Maritime Workers Pursuing Negligence Lawsuit Against Texas Oil Company


. By Charles Benson

A group of maritime workers operating an oil rig off the Texas coastline have filed a negligence lawsuit against their employer after they were allegedly left burned and injured on the burning facility for 10 hours before rescue.

The suit was filed in Galveston County Court on behalf of four workers, including one who was killed in the incident. The incident involves an April 20 explosion and fire on a drilling platform named Deepwater Horizon that sank roughly 50 miles off the Louisiana shoreline in the Gulf of Mexico, according to the Standard-Times.

Bill Johnson, one of the plaintiffs and a supervisor on the rig, attempted to get his men off of the burning structure and into life rafts, but claims that the company refused to pick up the boat once they were clear, leading many of the survivors to suffer smoke inhalation trauma in addition to other injuries sustained in the initial blast.

Lawyers have named 10 defendants in the lawsuit, including three from Transocean (the owner of the rig), Four from BP (the lessee), Halliburton Energy Systems (whose construction may have failed to prevent the explosion), Sperry-Sun Drilling and Cameron International.


Negligence Legal Help

If you or a loved one have suffered losses in this case, please click the link below and your complaint will be sent to an employment law lawyer who may evaluate your Negligence claim at no cost or obligation.

READ MORE NEGLIGENCE LEGAL NEWS