Houston Chronicle

One of the two BP supervisor­s on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig has died.

- By Michael Kunzelman and Kevin McGill

BATON ROUGE, La. — Donald Vidrine, one of two BP supervisor­s on the Deepwater Horizon when the drilling rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, has died in Louisiana at age 69.

Robert Habans, an attorney who defended Vidrine against federal manslaught­er charges in the deaths of 11 rig workers, said his former client died Saturday. An obituary posted online by Martin & Castille Funeral Home said Vidrine died at his Baton Rouge home after battling cancer for three years.

The deadly rig explosion off Louisiana unleashed the nation’s worst offshore oil spill, with an estimated 134 million gallons of crude spewing into the Gulf over the course of nearly three months.

Vidrine and fellow rig supervisor Robert Kaluza were indicted in 2012 on manslaught­er charges, but the case eventually fizzled after a judge threw out some of the manslaught­er charges and prosecutor­s elected to drop the rest.

Vidrine pleaded guilty in December 2015 to a misdemeano­r pollution charge and was sentenced to 10 months of probation. A jury acquitted Kaluza after a trial in which Vidrine testified as a government witness.

Justice Department prosecutor­s accused the two BP “well site leaders” of botching a key safety test and disregardi­ng abnormally high pressure readings indicating signs of trouble ahead of BP’s well blowout in April 2010.

Defense attorneys cast them as scapegoats. A series of investigat­ions by industry experts and regulators blamed the deadly disaster on a complex web of mistakes by multiple companies and individual­s.

A prosecutor who questioned Vidrine during Kaluza’s trial asked him if he did something wrong on the night of the explosion.

“I probably didn’t press hard enough,” Vidrine testified, according to a transcript. “I mean, I thought I had, but I probably didn’t press hard enough to get more informatio­n or questioned some of the informatio­n I got.”

Kaluza offered his condolence­s to Vidrine’s family in a statement released Monday by his own lawyer, Shaun Clarke.

“Don was a very experience­d, knowledgea­ble and conscienti­ous deep-water offshore drilling supervisor that passed away far too soon,” Kaluza said.

John Malkovich portrayed Vidrine in “Deepwater Horizon,” an action movie about the disaster that opened last September.

The Justice Department launched a sweeping and costly criminal investigat­ion after the explosion. The government secured a landmark criminal settlement with BP and record civil penalties against the London-based oil giant.

But none of BP’s onshore engineers or top executives faced criminal charges. And charges against four BP employees unraveled before skeptical jurors and judges, resulting in acquittals or plea bargains involving lesser crimes and no prison time.

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