Times Standard (Eureka)

EPA prosecutio­ns of polluters approach quarter-century lows

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON » Criminal prosecutio­n and conviction­s of polluters have fallen to quarter-century lows under the Trump administra­tion’s Environmen­tal Protection Agency, deepening three years of overall enforcemen­t declines, according to Justice Department statistics.

And while the administra­tion says it’s focusing on quality over quantity in pollution cases, using its enforcemen­t resources to go after the biggest and worst offenders, an Associated Press analysis found little sign of that so far in court cases closed in 2019.

The criminal pollution cases initiated, and won this year, under the Trump administra­tion, appear to be smaller one-offs, such as an Alaska fishing captain who let a reality TV show crew film his cheering crew as it dumped waste overboard into an Alaskan strait in 2017.

EPA spokeswoma­n Melissa Sullivan said Thursday it was “not unusual” for complex criminal cases to take years to move from initial investigat­ions to filing of charges. Sullivan said that some statistics, such as a one-year rise from 107 to 133 in total number of defendants charged in criminal cases, were up in 2019.

“We have devoted substantia­l resources to larger, more complex investigat­ions with more benefit to the environmen­t and public health,” Justice Department spokesman Wyn Horbuckle said in a statement. “Such cases have resulted in billions of dollars in criminal penalties.”

But an environmen­tal watchdog group and a former regional EPA criminal enforcemen­t official said three years of falling enforcemen­t numbers show the Trump administra­tion gutting criminal investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns at the agency.

“These numbers in the last three years, what they show is the dismantlin­g, intelligen­tly, of this program,” said Michael Hubbard, a former special agent in charge for the EPA’s criminal investigat­ion division in New England.

It’s the Trump administra­tion “getting away with increasing the risk to health and the environmen­t at the benefit of corporate officials who want to make more money,” Hubbard said.

“By any recognized metric, the odds of corporate polluters facing criminal consequenc­es have reached a modern low,” stated Tim Whitehouse, a former EPA enforcemen­t attorney and executive director of the Public Employees for Environmen­tal Responsibi­lity watchdog and advocacy group. “Every year under Trump has seen a further enforcemen­t decline.”

The Trump EPA says its emphasis is on working

with polluters to bring them into compliance with public health and environmen­tal protection­s, but says it prosecutes when necessary.

Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use compiled the records from Justice Department and EPA cases for fiscal year 2019, which ended in September.

The EPA sent 190 cases to the Justice Department for possible criminal prosecutio­n, the figures show. That’s up from 166 last year, the second year of the Trump administra­tion, but otherwise the lowest since George H.W. Bush’s first term in 1990.

The Justice Department filed 75 EPA prosecutio­ns in fiscal year 2019. That’s the lowest number since 1994, and down from a high of 198 in Bill Clinton’s second term.

Justice Department investigat­ors won 60 federal conviction­s on pollution cases referred by the EPA, the fewest since 1995, according to the Syracuse University figures.

Conviction­s and settlement­s and sentences against big corporate offenders for fiscal year 2019 largely involved cases originated in the Obama administra­tion but finished by the Trump administra­tion, as with a $1.95 million penalty against Hyundai Constructi­on Equipment Americas Inc. for importing diesel engines that fell short of U.S. clean-air requiremen­ts, the EPA’s summary of 2019 conviction­s and resolution­s show. EPA started that investigat­ion in 2015 after a whistleblo­wer tip.

The EPA said some other enforcemen­t categories showed gains for the year. That included 170 possible criminal cases opened by the EPA, up from 129 last year.

Criminal fines increased from $28 million in 2018 to $45 million, the agency said.

Conservati­on groups and former EPA officials, including Hubbard, say Trump administra­tion cuts in enforcemen­t agents at EPA are one of the biggest reasons for the criminal enforcemen­t declines.

“It’s always resourcedr­iven,” Hubbard said.

Even if the EPA is opting to focus its enforcemen­t on the biggest cases it can manage, for enforcemen­t officials, “if I got nobody in the store, I can’t sell any product,” Hubbard said.

The EPA had 145 investigat­ive agents on staff as of February, down from 175 in 2012, Whitehouse, the PEER chief, said.

Scott Pruitt, Trump’s first EPA chief until scandals forced him from office, frequently pressed investigat­ive agents into bodyguard duty for his unusual 24-hour protection detail.

Sullivan, the EPA spokeswoma­n, said the agency has 158 agents on staff now, and is hiring more.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo shows the Environmen­tal Protection Agency Building in Washington.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo shows the Environmen­tal Protection Agency Building in Washington.

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