In a “harsh retort,” a US federal judge has blocked attempts Friday by oil giant British Petroleum (BP) to temporarily suspend payments to victims of the 2010 Gulf oil spill—their latest effort to evade accountability and compensation for their role in a disaster which continues to plague both gulf residents and ecosystems alike.
BP filed an emergency temporary injunction Tuesday which claimed they are being forced to pay “hundreds of millions of dollars in inflated settlements” and asked to suspend further payments until an independent investigation of the claims administrator’s office has been completed.
US district judge Carl Barbier, who is overseeing the civil case against BP, scolded the company for what he said were “offensive” personal attacks against claims administrator Patrick Juneau—particularly comments made by BP CEO Patrick Dudley, who on Thursday complained to CNBC that the claim procedures had been “hijacked.”
As the Guardian explains:
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