W R Grace - Already The Subject Of Nearly 70,000 Lawsuits Related To Asbestos-related Diseases Is Be
Published by MAC on 2004-10-29Source: Associated Press
Grand jury investigating W.R. Grace & Co. over actions in Libby
W R Grace - already the subject of nearly 70,000 lawsuits related to asbestos-related diseases is beinginvestigated by a US Grand Jury for similar "crimes" committed at its vermiculite mine in Montana.
Associated Press
October 29, 2004
Baltimore - W.R. Grace & Co. and several of its senior-level employees are the targets of a federal grand jury investigation relating to possible violations of environmental laws in Montana, the company announced Friday.
The Columbia, Md.-based company also said it has been named as a target of the grand jury in Montana involving possible obstruction of federal agency proceedings and conspiring with others to violate federal environmental laws. "Grace believes that the investigation is related to its former vermiculite mining and processing activities in Libby, Mont.," the company said in a statement.
Greg Euston, a company spokesman, declined to comment further. The U.S. attorney's office in Billings, Mont., did not immediately return a call seeking comment. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency arrived in Libby in November 1999, after national news reports linked asbestos contamination from a vermiculite mine just outside town to the deaths of nearly 200 people and illness in hundreds more.
"Grace has not been advised of any details about the possible violations of law and is unable to assess at this point whether the results of this investigation will be material to Grace," the company's statement said.
Vermiculite, which was used to make insulation, is a naturally occurring mineral that expands into accordion-shaped pieces when heated and is lightweight and fire-resistant. Grace bought the mining operation -- which once supplied more than 80 percent of the world's vermiculite -- in 1963 and shut it down in 1990. The federal government has said ore from the site is contaminated with asbestos fibers, which were spread through the town as it was mined and processed.
Several current and former senior-level employees associated with the company's construction products business also have been named as targets of the investigation, the company's statement said.
Tony Berget, the mayor of the town of less than 2,900 people in northwestern Montana, said there have been rumors about the federal government taking action for some time. He said residents are "semi-divided" on the matter, with some expressing the view that criminal action is warranted and others who believe Grace should not be treated that harshly because the asbestos occurred naturally in the vermiculite. "It kind of depends on who you're talking to," Berget said.
In April, the company appealed a federal judge's ruling that it must pay the EPA the full $54.5 million for asbestos cleanup in Libby, along with any future costs. The company filed for bankruptcy in 2001.
The EPA filed a lawsuit against Grace in March 2001 to recover cleanup costs in the area, which the EPA has declared a Superfund site. EPA is working to remove asbestos from soil and buildings at the mine site and in town.
Berget said cleanup efforts have been going fairly well in the town, which suffered an economic setback from the contamination. "It seems like we're coming out of that," Berget said. "Things are moving forward."
Company attorneys argued that U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy erred when he ordered Grace to pay the EPA $54.5 million to cover the agency's Libby costs through the end of 2001. They also argued Molloy was in error when he found the company liable for future EPA expenses.
Before Molloy's ruling, W.R. Grace and a subsidiary had agreed to pay nearly $33 million for work done from November 1999 through December 2001, but Grace disputed another $21.5 million in costs.
Grace is a leading global supplier of catalysts and silica products, specialty construction chemicals, building materials, and sealants and coatings.
Shares of W.R. Grace closed up 7 cents at $10.72 in trading Friday on the New York Stock Exchange.