United States DOJ Convicts Oil Tanker Owner, Operator And Chief Engineer For Concealing Deliberate Pollution
Nikolaos Vastardis, Evridiki Navigation Inc., as well as Liquimar Tankers Management Services Inc., were founded guilty by a government court in Wilmington, Delaware, of breaching the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships, misstating ship’s papers, blocking a UNITED STATE Coast Guard examination, as well as making incorrect declarations to UNITED STATE Coast Guard assessors.
The criminal activities were devoted in order to hide Vastardis’ intentional bypassing of called for air pollution avoidance devices in order to unlawfully release oil-contaminated bilge waste over the top from the foreign-flagged oil vessel Motor Tanker (M/T) Evridiki.
“This case demonstrates that those who pollute our oceans and deliberately mislead Coast Guard officials will be brought to justice,” claimed Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey Bossert of the Justice Department’s Environment as well asNatural Resources Division “The Department of Justice will continue to support the important work of the Coast Guard to deter deliberate vessel pollution.”
“The Coast Guard is committed to protecting the safety of the marine environment and our living marine resources,” claimedRear Adm Keith Smith, leader, 5thCoast Guard District “Today’s conviction highlights our dedication to working with the Department of Justice to investigate and successfully prosecute those who violate the law and pollute our oceans and waterways.”
The M/T Evridiki was an 899 foot Liberian- flagged oil vessel had by Evridiki Navigation as well as run byLiqumar Tankers Management Services Vastardis was the Chief Engineer of the M/TEvridiki On March 10, 2019, the ship showed up in the Big Stone Anchorage, within Delaware Bay, for the function of supplying a freight of petroleum. The complying with day, the ship undertook a UNITED STATE Coast Guard examination to establish, to name a few points, the vessel’s conformity with worldwide ecological air pollution avoidance demands.
The court discovered that throughout the examination, Evridiki, Liquimar, as well as Vastardis attempted to trick Coast Guard assessors relating to making use of the ship’s oily water separator (OWS), a necessary air pollution avoidance gadget. Under the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL), a global treaty to which the UNITED STATE is an event, just bilge waste having much less than 15 components per million (ppm) oil can be released over the top as well as need to be very first go through an OWS as well as oil web content meter (OCM) to make certain that no waste having greater than 15 ppm oil is released. During the Coast Guard examination, Vastardis ran the devices with unmonitored shutoffs that entraped fresh water inside the OCM’s example line to make sure that its oil sensing unit signed up absolutely no ppm rather than what was actually being released over the top. However, historical OCM information recouped throughout the examination verified that the OCM was being deceived as well as bypassed. When the Coast Guard opened up the Evridiki’s OWS, they discovered it was fouled with large quantities of oil as well as residue.
Each accused was founded guilty of all 4 felony matters consisting of intentionally falling short to preserve an exact oil document publication, in infraction of the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships; blockage of justice; blockage of the Coast Guard’s examination; as well as making a materially incorrect declaration to the Coast Guard worrying just how the OWS was run mixed-up.
UNITED STATE District Court Judge Richard G. Andrews for the District of Delaware commanded the test as well as will certainly carry out sentencing on a day to be identified.
Senior Litigation Counsel Richard A. Udell as well as Senior Trial Attorney Kenneth E. Nelson, both with the Environmental Crimes Section of the UNITED STATE Department of Justice, stood for the federal government at test. Assisting in the prosecution were Trial Attorney Joel La Bissonniere with the Environmental Crimes Section, Assistant UNITED STATE Attorney Edmond Falgowski for the District of Delaware, as well as Lieutenant Commander Ben Robinson, lawyer with the Coast Guard’s Office of Maritime as well asInternational Law The Coast Guard’s Investigative Service checked out the situation with help from the Coast Guard’s Sector Delaware Bay as well as Marine Safety Detachment in Lewes, Delaware.
Reference: justice.gov