Tag Archives: emergency

Lindsay Lohan Reportedly Fails Drug Test

Actress could face 30 days in jail. By Mawuse Ziegbe Lindsay Lohan (file) Photo: Pool/ Getty Images After wrapping up jail and rehab stints, Lindsay Lohan might not be completely in the clear. The troubled starlet has reportedly failed a drug test, according to TMZ . Although the actress was released from jail early, only serving 13 days of her 90-day sentence, before staying in rehab for 23 days, Lohan was held to several conditions after her release. Lohan was ordered to submit to random twice-weekly drug and alcohol tests in addition to attending a 12-step program, participate in at least four psychotherapy sessions a week and attend behavior therapy sessions twice a week. If she fails a drug and alcohol test, she is required to return to jail for 30 days. Despite her recent legal drama, Lohan has maintained that she does not have debilitating issues with drugs and alcohol. The actress was ordered to wear an alcohol-monitoring bracelet in May after missing a mandatory court hearing, which went off at an MTV Movie Awards afterparty. The alarm prompted a California judge to issue a warrant for Lohan’s arrest and double her bail, although Lohan’s lawyer later insisted her client tested negative for alcohol. In a pre-jail interview with Vanity Fair, the actress insisted she wasn’t struggling with addiction. “If I were the alcoholic everyone says I am, then putting a [SCRAM] bracelet on would have ended me up in detox, in the emergency room, because I would have had to come down from all the things that people say I’m taking and my father says I’m taking — so that says something, because I was fine,” Lohan said. “I think everyone has their own addictions and hopefully learns how to get past them,” Lohan said, insisting that most of her issues stem from her strained relationship with her father. “I think my biggest focus for myself is learning how to continue to get through the trauma that my father has caused in my life.” Related Photos The Highs And Lows Of Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan Goes To Court Related Artists Lindsay Lohan

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Lindsay Lohan Reportedly Fails Drug Test

After Nearly Five Months, BP Scheduled to Release Findings of Inquiry Into Its Oil Rig Disaster

BP to release results of investigation into oil spill disaster By the CNN Wire Staff September 8, 2010 2:49 a.m. EDT The BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico released an estimated 205 million gallons of oil during an 87-day period. STORY HIGHLIGHTS * BP report comes nearly five months after oil rig explosion in the Gulf * Deep-water oxygen levels are down but not deadly, a federal report concludes * The federal study tracked dissolved oxygen levels from May to August (CNN) — BP on Wednesday is expected to release findings of an internal investigation into the Gulf oil disaster, the oil giant said. The report comes nearly five months after an April 20 explosion aboard an oil rig left 11 men dead and spewed millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico over an 87-day period. A federal task report on Tuesday said scientists have found a decline in oxygen levels in the Gulf following the BP spill, but no “dead zones.” Levels of dissolved oxygen in deep water have dropped about 20 percent below their long-term average, according to data collected from up to 60 miles from the well at the center of the worst oil spill in U.S. history. But much of that dip appears to be the result of microbes using oxygen to dissolve oil underwater, and the decline is not enough to be fatal to marine life, said Steve Murawski of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the head of the Joint Analysis Group studying the spill's impact. “Even the lowest observations in all of these was substantially above the threshold,” Murawski said. The samples were collected from 419 points at varying distances from the ruptured well at the heart of the disaster and at depths as far down as 4,800 feet, the group reported. The task force is made up of NOAA, the Environmental Protection Agency and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. The undersea gusher erupted in April, releasing an estimated 4.9 million barrels (205 million gallons) of crude before being temporarily capped in July. The volume of oil — and the amount of chemical dispersants used to break it up — have created concerns about the long-term health of the Gulf. The spill also delivered an economic blow to the region, where fisheries and beach resorts are major employers. Early findings from a mid-August survey led by the University of South Florida indicated oil had settled to the bottom of the Gulf farther east than previously suspected and at levels toxic to marine life. At about the same time, a team from Georgia Sea Grant and the University of Georgia released a report that estimates that 70 to 79 percent of the oil that leaked from the well “has not been recovered and remains a threat to the ecosystem.” The latest study “does not discuss the broad ecosystem consequences of hydrocarbons released into the environment,” NOAA said. But it concludes that the oil is continuing to break up and disperse underneath the surface, making the emergency of a major oxygen-poor dead zone unlikely. In early August, the federal government estimated that three-quarters of the oil spilled had either evaporated or been dispersed, or had been skimmed or burned off the surface. The well has been temporarily capped and operations are under way to permanently seal it. BP, rig owner Transocean and well cement contractor Halliburton have blamed one another for the disaster. http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/09/08/us.gulf.oil.disaster/index.html?hpt=T1 added by: EthicalVegan

Lindsay Lohan Tells Vanity Fair: “I Want My Career Back”

Troubled actress says she’s learned from her mistakes. By Gil Kaufman Lindsay Lohan on the cover of the October issue of Vanity Fair Photo: Condé Nast In the first major interview published since Lindsay Lohan spent time in jail and rehab, the troubled actress told Vanity Fair that she’s determined to get her career back on track. She also addressed suggestions that she was on a downward spiral of drug and alcohol addiction and talked about how heartrending it was to see her younger sister Ali in the courtroom during her sentencing earlier this summer. “I don’t care what anyone says. I know that I’m a damn good actress. … And I know that in my past I was young and irresponsible — but that’s what growing up is. You learn from your mistakes,” said Lohan, who can be seen in “Machete” and who is slated to start working on the Linda Lovelace biography “Inferno” in November. Lohan also spoke candidly about her alleged struggles with illicit substances and alcohol in the interview, which was conducted one week before she spent 13 days of a 90-day sentence in jail. “If I were the alcoholic everyone says I am, then putting a [SCRAM] bracelet on would have ended me up in detox, in the emergency room, because I would have had to come down from all the things that people say I’m taking and my father says I’m taking–so that says something, because I was fine,” Lohan told the magazine about the alcohol-detection bracelet she was required to wear. Her SCRAM bracelet was triggered on the night of the MTV Movie Awards in June; her lawyer said the cause was an accident in which someone spilled a drink on Lohan’s ankle . But that incident helped set off the chain of events that landed Lohan in jail for 13 days of a 90-day sentence on a probation violation from her 2007 DUI conviction. “I think everyone has their own addictions and hopefully learns how to get past them,” Lohan explained. “I think my biggest focus for myself is learning how to continue to get through the trauma that my father has caused in my life.” Lohan is estranged from father Michael Lohan, but she said watching the reactions from him and her sister Ali when the actress was sentenced to three months in jail was incredibly difficult. The article describes Lohan, 24, as “visibly upset” when talking about watching her sister cry in the courtroom, but it notes that she was torn by Michael Lohan’s presence at the hearing. “The worst part of it is you turn around and you see your dad crying and normally you’d be, like, happy that your father’s there,” she said. “But then he has to go and do an interview right after.” Though Lohan was reportedly taking a number of prescription medications before reporting to jail, the “Mean Girls” star adamantly denied ever abusing prescription drugs . “I never have — never in my life. I have no desire to,” she said. “That’s not who I am. I’ve admitted to the things that I’ve done–to, you know, dabbling in certain things and trying things ’cause I was young and curious and thought it was like, OK, ’cause other people were doing it and other people put it in front of me. And I see what happened in my life because of it.” In addition to serving a short sentence in jail, Lohan was sprung from a 90-day rehab sentence early . Like a lot of young stars who come to Hollywood, Lohan said she got caught up in the party scene and ended up running with the wrong crowd. She blamed that group for some of her troubles, saying they pretended to care about her for the wrong reasons and were only there for the party. When she first moved to Los Angeles as a teenager, Lohan said the atmosphere was,” very go-go-go and I had a lot of responsibility; and I think just the second I didn’t have [structure] anymore — I was 18, 19 — with a ton of money and no one really here to tell me that I couldn’t do certain things … And I see where that’s gotten me now, and I don’t like it.” And while she denied tipping off the paparazzi to her whereabouts to get more press, Lohan confessed that she often relied on tabloids as her main news source and that she was influenced by the blanket coverage of other bad girls like Britney Spears. “I would look up to those girls,” she said. “And I would be like, ‘I want to be like that.’ ” The interview with Lohan runs in the October issue of Vanity Fair , which hits newsstands in New York and Los Angeles on Thursday (September 2) and nationwide on September 7. Related Videos Lindsay Lohan: Crime And Punishment Related Photos Lindsay Lohan’s ‘Inferno’ Photo Shoot Lindsay Lohan Goes To Court The Highs And Lows Of Lindsay Lohan Related Artists Lindsay Lohan

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Lindsay Lohan Tells Vanity Fair: “I Want My Career Back”

Alligator appears in New York City, may have crawled from sewer

AT LEAST one alligator apparently really does live in New York City's sewers with a 46cm 'gator allegedly crawling out of a drain today, delighting onlookers and giving fresh meat to the urban myth that the carnivorous critters are living below the Big Apple. The spectacle began just after 3pm local time, when a passersby spotted the reptile on Newtown Avenue near 29th St, Astoria, Queens and yelled “Crocodile!”, the New York Post reported. One witness said the alligator crawled out of a drain during the afternoon's downpour. Police couldn't verify that the animal crawled from the sewers – a big-city myth that inspired the 1980 B-movie Alligator and others – but were baffled as to where it came from. “It's a big mystery,” said police spokesman Officer James Duffy. “It could have been dumped from a car or it could have come out of a sewer.” The police Emergency Service Unit lassoed the animal and bound its snout with tape. The caged 'gator was kept at the 114th Precinct until it was picked up by Animal Care & Control. A spokesman for animal control said the alligator would be taken to a licensed rehabilitation carer or reptile sanctuary. Crocodiles and alligators have called New York home in the past, most famously in 2001, when the city was captivated by a caiman that eluded authorities in Central Park for a week. In 2003, police caught a 1.2-metre crocodile that was wandering around a Queens park. Some experts have called the city's sewer system a “natural swamp” warm enough to attract 'gators, but few think they could survive for very long. No one has yet claimed the alligator. added by: eden49

Dr. Frank Ryan’s Fatal Crash Reignites Texting-While-Driving Debate

‘It has stopped being an oddity when we hear that someone was texting and has a wreck,’ an emergency physician tells MTV News. By Mawuse Ziegbe Dr. Frank Ryan Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images In a case of multitasking gone horribly wrong, plastic surgeon Dr. Frank Ryan was apparently sending out a tweet before his car fell off a cliff Monday. The surgeon, best known for performing several surgeries on “The Hills” starlet Heidi Montag, was apparently typing about his border collie before his Jeep Wrangler plummeted from Malibu’s Pacific Coast Highway. The accident demonstrates the very real danger of texting or tweeting while driving, an activity that has reportedly spiked in recent years. “I hear, almost daily, accounts of people who are injured while texting,” said Dr. Angela Gardner, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians . Gardner, who is also an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, told MTV News that sometimes, linking an accident to texting is difficult if the phone is destroyed or tossed from the scene of the incident. However, Gardner did say texting-related accidents are becoming commonplace. “[There is] definitely an uptick and a noticeable one,” she said. “It has stopped being an oddity when we hear that someone was texting and has a wreck. Now it’s more of a fairly common occurrence.” While sending out a status update during a leisurely drive may seem innocuous, Gardner said it only takes a moment for distracted drivers to become vulnerable. “There’s two things [that can lead to accidents]: The obvious one is that one hand is off the wheel if you’re holding a phone. The other thing is that, as fast or as good as you are at texting, it still takes that microsecond of looking away from the road, and that microsecond is when accidents occur,” Gardner said. “The theory is that people look away for a minute, and then they realize the car is going off the road, and they jerk the car back. It’s the compensation movement that can cause a car to roll over.” Several states have laws in place curtailing cell phone use while driving, and many, including, where Ryan died, have outright bans on texting while on the road. A 2009 study by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute revealed that truck drivers were more than 20 times as likely to be involved in a crash while texting. The study indicated that sending messages in particular was significantly more dangerous than dialing or talking on the phone. “People don’t realize — and it’s not just young people, it’s everyone with a cell phone — that moment that you look away from your phone is the moment it could take to have a wreck,” Gardner said. Gardner noted that people often have an “irresistible urge” to respond to a text or tweet but offered a straightforward suggestion for drivers who feel tempted to type while still on the road. “My advice is put the phone away,” Gardner said. “Put it in your pocket, put it in your purse. Put it away until you’re done with your trip.”

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Dr. Frank Ryan’s Fatal Crash Reignites Texting-While-Driving Debate

Slater’s Emergency Beer — Twice in a Blue Moon

Filed under: Steven Slater TMZ has learned the secret identity of the two beer bottles Steven Slater allegedly grabbed right before he activated the emergency slide and made his heroic escape — Blue Moon . According to multiple eyewitnesses, Slater swiped the two BMs during his… Read more

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Slater’s Emergency Beer — Twice in a Blue Moon

TMZ’s Steven Slater Emergency Slide Game

Filed under: Steven Slater , TMZ Games Do you have what it takes to navigate Steven Slater down the emergency slide … while avoiding falling luggage? Read more

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TMZ’s Steven Slater Emergency Slide Game

Haiti’s Earthquake-Injured Animals Are That Country’s Lowest Priority | 8 Deeply Touching Photos… Accompanied by Some Hope

Haiti's injured animals lowest priority More than six months since Haiti's earthquake, family dogs and pigs search for food in the rubble. “Animal welfare is a new concept in Haiti,” said Max Millien, director of animal health at the Haiti Ministry of Agriculture. _____ First aid groups treat Haiti's injured animals By Daphne Sashin, for CNN August 9, 2010 10:44 p.m. EDT STORY HIGHLIGHTS * Groups say animals are lowest priority in aftermath of Haiti's earthquake * For the first time, the nation has non-profit animal welfare organizations * They have treated tens of thousands of animals since the January disaster * One group plans to build an animal care and veterinary training center (CNN) — More than six months since the earthquake in Haiti, family dogs and pigs paw through garbage and rubble in search of food, putting them at risk of infections, abscesses and parasites, according to animal welfare groups. Owners want to help their pets and livestock, but they have little to give. With 1.5 million people still living in tents and the nation in the middle of hurricane season, animals are the lowest priority, animal rescue groups say. Despite this, tens of thousands of animals have been treated while a public service campaign features a Creole-speaking dog telling families to include their animals in evacuation plans. “The animal situation is only a reflection of the people's situation,” Gerardo Huertas, of the UK-based World Society for the Protection of Animals, told CNN from Costa Rica. “They live together. Until the whole shelter situation resolves, all you can do is help them with little veterinary support that we can provide,” added Huertas, the society's Director of Disaster Management for the Americas. But animal welfare groups are hopeful that in time they can actually give the nation and its people something it didn't have before the earthquake — equipment, training and an awareness that animal welfare is critical to their own survival. “Often in disasters we try and only deal with the problems caused by the disaster and not the underlying problems … but Haiti was a special case,” said Ian Robinson, Emergency Relief Program Director for the International Fund for Animal Welfare, based in Massachusetts. The animal situation is only a reflection of the people's situation –Gerardo Huertas, World Society for the Protection of Animals “To put it back like it was before the earthquake wasn't good enough.” There wasn't a single animal welfare organization in Haiti before the earthquake. The government was focused on preventing the spread of animal-to-human diseases like anthrax, rabies and classical swine fever. “Animal welfare is a new concept in Haiti,” said Max Millien, Director of Animal Health at the Haiti Ministry of Agriculture. “The children have to start to understand … if you treat the animals well, that's a way to protect yourself.” Robinson and Millien recently presented their observations at the annual American Veterinary Medical Association conference, in Atlanta, Georgia. The earthquake damaged the buildings that held vaccines for rabies, heartworm and other diseases. Vets lacked supplies. International volunteers struggled to get around the country. As for the animals themselves, hundreds were injured. Some of them had wounds caused by the quake or from having to find food in dumps. Others had infections and needed immediate treatment. Days after the earthquake, the two non-profits created The Animal Relief Coalition for Haiti (ARCH), with a dozen other animal rescue groups to provide more than $1.1 million in aid to the Haitian government over the next year, including: • A team of Haitian vets to reach the hardest hit areas with antibiotics, vaccinations and other treatments for animals that in many cases had never been seen by a doctor. Since January, the ARCH mobile clinic has treated 30,000 pigs, goats, dogs, cats and other animals. • Solar-powered freezers and refrigerators to store temperature-sensitive vaccines in rural areas without electricity, along with coolers that will fit on the back of motorcycles, horses or bicycles for mobile veterinarians. • Haiti's first census of dogs and cats to determine the level of care they are receiving, people's attitudes toward companion animals and the risk of rabies and other diseases to humans. • A public awareness campaign to educate families about disaster planning. Last month, public-service announcements began airing a speaking dog telling families to take them along if they have to evacuate. “Any emergency plan is better than no plan,” Huertas said. “We're just asking them to include their pets.” Separately, The Christian Veterinary Mission has promised laptops and projectors for mobile veterinarians to give presentations on animal care. In addition, Humane Society International has spent $400,000 in Haiti and pledged more than $1 million over the next five years. It has begun planning an animal care and veterinary training center in Croix-des-Bouquets and is also working to establish spay-neuter and vaccine clinics. “I do consider the earthquake as an opportunity,” Millien said. “We have a lot of promises … I hope the situation will be better than before.” Click here to see photos of our voiceless friends… http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/08/06/haiti.animals/index.html?hpt=C1 added by: EthicalVegan

Establishment Press Ignores Counterpunch Accusations That Sherrods Mistreated Workers at New Communities

What follows was eminently predictable, but noting it is nonetheless necessary. Shirley Sherrod, and to a lesser extent her husband Charles, were media celebrities for a while in late July. Readers might have noticed their near absence from establishment media news reports during the past seven days. It would be easy to think that this has occurred because the story played itself out, with nothing newsworthy to add. That stopped being true on Monday, August 2, when a column by Ron Wilkins (“The Other Side of Shirley Sherrod”) appeared in the leftist alternative publication Counterpunch . Wilkins is currently a professor in the Department of Africana Studies (not misspelled) at Cal State University. He claims in the final sentence of his column that he is knowledgeable concerning what he is writing because “I was one of those workers at NCI.” “NCI” is New Communities, Inc., described at a RuralDevelopment.org link as “the land trust that Shirley and Charles Sherrod established, with other black farm families in the 1960’s.” Here’s part of what Wilkins alleges (excerpted items are not in the same order as they originally appeared; out of order verbiage is identified): Imagine farm workers doing back breaking labor in the sweltering sun, sprayed with pesticides and paid less than minimum wage. Imagine the United Farm Workers called in to defend these laborers against such exploitation by management. Now imagine that the farm workers are black children and adults and that the managers are Shirley Sherrod, her husband Rev. Charles Sherrod, and a host of others. But it’s no illusion; this is fact. Shirley Sherrod was New Communities Inc. store manager during the 1970s. As such, Mrs. Sherrod was a key member of the NCI administrative team, which exploited and abused the workforce in the field. The 6,000 acre New Communities Inc. in Lee County promoted itself during the latter part of the 1960s and throughout the 70s as a land trust committed to improving the lives of the rural black poor. Underneath this facade, the young and old worked long hours with few breaks, the pay averaged sixty-seven cents an hour, fieldwork behind equipment spraying pesticides was commonplace and workers expressing dissatisfaction were fired without recourse. Worker protest at New Communities eventually garnered some assistance from the United Farm Workers Union in nearby Florida in the person of one of its most formidable organizers, black State Director, the late Mack Lyons. … Fearful of both UFW efforts to unionize NCI’s labor force and scrutiny by the Georgia State Wage and Hour Division, the Sherrods and NCI management hastily issued checks in varying amounts to strikers to makeup ostensibly for minimum wage differentials. It is bitter irony that the Sherrods have succeeded in being awarded $300,000 following a discrimination lawsuit, while … impoverished NCI black laborers whom NCI exploited were never adequately compensated for their “pain and suffering.” (the following sentences appeared earlier in the column) … Justice and integrity require at least as much accountability from Mrs. Sherrod to the poor black farm workers of NCI as to the white farmers she came to befriend. This lack of full disclosure of the whole truth is a “sin of omission” that trivializes the suffering of poor black farm workers and exacerbates the offenses of NCI. This is hardly a right-wing hit piece. Wilkins’s bio at the end of his column describes him as “a former organizer in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee,” and further claims the following: In 1974, under an assumed name, he hired-on at New Communities Inc. The Emergency Land Fund, an Atlanta-based black land retention organization, which shared oversight responsibility for NCI’s progress, wanted to know the basis for NCI’s continued poor performance. … For his role in organizing NCI’s workers, management eventually fired him from his $40 per week position, evicted him from the rent-free shack on NCI property and orchestrated his arrest, on bogus charges, by FBI agents and Lee County, Georgia Sheriff’s deputies in the midst of an NCI labor protest. The charges were later dropped. In his column, Wilkins refers to a report in  El Macriado , which was then a monthly publication of the United Farm Workers. That report contains these two final paragraphs describing Charles Sherrod’s attitude toward labor-management relations: Though (the original reads “through” — Ed.) several of the cooperative’s funding organization’s are pressuring Charles Sherrod, the farm’s manager, to reach a settlement with the strikers, he remains unwilling to negotiate. With so few scabs left in New Community’s (sic) fields, the UFW first strike in the southeast area (outside of Florida) may bring the first of many UFW contracts to these fields that were once harvested by slave labor. You read that right: “Scabs.” Despite the contemporaneous evidence that his allegations of serious labor mistreatment are credible, Wilkins’s column has been ignored by the establishment press: On August 4, two days after the Counterpunch item appeared, the Associated Press published two pieces apparently intended to be the last word on the main players in the Sherrod controversy — one by Julie Pace (“AP Exclusive: USDA racial flap reconstructed”) containing what AP claims is the backstory of the lead-up to Sherrod’s firing, and another by Michael R. Blood (“Breitbart: Enemy of the left with a laptop”) which portrays Andrew Breitbart, whose posting of a brief speech excerpt at his BigGovernment.com web site first brought Shirley Sherrod to the nation’s attention (the USAcationnew.com web site actually posted the video first , as this July 15 tweet demonstrates). Neither AP article alludes to the Sherrods’ alleged troubled labor history. An advanced search on “Shirley Sherrod” (not in quotes) at the New York Times indicates that the latest related story was on August 1, the day before the Counterpunch item appeared. Searches at the Times’s Media Decoder , The Caucus , and The Lede blogs on the “Shirley Sherrod” tag also have nothing. A Washington Post search on “Shirley Sherrod” (in quotes) returns several items dated August 2 or later. But two of them are the AP items already noted, and the others don’t refer to the Sherrods’ alleged inhumane labor practices during the 1960s and early 1970s. An August 4 Tribune Media item originating from Albany, Georgia by Kathleen Hennessey (Hard feelings about handling of Shirley Sherrod have deep roots in Georgia) and carried at the Los Angeles Times contains several direct quotes from residents. Even though she was almost literally in the neighborhood, there is no evidence that Hennessey attempted to follow up on the allegations contained in the Counterpunch item that had been out for two days. It is not reasonable to believe that the establishment press is not aware of the story by this time. A Google Web search on [“Ron Wilkins” “Shirley Sherrod”] (typed as indicated between brackets) for the past seven days returns about 180 items (it says almost 600 , but it’s really “only” about 180 ). No cocoon of ignorance is that tight. It’s more reasonable to believe that the establishment press is not interested in letting Wilkins’s charges get out to the majority of the population that isn’t paying close attention, lest it damage the current “Shirley good, Breitbart bad” meme. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Establishment Press Ignores Counterpunch Accusations That Sherrods Mistreated Workers at New Communities

BP Oil Rig Engineer Testifies About Failures Ahead of Explosion, Including Blackouts and Glitches | Rig’s Captain Is Said to Have Ordered Injured Man Be Left behind

Oil rig engineer testifies about power failures Testimony at a federal hearing describes computer glitches and deferred maintenance. The rig's captain is said to have ordered an injured man to be left behind. Photo: Deepwater Horizon engineer Stephen Bertone testifies as joint Coast Guard-Interior Department hearings resumed Monday. (Brett Duke, Times Picayune / July 20, 2010) latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-oil-spill-hearings-20100720,0,1569438.story latimes.com Oil rig engineer testifies about power failures Oil rig engineer tells of failures ahead of blast By Julie Cart Testifying at a federal hearing, he says the rig had been experiencing blackouts and glitches, and had deferred maintenance. . By Julie Cart, Los Angeles Times July 20, 2010 Reporting from Kenner, Louisiana Months before the April 20 explosion on the Deepwater Horizon that killed 11 men, the sophisticated drilling vessel experienced power blackouts, computer glitches and a balky propulsion system, and carried a list of more than 300 deferred maintenance projects. Under withering questioning during Monday's resumption of the Coast Guard- Interior Department investigation into the well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico, the rig's chief engineer revealed the possibility that alarms and other crucial systems were bypassed or not functioning at the time of the explosion. His testimony also introduced a sensational detail: As crew members scrambled onto life rafts to abandon the crippled rig, the vessel's captain ordered an injured man to be left behind. The injured worker was eventually loaded onto a life raft and evacuated. The day's first witness, chief engineer Stephen Bertone, was questioned sharply by panel members from the Coast Guard and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, who laid out a pattern of lax maintenance on the Deepwater Horizon, owned by Transocean and leased to BP. The engineer said the rig had been experiencing mechanical failures for months before the explosion. Bertone, an employee of Transocean, said the vessel's thruster, or propeller system, had been “having problems” for the previous eight months. In addition, the computer station where the rig's driller sits had temporarily lost electrical power days before the blowout, he said. Bertone said on the night of the explosion, he heard no general alarm, there were no internal communications and no power to the engines, and none of the Deepwater Horizon's backup or emergency generators were working. “We were a dead ship,” he said. Because there was no power, the crew was unable to engage the emergency disconnect system that would have halted the flow of oil from the wellhead. He said there was at least one incident earlier in the day that had foreshadowed what was to come. While taking BP and Transocean officials on a tour, Bertone saw a large group in the drill shack, an unusual number of people crammed into a small space. “I had a feeling something wasn't right,” Bertone said, adding that he was told to keep the tour moving and didn't hear anything further about problems with the well. Under questioning from BP attorney Richard Godfrey, Bertone said that the entire Deepwater Horizon rig had lost electrical power in the past. He described it as a “partial blackout,” and said rig-wide electrical failures had occurred two or three times before the explosion. He did not say how long the failures had lasted. Panel co-chairman Jason Mathews of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement sought to portray managers of the drilling rig as having trouble keeping up with routine maintenance because of frequent employee turnover. The Deepwater Horizon was scheduled to be sent to a shipyard for maintenance in early 2011, a point that Mathews bore in on, despite frequent objections from attorneys representing Transocean. A maintenance audit conducted by BP in September 2009 — seven months before the disaster — found 390 maintenance jobs undone, requiring more than 3,500 hours of work. The report referred to the amount of deferred work as “excessive.” In questioning Bertone, Ronnie Penton, the attorney for the Deepwater Horizon's chief electronics technician, implied that some of the vessel's safety monitoring systems were regularly bypassed, including a general alarm and a device that purged trapped gas from the drilling shack. Another attorney implied that the gas-purging device, which is designed to expel any unanticipated buildup of natural gas, had not been operating for five years. A sudden surge of natural gas from the well is believed to have caused the explosion, according to previous testimony and investigation documents. In May, Douglas Brown, the rig's chief mechanic, testified that he believed a sudden influx of gas onto the rig's deck caused an engine to rev uncontrollably and touch off an explosion. A system to stop that scenario was not functional at the time, he said. “If I would have shut down those engines, it could have stopped [them] as an ignition source,” he told the panel. Also in Monday's hearing, an attorney for Halliburton asked Leo Linder, a drilling fluid specialist, if gauges monitoring the drilling mud had been bypassed. Linder said he did not know. Bertone testified to two incidents that called into question the conduct of Capt. Curt Kuchta immediately after the explosion. Bertone said Kuchta admonished a crew member for activating a distress signal. Then, as rig workers were climbing aboard a life raft, the captain gestured toward a stricken man lying on a gurney and said, “Leave him!” The captain's remarks were contained in a statement Bertone made to the Coast Guard in the hours after the incident, a document that has not been made public. The introduction of his statement prompted a lengthy and sometimes heated exchange among attorneys. julie.cart@latimes.com Times staff writer Rong-Gong Lin II contributed to this report from Kenner, La. added by: EthicalVegan