Here is an interesting read from the Burlington County Times The EPA has put this press release on it's website - the newspaper is mostly a verbatim reporduction of the press release-
A case of Oil record book falsification, magic pipe, and Whistle blowers (two of them)
Swedish shipping company fined for illegal dumping off NJ coast
March 10th, 2009A Swedish shipping company was ordered to pay a $1 million fine and a $400,000 community service payment as part of its federal sentence for covering up the illegal dumping of oil waste in international waters of the coast of New Jersey, Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr. announced.
Holy House Shipping AB of Stockholm also was placed on probation by U.S. District Judge Jerome B. Simandle in Camden, who approved the plea agreement.
Under the terms of the agreement, the community service funds will go to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation for projects to restore and protect fragile marine habitats in New Jersey. Holy House must also implement an Environmental Management System/Compliance Plan to ensure there is no future dumping from any ship in its control that operates in U.S. ports.
Holy House, which operates approximately 14 oceangoing bulk carrier vessels, pleaded guilty in October, to a two-count information for violating the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships. The act implements an international treaty regulating the handling and disposal of oil waste at sea, and for making false statements to authorities.
Specifically, Holy House attempted to conceal the illegal dumping of oil-contaminated waste directly overboard from the M/V Snow Flower, an approximately 15,000 ton, 568 foot Cook Islands flagged oceangoing refrigerated ship, directly into the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans in January and February 2008. One of those discharges took place only one day’s sail from New Jersey.
“The ports in northern and southern New Jersey are among the busiest in the nation, and shipping companies must recognize that we and the Department of Justice will be relentless when it comes to enforcing maritime law protecting our oceans from polluters,” said Marra.
Marra noted that this is the latest of several such prosecutions by the District of New Jersey in recent years in which international shipping companies have been fined millions of dollars and had ship captains and engineers fined and/or imprisoned for exactly the same conduct.
“The Coast Guard is committed to aggressive enforcement of U.S. laws and international requirements designed to prevent pollution at sea. We thoroughly investigate credible reports of alleged illegal discharges of oil and/or tampering with shipboard anti-pollution equipment or falsifying oil discharge records,” said Captain David Scott, Commanding Officer of the U.S. Coast Guard’s Sector Delaware Bay. “We work closely with appropriate state and other Federal law enforcement agencies to prosecute environmental crimes, to promote compliance with these important environmental protection statutes.”
“We work closely with the U.S. Coast Guard to investigate those who take shortcuts and despoil our marine environment,” said William Lometti, Special Agent in Charge of EPA’s Criminal Investigation Division in New York. Lometti added that “Today’s sentence should send a clear message that those who violate the law and pollute our waters will be vigorously prosecuted.”
On Feb. 27, 2008, U.S. Coast Guard inspectors from Coast Guard Sector Delaware Bay boarded the M/V Snow Flower at the Gloucester Marine Terminal in Gloucester City for an inspection.
Inspectors identified discrepancies in the Oil Record Book. Oceangoing vessels like the M/V Snow Flower are required by international and U.S. law to maintain an accurate Oil Record Book that records any transfer or disposal of oily waste. Inspectors also located a “magic pipe,” a section of pipe installed for temporary periods at sea and used to discharge oil waste into the oceans, officials said.
Judge Simandle also approved a motion by the government that $375,000 of the fine be awarded to two crew members of the M/V Snow Flower who alerted the U.S. Coast Guard to the illegal dumping. The government attorneys noted in a motion to the Court that the two whistle-blowers risked their careers in the maritime industries by informing the Coast Guard of this crime and that a “substantial monetary award” both rewards the crew members for taking that risk and may provide an incentive for fellow crew members to alert inspectors and investigators of similar conduct on other ships.