Even before the oil spill, ultimate authority on the rig was unclear.
The New York Times
By IAN URBINA
Published: June 5, 2010
NEW ORLEANS — Over six days in May, far from the familiar choreography of Washington hearings, federal investigators grilled workers involved in the Deepwater Horizon disaster in a chilly, sterile conference room at a hotel near the airport here.
Oil in the Gulf of Mexico off East Grand Terre Island near the Louisiana coast on Thursday. Critics say delays in the response to the spill will result in greater environmental and economic damage.
The six-member panel of Coast Guard and Minerals Management Service officials pressed for answers about what occurred on the rig on April 20 before it exploded. They wanted to know who was in charge, and heard conflicting answers.
They pushed for more insight into an argument on the rig that day between a manager for BP, the well’s owner, and one for Transocean, the rig’s owner, and asked Curt R. Kuchta, the rig’s captain, how the crew knew who was in charge. more …








