Plains All American Pipeline Company and one  of its employees have been indicted in California  on criminal charges stemming from a petroleum  spill last year near Santa Barbara, the company  said on Tuesday. The 46-count indictment includes 10 related to  the release of crude oil or the reporting of the  pipeline rupture, and 36 related to wildlife  losses blamed on the spill, the company said in a  press release.    An estimated 1,700 to 2,500 barrels of crude  petroleum gushed onto San Refugio State Beach and  into the Pacific Ocean, about 20 miles west of  Santa Barbara, when an underground pipeline burst  along a coastal highway on May 19, 2015.    Environmental activists and local officials  have said the rupture ranks as the largest oil  spill to hit the ecologically sensitive coastline  northwest of Los Angeles since a massive 1969  offshore blowout dumped up to 100,000 barrels into  the Santa Barbara Channel.    The criminal charges are unwarranted, the  company said.                       “Plains believes that neither the company  nor any of its employees engaged in any criminal  behavior at any time in connection with this  accident,” the company said.    The spill occurred at the edge of a national  marine sanctuary and state-designated underwater  preserve teeming with whales, dolphins and sea  lions, along with some 60 species of sea birds and  more than 500 species of fish.                        The surrounding waters are also shared by  nearly two dozen offshore oil platforms.    After the spill, federal inspectors determined  that the failed section of the pipeline, owned by  Texas-based Plains, had been badly corroded,  degrading to a thickness of just 1/16th of an inch  (1.6mm).                        (Reporting by Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb;  Editing by Chris Reese and Richard Chang)
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
UPDATE 1-Plains All American Pipeline indicted in Santa Barbara oil spill – Reuters
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