Fraudsters angle for piece of BP oil spill fund

Louisiana (Reuters) – Swindlers, scammers and even a few strippers are flocking to the Gulf Coast in search of a piece of the $20 billion BP Plc has set aside to compensate residents for spill-related losses.

Adjusters passing out emergency funds in Louisiana and other Gulf Coast states are on high alert for fraud even as they pay out legitimate claims following the April 20 oil rig explosion and spill that killed 11 workers and devastated the livelihoods of many fishermen, tourism workers and others.

The promise of a handout has attracted the unscrupulous, who have flocked to the Gulf in a bid to cash in.

Scott Ward, assistant manager of the BP claims office in Boothville, Louisiana, recalls staring at the long, manicured fingernails of the purported deckhand who sat across his desk one day asking for compensation.

The woman, who was “all gussied up,” bore little resemblance to the hardened workers he knew made their living on the water, Ward said.

“How can you separate shrimp with those nails?” he recalls thinking. “She had the proper documentation so we paid her, but you have to wonder.”

Another applicant was overheard telling fellow claimants in the waiting room she was a stripper on New Orleans’ famed Bourbon Street, said Burnell Alessi, the office’s manager.

“Every time we think we’ve seen it all, there’s a new one that comes in,” Alessi said.

BP has so far paid $201 million out of its $20 billion fund to residents and businesses in Gulf Coast states. Fishermen and shrimpers have received $50 million of that pie. But of the 114,000 claims submitted, nearly 54 percent, or more than 61,000, lack key documentation, according to BP.

Although many fishermen, shrimpers, oystermen and others have complained of red tape, BP says it is working diligently to quickly process and pay claims.

The process has been flexible to allow for unforeseen issues, like claimants without their paperwork in perfect order, but that may have opened the door to fraud.

“We are trying to have a process that is workable that addresses genuine need,” said BP’s government and public affairs director, Ron Rybarczyk.

“It was not a perfect system. We erred on the side of … putting it in motion before we examined every angle.”

There are 36 claims offices throughout the Gulf states.

In early August, the claims process will transfer from BP to Kenneth Feinberg, a high-powered attorney tasked by President Obama to oversee the damage claims process.

Speaking recently at a town hall meeting in Houma, Louisiana, Feinberg stressed his willingness to pay legitimate claimants who might not have perfect documentation.

“Tell the captain of your boat or your priest or your sheriff or your mayor, come on in and vouch for you,” he said.

“I have to get something to avoid fraud, to verify your claim, but I’m not looking to get fancy here,” Feinberg said. “I’m looking to get the money out to people who need it. I’m working for you. Let’s get creative on corroboration. I will then bend over backwards.”

HAT IN HAND

But that willingness to pay has opened the door to trouble, locals say.

“You see people who haven’t been down here in 20 years showing up at that claims office,” said shrimper Marvin Davis, who reported one out-of-towner trying to game the system.

In one scam making the circuit, boat captains vouch for purported out-of-work deckhands who then share with the captains a cut of their BP payment. Adjusters are now wise to the scheme, using a boat registration number that can show whether a boat with a capacity for four workers, for example, has a phantom crew of double that number — all seeking funds.

Applications for Louisiana commercial fishing licenses also reveal potential schemes in motion. The department of wildlife and fisheries processed applications for 85 such licenses on April 9th, about a week before the spill. A month later, that number rose 44 percent to 122 applications, following the news that BP would pay claims to fishermen with active licenses.

“Why would you need a commercial fishing license when you know the fishing is closed?” asked Ward.

BP has hired private investigators to follow up on questionable claims, said Mike Thompson, director of investigations at the Louisiana Attorney General’s office. Some will likely be passed along to local district attorneys.

Fraud is not only directed at BP — local residents are also potential victims. The Federal Trade Commission recently warned that scammers were likely to go door to door, or use email or websites, to solicit funds for fraudulent environmental causes or pretend to be authorized adjusters who need upfront fees to expedite claims.

Locals say the word is out, and even the undeserving are scrambling to get a piece of the pie.

“If doesn’t take long in a community like ours — we call it the Cajun grapevine — to find out exactly what you need to get a check,” said Alessi. “I’m certain quite a few people have gotten payments they shouldn’t have.”

(Editing by Todd Eastham)

Fraudsters angle for piece of BP oil spill fund

BOOTHVILLE, Louisiana, July 25 (Reuters) – Swindlers, scammers and even a few strippers are flocking to the Gulf Coast in search of a piece of the $20 billion BP Plc (BP.L) has set aside to compensate residents for spill-related losses.

Adjusters passing out emergency funds in Louisiana and other Gulf Coast states are on high alert for fraud even as they pay out legitimate claims following the April 20 oil rig explosion and spill that killed 11 workers and devastated the livelihoods of many fishermen, tourism workers and others.

The promise of a handout has attracted the unscrupulous, who have flocked to the Gulf in a bid to cash in.

Scott Ward, assistant manager of the BP claims office in Boothville, Louisiana, recalls staring at the long, manicured fingernails of the purported deckhand who sat across his desk one day asking for compensation.

The woman, who was “all gussied up,” bore little resemblance to the hardened workers he knew made their living on the water, Ward said.

“How can you separate shrimp with those nails?” he recalls thinking. “She had the proper documentation so we paid her, but you have to wonder.”

Another applicant was overheard telling fellow claimants in the waiting room she was a stripper on New Orleans’ famed Bourbon Street, said Burnell Alessi, the office’s manager.

“Every time we think we’ve seen it all, there’s a new one that comes in,” Alessi said.

BP has so far paid $201 million out of its $20 billion fund to residents and businesses in Gulf Coast states. Fishermen and shrimpers have received $50 million of that pie. But of the 114,000 claims submitted, nearly 54 percent, or more than 61,000, lack key documentation, according to BP.

Although many fishermen, shrimpers, oystermen and others have complained of red tape, BP says it is working diligently to quickly process and pay claims.

The process has been flexible to allow for unforeseen issues, like claimants without their paperwork in perfect order, but that may have opened the door to fraud.

“We are trying to have a process that is workable that addresses genuine need,” said BP’s government and public affairs director, Ron Rybarczyk.

“It was not a perfect system. We erred on the side of … putting it in motion before we examined every angle.”

There are 36 claims offices throughout the Gulf states.

In early August, the claims process will transfer from BP to Kenneth Feinberg, a high-powered attorney tasked by President Obama to oversee the damage claims process.

Speaking recently at a town hall meeting in Houma, Louisiana, Feinberg stressed his willingness to pay legitimate claimants who might not have perfect documentation.

“Tell the captain of your boat or your priest or your sheriff or your mayor, come on in and vouch for you,” he said.

“I have to get something to avoid fraud, to verify your claim, but I’m not looking to get fancy here,” Feinberg said. “I’m looking to get the money out to people who need it. I’m working for you. Let’s get creative on corroboration. I will then bend over backwards.”

HAT IN HAND

But that willingness to pay has opened the door to trouble, locals say.

“You see people who haven’t been down here in 20 years showing up at that claims office,” said shrimper Marvin Davis, who reported one out-of-towner trying to game the system.

In one scam making the circuit, boat captains vouch for purported out-of-work deckhands who then share with the captains a cut of their BP payment. Adjusters are now wise to the scheme, using a boat registration number that can show whether a boat with a capacity for four workers, for example, has a phantom crew of double that number — all seeking funds.

Applications for Louisiana commercial fishing licenses also reveal potential schemes in motion. The department of wildlife and fisheries processed applications for 85 such licenses on April 9th, about a week before the spill. A month later, that number rose 44 percent to 122 applications, following the news that BP would pay claims to fishermen with active licenses.

“Why would you need a commercial fishing license when you know the fishing is closed?” asked Ward.

BP has hired private investigators to follow up on questionable claims, said Mike Thompson, director of investigations at the Louisiana Attorney General’s office. Some will likely be passed along to local district attorneys.

Fraud is not only directed at BP — local residents are also potential victims. The Federal Trade Commission recently warned that scammers were likely to go door to door, or use email or websites, to solicit funds for fraudulent environmental causes or pretend to be authorized adjusters who need upfront fees to expedite claims.

Locals say the word is out, and even the undeserving are scrambling to get a piece of the pie.

“If doesn’t take long in a community like ours — we call it the Cajun grapevine — to find out exactly what you need to get a check,” said Alessi. “I’m certain quite a few people have gotten payments they shouldn’t have.” (Editing by Todd Eastham)

Factbox: Developments in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill

(Reuters) – Here are developments in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the largest in U.S. history:

U.S. | Green Business | Russia | Barack Obama | Gulf Oil Spill

TOP DEVELOPMENTS

* Anadarko, a non-operating partner of BP in the blown-out Macondo well, said in a statement it expects BP to pay oil spill claims because BP was “reckless” and likely engaged in “gross negligence” and “willful misconduct.”

* Anadarko CEO Jim Hackett told Reuters in an interview his company would have handled things differently and is “looking at our contractual remedies.”

* BP said in a statement it “strongly disagrees” with Anadarko’s assessment, that other parties may be responsible and that the allegations will not distract it from stopping the two-month-old leak.

* BP is seeking $1 billion in loans from seven banks for up to $7 billion, a senior London-based loan banker told Thomson Reuters LPC, as the company raises funds while battling to plug its gushing well.

POLITICS/POLICY

* The U.S. Interior Department issued a directive requiring oil companies applying for offshore drilling permits to provide more information about how they would cope with a blowout.

COMPANY/MARKETS NEWS

* A $20 billion fund set up by energy giant BP Plc to compensate financial losses due to the spill will pay legitimate claims fast, the fund’s independent administrator said on Friday.

* BP remains in a strong financial position despite the market uncertainty that has followed the spill, Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg said on Friday.

* BP shares end down slightly in London on Friday, flat in New York trade.

* Moody’s cut BP’s credit rating by three notches on Friday, the oil major’s third downgrade in a week, and said the company’s $20 billion spill fund would not cap liabilities for the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster.

* Russia’s LUKOIL said it had not yet decided whether to buy back its stake from Conoco and was not interested in snapping up anything from BP’s $10 billion asset sale.

* BP has no plans to sell its stake in Russia’s biggest oil firm, Rosneft, as part of its $10 billion asset sale plan, the head of BP’s Russian operations said.

SPILL CONTAINMENT EFFORTS

* The first of two relief wells being drilled to plug the leak is within 200 feet of the blown-out well bore but officials say the toughest part remains – actually penetrating the damaged well.

* BP collected 25,000 barrels of oil from its blown-out Macondo well on Thursday, Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen said.

GLOBAL REACTION

* Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said the Gulf spill should lead to a review of global energy industry co-operation.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“Frankly, we are shocked,” Jim Hackett, CEO of BP’s Macondo well partner Anadarko, in a statement blasting BP’s handling of the well.

(Compiled by Ed Stoddard, editing by Todd Eastham)

Timeline: Gulf of Mexico oil spill

April 20, 2010 – Explosion and fire on Transocean Ltd’s drilling rig Deepwater Horizon licensed to BP; 11 workers are killed. The rig was drilling in BP’s Macondo project 42 miles southeast of Venice, Louisiana, beneath about 5,000 feet of water and 13,000 feet under the seabed.

April 22 – The Deepwater Horizon rig, valued at more than $560 million, sinks and a five mile long oil slick is seen.

April 25 – The Coast Guard says remote underwater cameras detect the well is leaking 1,000 barrels of crude oil per day. It approves a plan to have remote underwater vehicles activate a blowout preventer and stop leak. Efforts to activate the blowout preventer fail.

April 28 – The Coast Guard says the flow of oil is 5,000 barrels per day (bpd) (210,000 gallons/795,000 liters) — five times greater than first estimated. A controlled burn is held on the giant oil slick.

April 29 – Obama pledges “every single available resource,” including the U.S. military, to contain the spreading spill.

– Obama also says BP is responsible for the cleanup. Louisiana declares state of emergency due to the threat to the state’s natural resources.

April 30 – An Obama aide says no drilling will be allowed in new areas, as the president had recently proposed, until the cause of the Deepwater Horizon accident is known.

– BP Chairman Tony Hayward says the company takes full responsibility for the spill and would pay all legitimate claims and the cost of the cleanup.

May 2 – Obama visits the Gulf Coast to see cleanup efforts first hand. U.S. officials close areas affected by the spill to fishing for an initial period of 10 days. BP starts to drill a relief well alongside the failed well, a process that could take two to three months to complete.

May 5 – A barge begins towing a 98-ton containment chamber to the site of the leak. BP says one of the three leaks has been shut off by capping a valve, but that would not cut the amount of oil gushing out.

May 6 – Oil washes ashore on the Chandeleur Islands off the Louisiana coast, uninhabited barrier islands that are part of the Breton National Wildlife Refuge.

May 7 – BP tries to lower a containment dome over the leak, but the 100-tonne device was rendered useless by a slush of frozen hydrocarbons that clogged it. — A fishing ban for federal waters off the Gulf is modified, expanded and extended to May 17.

May 9 – BP says it might try to plug the undersea leak by pumping materials such as shredded up tires and golf balls into the well at high pressure, a method called a “junk shot.”

May 11/12 – Executives from BP, Transocean and Halliburton appear at congressional hearings in Washington. Senate Energy committee chairman Jeff Bingaman says that it appeared that the explosion on the rig was due to a “cascade of errors, technical, human and regulatory. The executives blame each other’s companies.

May 14 – Obama slams companies involved in the spill, criticizing them for a “ridiculous spectacle” of publicly trading blame over the accident in his sternest comments yet.

May 16 – BP succeeds in inserting a tube into the leaking well and capturing some oil and gas.

May 18 – The U.S. nearly doubles a no-fishing zone in waters affected by the oil, extending it to 19 percent of U.S. waters in the Gulf.

May 19 – The first heavy oil from the spill sloshes ashore in fragile Louisiana marshlands and part of the mess enters a powerful current that could carry it to Florida and beyond.

May 26 – A “top kill” maneuver starts involving pumping heavy fluids and other material into the well shaft to stifle the flow, then sealing it with cement.

May 28 – Obama tours the Louisiana Gulf coast on his second visit – “I am the president and the buck stops with me,” he said.

– BP CEO Tony Hayward flies over the Gulf. BP says that the cost of the disaster so far is $930 million. May 29 – BP says the complex “top kill” maneuver to plug the well has failed, crushing hopes for a quick end to the largest oil spill in U.S. history already in its 40th day.

May 31 – The U.S. government and BP are warning that the blown-out oil well may not be stopped until August as the company prepares a new attempt to capture leaking crude.

June 1 – BP shares plunge 17 percent in London trading, wiping $23 billion off its market value, on news its latest attempt to plug the well has failed.

(Reporting by Erwin Seba and Ros Krasny: Additional writing and editing by David Cutler, London Editorial Reference Unit)

Obama for more liability on oil company for spills

Washington, May 13 (DPA) US President Barack Obama Wednesday formally threw his weight behind moves in Congress to increase the liability of oil companies for expenses and damages after oil spills.

The proposal would retroactively affect energy company BP for the crude oil well rupture it is now fighting in the Gulf of Mexico, White House officials told reporters.

The ruptured deepwater well is spewing 5,000 barrels of crude a day into the water and threatens a ‘massive and potentially unprecedented environmental disaster,’ said Carol Browner, Obama’s assistant for energy and climate change.

Officials declined to say whether the White House would support lifting liability for damages to $10 billion, as has been proposed in Congress. Current law requires BP to pay the cleanup costs, but limits its liability for other costs like environmental damage to $75 million.

‘We think it’s important to work with Congress in determining what the right number is,’ Browner said.

The bill would also raise the limit on claims against a special oil spill liability fund from $1 billion to $1.5 billion per incident. The $500 million limit on natural resource damage claims would be raised to $750 million.

Testifying before Congress Tuesday, BP America’s chairman Lamar McKay pledged to pay out on all legitimate claims, and said his company had already started reimbursing some people along the Gulf of Mexico for temporary loss of livelihood.

Browner drove home the point, reminding reporters of McKay’s pledge Tuesday of ‘liability, blame, fault, put it over here.’

Most green products seen to make false claims

OTTAWA (Reuters) – Just 2 percent of the growing number of self-proclaimed green products on store shelves make completely legitimate claims on their labels, a report by consulting firm TerraChoice Environmental Marketing said on Wednesday.

The remainder commit “greenwashing” sins, that is they mislead consumers about the environmental benefits of a product or the practices of a company, said TerraChoice, which runs the Canadian government’s eco-labeling program and counts companies as diverse as Canon and Husky Energy among its customers.

The number of green products available in stores surveyed by TerraChoice increased dramatically between 2007 and 2009, the report said, and marketing claims became more creative.

TerraChoice increased its list of greenwashing sins this year to seven from six, adding “worship of false labels” for marketers who mimic third-party environmental certifications on their products to entice consumers.

Other sins in the report include lack of proof, vagueness, irrelevance and outright lying. Products that make environmental claims and are sold in big box stores in the United States, Canada, Britain, and Australia were surveyed.

TerraChoice researchers recorded product details, claims, supporting information, and manufacturers’ offers of more information or support.

They then tested the claims against best practice guidelines provided by the Canadian Competition Bureau, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, the Australian Consumer and Competition Commission, and the standard for environmental labeling set by the International Organization for Standardization.

“The good news is that the growing availability of green products shows that consumers are demanding more environmentally responsible choices and that marketers and manufacturers are listening”, said TerraChoice Chief Executive Scott McDougall.

“The bad news is that TerraChoice’s survey of 2,219 consumer products in Canada and the U.S. shows that 98 percent committed at least one sin of greenwashing and that some marketers are exploiting consumers’ demand for third-party certification by creating fake labels or false suggestions of third-party endorsement.”

(Reporting by Susan Taylor; editing by Peter Galloway)