Investigations Desk
The Paria Fuel Trading Company Limited should be investigated for corporate manslaughter. It is one of the recommendations from the 380-page report produced by Jerome Lynch, KC, chairman of the Commission of Enquiry (CoE) into the Paria pipeline tragedy which led to the deaths of four divers on February 25, 2022.
It echoes the call made by attorney Prakash Ramadhar, who represented the bereaved families, at the conclusion of the CoE. “So I move against my inner instincts that there should be criminal prosecution recommended in this matter,” Ramadhar had said in his closing argument.
The divers–Rishi Nagassar, Kazim Ali Jr, Fyzal Kurban, Yusuf Henry, and Christopher Boodram, employees of the Land and Marine Construction Services Ltd (LMCS), were sucked into a 30-inch underwater pipeline after a differential pressure (Delta P) event occurred while they were doing maintenance work at Berth No 6 in the Pointe-a-Pierre harbour.
During the CoE, Paria had claimed it did not know the divers were in the pipe between 2.45 pm and 5.30 pm on the day and only became aware when Boodram emerged. Paria did not allow a rescue mission for the other divers and Boodram was the sole survivor in an ordeal which lasted five days
The deaths and the public furore which followed led to the Commission of Enquiry which cost the country $15.5 million.
The Sunday Guardian understands that despite Lynch’s recommendation that Paria be investigated for corporate manslaughter, the crime of corporate manslaughter is not codified in T&T’s legislation. However, such a charge is possible in common law.
“Common law is not old law, it’s laws that the Commonwealth adopted and can implement in the respective jurisdictions under existing laws,” a source said.
As for LMCS, Lynch’s recommended that the company implement stringent measures to ensure all divers are of a certain accreditation. Furthermore, there should be laws that mandate companies have those measures in place for all their workers.
That recommendation echoes a call made by Gilbert Peterson, SC, Paria’s attorney, during his closing statement.
In his final press conference, Lynch said it remains factual that in an industry inherently dangerous in its operations, there are no compulsory standards in this country.
The CoE report, which was submitted to President Christine Kangaloo on November 30, has been sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions, Roger Gaspard, for his consideration.
“The report has far-reaching consequences so as a result it was decided that the report be sent to the DPP,” a Cabinet source told the Sunday Guardian.
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley has given his commitment to lay the complete report in Parliament after it is reviewed by Cabinet.
The Sunday Guardian understands that the report will also be part of a discussion by the Joint Select Committee on Land and Physical Infrastructure whose members are Saddam Hosein, Kennedy Richards, Lisa Morris-Julian and Symon de Nobriga.
Lynch had said the tragedy was “no act of God” and that everyone should ensure it never recurs.
“We understand there is a desire not to accept liability lest that should incur financial responsibility in some civil suit at some later stage, but these men, as I said, already did not die by accident. What they and their families are left with is the posturing of the potential parties, perhaps challenging the very findings of this inquiry before they start fighting with each other, each insisting that they got nothing wrong,” Lynch had said.
“This report pulls no punches. It is our honest appraisal of the facts as we see them. There may be those who will be disappointed. There may be those who will be outraged and those who will wish to challenge it,” he said.
The board members of Paria are Newman George (chair), Fayad Ali, Avie Chadee, Peter Clarke, Eustace Nancis and Reza Salim.
How Paria defended itself through the tragedy
On May 10, Paria issued a press statement that it welcomed the Government’s decision to establish a CoE and it looked forward to “presenting the facts on the incident” which took place at its facility in Pointe-a-Pierre.
“With respect to the media release dated March 07, 2022, Paria also takes this opportunity to clarify and reinforce that the decision to prevent further entry by LMCS divers into the 30” pipeline during the search and rescue exercise on Friday 25 February 2022 was made by Paria and supported by the T&T Coast guard and other external experts. OSH is currently conducting its own investigation into the incident and Paria is fully committed to making available all relevant documents and information to the investigating team, and we look forward to the completion of the investigation,” it said.
During the CoE, both Paria and Heritage Petroleum wrote to Lynch accusing its commissioners of displaying “apparent bias.”
For his part, Lynch “wholeheartedly” rejected the allegations.
“Both suggested they have been unfairly treated and that the commissioners, I suspect, primarily me, have displayed an apparent bias and that we should be recused,” Lynch had said.
During the CoE, Paria’s employees came under scrutiny.
Michael Wei, technical and maintenance manager at Paria, said the company did not want to risk more lives and feared any would-be rescuers might suffer a second Delta P event.
Collin Piper, terminal operations manager at Paria said he thought the unofficial would-be rescuers were too “emotionally charged” to enter the pipeline.
“My assessment of that was that it would not be a prudent decision to make with a group who are emotionally charged, who have never done anything like this before, who have no training to do anything like this,” he had said.
At the close of the CoE, Paria’s attorney Gilbert Peterson, SC, said Paria had no legal responsibility to rescue the five divers and that the company’s only obligation was to support emergency and action rescue plans LMCS had for its employees.
Peterson had argued that Paria’s actions were wholly reasonable, given its operating conditions following the incident and that the resources available and the safety potential for proposed rescuers were live issues for Paria’s decision-makers.
He had said that Paria’s knowledge of the pipeline condition was inadequate, unaware of the location and state of an inflatable plug and the divers.
Peterson said at the time Paria had engaged multiple specialist service providers: Eastern Emergency Response Services, Mitchell’s Professional Diving Services Company, HHSL Safety Systems Ltd, Hull Support Services Ltd, Subsea Global Solutions and Offshore Technology Solutions Ltd as well as assistance from Heritage Petroleum personnel and the Coast Guard but none of the entities contacted by Paria wanted to enter the pipeline–the Coast Guard advised that its divers did not possess the training or specialist equipment and Eastern’s confined space technicians could not undertake a diving rescue, and Mitchell’s found the risk too high.
Peterson had described Ramadhar’s recommendation for criminal prosecutions of Paria personnel as outrageous.
“I wish Mr Ramadhar was here because I wanted to describe his invitation to the commission for criminal proceedings against Paria and its personnel as outrageous as the evidence did not support this. It may grab a good headline. It may grab the newspaper front page, but on the evidence: it cannot be supported. There is no evidence here of anything close to criminal conduct,” Peterson had said.
Corporate manslaughter
The law, which came into effect in the UK in April 2008, makes Section 1 of the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act an offence where a government entity or company is found to have caused the death of someone through negligence.
According to the Crown Prosecution Service, the UK’s DPP office, corporate manslaughter is an offence that was “created to overcome the limitations of the common law offence of gross negligence manslaughter as applied to companies and other incorporated bodies. Under the common law, in order for a company to be guilty of the offence it was necessary for a senior individual who could be said to embody the company (also known as “the controlling mind”) to be guilty of gross negligence.”
Under the new law, the controlling minds, the board, the company, or the government agency can be held criminally liable.
The UK’s sentencing review committee prescribed that companies found guilty face a fine between $1.5 million (TT) to $171.8 million (TT) or a percentage of the company’s worth, depending on its financials.