Published: May 02, 2010
Louisiana Fisherman Asks for Emergency Relief from a Federal Court to Stop BP from Forcing Volunteers to Enter Into One-Sided Master Charter of Agreements
NEW ORLEANS, May 2 /PRNewswire/ -- This Sunday afternoon in New Orleans, Louisiana, commercial fisherman George Barasich stepped forward asking for emergency relief from a federal court to stop British Petroleum, plc ("BP") from forcing the volunteer corps of oil-spill responders to enter into onerous and one-sided "Master Charter Agreements" ("MCA") which will seriously compromise the existing and future rights and potential legal claims of these volunteers. Barasich is President of the Commercial Fisherman's Association, Inc.
Copies of the MCA drafted by BP's lawyers and Barasich's petition for Temporary Restraining order are available by contacting terriea@moore-pr.com or (850) 528-7668.
"To be clear, the very people whose livelihood and culture have been put at great risk of destruction, such as Barasich and the men and women he represents, are being dictated by BP on the terms by which they will be 'allowed' to volunteer to protect the fishing grounds and oyster beds of Louisiana," said Stuart Smith, attorney, Smith Stag LLC of New Orleans, who is representing a group of Gulf Coast attorneys known as the Gulf Oil Disaster Recovery Group. "That BP would attempt to force this one-sided and egregious Agreement on volunteers in the midst of this environmental disaster shocks the conscience."
Attorney Smith said especially egregious provisions within the Agreement are:
-- BP, which is mandated to take 100 percent responsibility for the oil
clean-up, is demanding that the volunteers INDEMNIFY IT for any
accidents that might occur from the volunteers' efforts (Art. 13(F));
-- BP demands that the volunteers WAIVE their First Amendment
constitutional free speech rights about the volunteer's participation in
the clean-up efforts of the disaster; for example, if a commercial
fisherman signed this agreement he or she could not then speak to anyone
about the disaster or clean-up efforts until BP first "approves" of what
the volunteer wants to say (Art. 22);
-- BP demands a FREE-RIDE on the volunteers' insurance policies so that if
there is damage to a volunteer's vessel or other injuries, such as to a
crew member, BP will be an "additional insured" and the financial
responsibility for the damage will rest on the volunteer's insurance
carrier, NOT BP; quite obviously, the volunteers paid good money for
this insurance and BP should not be allowed after-the-fact to worm their
way into that contract so that it can attempt to avoid further legal
responsibility for the very volunteers it is asking for aid and
assistance; (Art. 13(A)); and
-- BP demands 30 days of notice before any volunteer is allowed to pursue
legal claims against BP, and there are no exceptions made for
emergencies (Art. 13(I) [sic (G]).
Barasich's petition was presented this afternoon to a Judge for the Eastern District of Louisiana, as well as to counsel for BP.
About:
Stuart H. Smith of the law firm Smith Stag, LLC, New Orleans, Louisiana has assembled a working group of lawyers from Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida to prosecute claims for those who have been affected by BP's Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Commercial fishermen and shrimpers have filed a class-action lawsuit against BP and owners of the oil rig for economic losses stemming from the disaster. The lawsuit was filed late on Wednesday, April 28 in U.S. District Court in New Orleans.
SOURCE Smith Stag, LLC
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