Law: Battling Crimes Against Nature

When the Exxon Valdez fouled Alaska's waters a year ago, Americans reacted with shock and indignation. Last week it was Exxon's turn to be shocked. U.S. Attorney General Dick Thornburgh announced that the company had been indicted on five criminal counts stemming from the March 1989 oil spill. That action, which reportedly followed the breakdown of a plea bargain that Alaskan officials opposed as too lenient, could cost Exxon $700 million in fines if the company is convicted. Said Thornburgh: "We intend to see that the laws are fully and strictly enforced."

Thornburgh's tough words seemed to signal that the Bush Administration, stung by charges of foot dragging on the environment, was moving to crack down on major polluters like Exxon. The company pronounced itself "disappointed" at the indictments and vowed to fight them in court. The prosecution may yet result in a settlement. But no matter what happens, the case will further complicate a gargantuan legal wrangle that already involves more than 150 civil complaints as well as the separate prosecution of tanker captain Joseph Hazelwood by the state of Alaska.

The Exxon indictment is only the latest example of a growing legal trend. In the past two decades, rising concerns over conservation, pollution and industrial accidents have crystallized into a large body of environmental regulations. "Congress and the states have created thousands of new laws governing the environment," says Washington lawyer Ridgway Hall, "and in each of the past four years the Justice Department has brought increasing numbers of environmental actions." As a result, the 20,000 attorneys who specialize in environmental law have become some of the most sought after professionals in the U.S. "Business is unbelievable," says Chicago lawyer Richard Kissel. "It's the largest explosion of legal work that I've seen."

One of the splashiest growth areas has been criminal environmental law. The Justice Department now has 20 full-time lawyers working on such prosecutions, backed up by U.S. attorneys and FBI agents across the nation, plus 50 criminal investigators at the Environmental Protection Agency. In seven years, the Justice Department's special environmental unit has obtained more than 400 settlements or convictions against individuals and corporations, yielding fines of $26 million and prison sentences totaling 270 years. Among the defendants: Ashland Oil, fined $2.25 million last year for the collapse of a storage tank near Pittsburgh that discharged more than 700,000 gal. of diesel fuel into the Monongahela and Ohio rivers; Texaco, fined $750,000 in 1988 for failing to conduct important safety tests on a California off-shore drilling rig; and Ocean Spray Cranberries, fined $400,000 in 1988 for discharging acidic waste water from its processing plant in Middleboro, Mass.

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ROLF-DIETER HEUER, CERN director general, after the Large Hadron Collider smashed proton beams together for the first time on Tuesday, a step toward experiments about the makeup of the universe

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