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  • 4
    days
    ago

    One dead, three critical after second Louisiana chemical plant incident in days

    WVLA

    By Tracy Jarrett, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Three people remained in critical condition late Friday after a container rupture at a Louisiana nitrogen plant killed one person and injured several others, police said.

    CF Industries, one of the world's largest nitrogen fertilizer suppliers, confirmed that the accident occurred in a section of their Donaldsonville, La. plant that had been shut down for maintenance activity. The incident occurred at 6 p.m. local time on Friday, the company said.

    According to a press release from the Illinois-based company, the accident was caused by the rupture of a container while workers were off-loading nitrogen from a truck at the plant located about halfway between Baton Rouge and New Orleans.There was no fire or explosion after the incident, according to the company's statement.

    Louisiana State Police said that the scene was secure and there was no outside impact.

    The bursting of the overpressurized nitrogen container was "like a balloon popping," Ascension Parish Sheriff Jeff Wiley said.

    According to federal records, CF Industries acquired $150,000 in fines for safety and health violations after an explosion and fire in 2000 that killed three people at the Donaldsville plant. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration records cited a dozen violations that it said posed "substantial probability" of serious injury or death.

    The container rupture was initially reported as an explosion.

    "There was no explosion, no fire," said plant manager Lou Frey.

    As of Friday night, NBC33 reported that five victims remained in the hospital, and that some of the trauma victims would be transported to Baton Rouge hospitals for further treatment.

    "Our focus is on our number one priority – the health and safety of our employees and the community.  We are deeply saddened by the loss of one of our employees," said Frey. "Our thoughts and prayers are with those affected and their families."

    Friday’s incident occurred just one day after an explosion and fire at Geismar’s Williams Olefins Chemical plant, just 30 miles north of Donaldsonville, that killed two people and left more than 70 others injured.

    "The irony of back-to-back incidents has not escaped us," Wiley said. "We express our sincere condolences to the families of the deceased and injured."

    Related:

    • One person killed in second plant incident in two days in Louisiana parish
    • Full coverage from local NBC News affiliate WDSU
    • One dead, scores injured in Louisiana chemical plant explosion

    39 comments

    Please Review what could have been read in advance: Google: guide to filling nitrogen tanks 1) Filling and Maintenance of Liquid Nitrogen Tanks, Length 16:54 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGMgl-O4M5M 2) Same as 1) Filling and Maintaining Liquid Nitrogen Tanks, Length 16:56 http://www.youtube.com/w …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: explosion, louisiana, nitrogen, donaldsonville
  • Updated
    4
    days
    ago

    One person killed in second plant incident in two days in Louisiana parish

    WVLA-TV

    The CF Industries plant in Donaldsonville, La., is just 30 miles south of Geismar, where a chemical plant explosion killed two people Thursday, June 13.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    A container ruptured at a Louisiana nitrogen plant Friday night, killing one person and injuring at least seven others, the company said — just a day after an explosion at a chemical plant killed two people in the same parish.

    Louisiana State Police told NBC News that three of the injured were in critical condition.

    The plant's owner, CF Industries of Deerfield, Ill., said the incident occurred about 6 p.m. (7 p.m. ET) at its facility in Donaldsonville, roughly halfway between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. "There was no fire or chemical release nor is there any threat or hazard posed to the community," it said.

    Ascension Parish Sheriff Jeff Wiley and plant manager Lou Frey said at a news conference Friday night that the rupture — which initially was reported as an explosion — was caused by workers who overpressurized a nitrogen vessel they were filling from a truck at CF Industries in Donaldsonville.

    "There was no explosion, no fire," Frey said.

    Wiley said it was "like a balloon popping."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Federal records show that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration fined CF Industries, one of the world's biggest nitrogen fertilizer producers, about $150,000 for safety and health violations after a fire and explosion killed three people at the Donaldsonville plant in 2000. It cited 12 violations posing "substantial probability" of serious injury or death. 

    The blast Friday occurred just a day after an explosion and fire at the Williams Olefins chemical plant in Geismar, just 30 miles north of Donaldsonville, killed two people and injured more than 70 others. State Police confirmed the second death Friday.

    "The irony of back-to-back incidents has not escaped us," Wiley, said. "We express our sincere condolences to the families of the deceased and injured."

    Azhar Fateh of NBC News contributed to this report.

    Watch the top videos on NBCNews.com

    This story was originally published on Fri Jun 14, 2013 10:06 PM EDT

    225 comments

    Wow. I wonder how often these companies have OSHA inspections.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: explosion, louisiana, featured, updated, cf-industries, williams-olefins, ascension-parish-la, donaldsonville-la, geismar-la
  • Updated
    6
    days
    ago

    One dead, scores injured in Louisiana chemical plant explosion

    At least one person has been killed and dozens more are hurt, some of them critically, after a massive explosion at a chemical plant in Louisiana. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    An explosion and fire at a Louisiana chemical plant Thursday morning killed one person and injured 73 more, Gov. Bobby Jindal said.

    The explosion took place at Williams Olefins chemical plant in Ascension Parish, between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, state police said. A fire after the explosion was contained and then extinguished, and preliminary tests showed the air was safe.

    Chemicals were being burned off, but there was no immediate threat to the public, said Jared Sadifer, a state police spokesman.

    The fire, fueled by the petrochemical propylene, burned for more than three hours, though government monitors had yet to detect dangerous levels of emissions, Jindal told a news conference near the scene.

    WVLA

    People run away from an explosion and fire at the Williams Chemical Plant in the Ascension Parish town of Geismar, La., on June 13. The photo was taken by a plant employee who did not wish to be identified.

    "Once the investigations are done, once there's a responsible party, they will absolutely be held responsible," Jindal said.

    The cause of the fire was undetermined, Slaton said. Hazardous-materials crews were checking the site, and a controlled fire was burning off the rest of the chemicals.

    The injured were taken to hospitals, and a total of 300 workers were evacuated, Jindal said. Ten people remained in a safe room at the plant, he said.

    The man killed was identified Thursday evening as 29-year-old Zachary C. Green of Hammond, Louisiana, according to the state police.

    Authorities ordered people within a 2-mile radius to remain in their homes, in part because of the smoke, said Lester Kenyon, a spokesman for Ascension Parish.

    The site of the explosion remained an “active scene,” Lester Kenyon, a public information officer for Ascension Parish, told NBC News. He said the parish’s emergency operations center was in “partial activation,” with police, fire, Homeland Security and other emergency officials on the scene.

    Baton Rouge General Medical Center said it had received seven victims, and St. Elizabeth Hospital in Gonzales had eight more. Eleven were taken to Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge, two in critical condition. Some patients were flown from the scene.

    Joseph Chamberlain / Red Stick Storm Spotters

    A plume of smoke rises from an explosion at the Williams Olefins chemical plant on Thursday.

    The plant said the blast happened just after 8:30 a.m. Emergency responders were notified and shut-down valves were closed after the explosion, isolating the unit, according to a release.

    The plant is in the unincorporated, mostly industrial area of Geismar, about 60 miles northwest of New Orleans. The facility produces 1.3 billion pounds of ethylene and 90 million pounds of propylene a year, according to the company’s website.

    Reuters contributed to this report

    This story was originally published on Thu Jun 13, 2013 9:36 PM EDT

    278 comments

    I wonder why these explosions seem to happen only in red states. Could it have anything to do with relaxed regulations? Corporations will regulate themselves if you let them... didn't you know?

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    Explore related topics: plant, louisiana, updated, petrochemical, williams-olefins
  • 6
    days
    ago

    Louisiana town imposes curfew to cut crime

    Clinton, La., police say a recent rash of crimes prompted them to enact a town-wide curfew between the hours of 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. WVLA's Alex Deiro reports.

    By Sophia Rosenbaum, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The chief of police of Clinton, La., says he knows everyone in his small town, and that’s why he wants to keep it safe with an 11 p.m. curfew for all its residents.

    After 13 years with the Clinton police department, Chief Fred Dunn said he knows when crimes are going to occur. And they usually happen in the night hours.

    “The reason why I did the curfews is because of the businesses and home owners,” he said. “My citizens have been telling me that when they go home, they don’t feel safe.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Clinton is a community of about 1,600 people about 35 miles north of Baton Rouge. 

    Dunn implemented the curfew – which lasts until 6 a.m. – on May 30 and he said it's already producing results. The chief said he encountered two men hanging around one of Clinton’s streets a few days ago. Dunn said he was able to tell the men to move on because of the curfew. Later that night, Dunn said he learned the same men robbed a town 18 miles away.

    The chief said residents have praised the new ordinance, but not everyone is a fan.

    “I think that's kind of stripping people's rights to come and go as they please,” Tammy Childress, who works at the only 24/7 gas station in town, told NBC affiliate WVLA.

    “We’re the only store open 24 hours here in Clinton, and we do pretty good business between the hours of 11 and 2,” Childress said.

    But Dunn said no one has come to his office to complain about the curfew.

    “I haven’t had one person come and say they don’t think it’s right,” he said. “I have an open-door policy and anyone can come talk to me.”

    Dunn said he understands some people are travelling to and from work, and those people are not stopped. During their patrol, his officers look for cars stopped in the same area for longer than 30 minutes.

    He plans to keep the curfew in place while he monitors crime rates.

     

    246 comments

    Another idiot with a badge taking away American rights. Who the hell made him god to where he can tell free Americans when they have to be in at night. America is going down the toilet because of people like this that believe they know what is right for everyone else. 'Demolition Man' come to mind a …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: clinton, louisiana, curfew
  • 7
    Jun
    2013
    6:54pm, EDT

    Small plane crashes into three homes, erupts in flames in Louisiana

    NBC33

    Witnesses say the plane clipped a house, then slammed into two others in Baker, La., before bursting into flames.

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A small airplane crashed into three homes near Baton Rouge, La., on Friday, clipping one before slamming into two others and erupting into a ball of flames, officials said. 

    The King Air 200 plunged into a residential area in Baker, La., shortly after 1 p.m. local time, said Baker Police Chief Mike Knaps.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Emergency responders and authorities from multiple agencies were at the scene investigating the cause of the fiery crash, Knaps said.

    The plane’s unidentified pilot was killed in the accident, but there were no injuries on the ground, according to NBC station KSLA in Shreveport. Knaps declined to confirm any fatalities but said the FAA would release more information after finishing a preliminary investigation.

    Witnesses say they saw the aircraft clip one house and strike two others before ramming into a nearby tree, scattering jet fuel around the area, Knaps said.

    “It hit the tree and spun 180 degrees,” Knaps said. “The plane looks like it went through a blender. You can see one piece of the wing and part of the tail. That’s about it.”

    Authorities found the plane and the two damaged residences engulfed in flames and plumes of smoke when they arrived at the scene minutes after the crash, according to officials.

    More coverage from NBC affiliate WVLA News33 in Baton Rouge

    One of the  homes suffered damage to about 75 percent of the structure, Knaps said. Fortunately, no one was in the hardest-hit homes at the time of the crash, although at least one person was inside the house clipped by the plane, according to officials.

     

    33 comments

    I don't think I would call a Kingair 200 "small"

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    Explore related topics: flames, plane, louisiana, plane-crash, baton-rouge, ksla
  • 21
    May
    2013
    1:18pm, EDT

    'Upsets': Chemical releases disrupt lives but rarely result in punishment

    Kristen Lombardi /Center for Public Integrity

    The 2,400-acre ExxonMobil petrochemical complex in Baton Rouge, La.

    By Kristen Lombardi and Andrea Fuller, Center for Public Integrity

    BATON ROUGE, La. — Shirley Bowman noticed the smell after 8 a.m. on June 14, 2012, her 61st birthday. In Baton Rouge, where the petrochemical industry dominates the landscape, foul odors resembling burnt rubber or propane are perennial. But this odor, caustic and potent, seemed especially foul — “like some sort of chemical,” she recalls.


    Follow @openchannelblog

    Bowman found her daughter crying over a migraine. Her neighbors experienced headaches, dizziness, nausea. One family reported a toddler son coughing up phlegm; another, an elderly father collapsing on the floor. She soon suspected the cause: A leak of “steam-cracked” naphtha, a liquid mixture of volatile petrochemicals, occurring at the ExxonMobil Baton Rouge petrochemical complex a half mile away.

    Four hours earlier, Exxon operators detected an odor in the East area tank field and discovered a “bleeder” valve on Tank 801 dripping naphtha into a sewer. The leaky valve dumped 411 barrels into the underground system, company records filed with the state show. The liquid traveled a mile before pouring into a separator pit, vaporizing along the way, and releasing tens of thousands of pounds of benzene and other toxic chemicals into the air.

    What happened that day in Baton Rouge is one thread of a larger story about the often toxic, sometimes invisible releases emanating from oil refineries, chemical plants and other industrial facilities along the chemical corridor of Louisiana and Texas. Those unplanned emissions — known in regulatory parlance as “upsets” — are occurring more often than industry admits or government knows, according to more than 50 interviews with regulators, activists, plant representatives, workers and residents, and an analysis of tens of thousands of records by the Center for Public Integrity.


    For many communities, these upsets have evolved into an unseen menace: They disrupt lives, yet the companies are rarely punished. In Texas, where activists have clamored for relief, state officials say enforcement efforts helped reduce the number of incidents by 6 percent; Louisiana officials cite an even steeper decrease, 41 percent since 2008.

    Yet those numbers tell only part of the story. The mass of pollution emitted in Texas, the nation’s refinery hub, hit a five-year peak in 2011, the Center found -- so even as the number of reported events dipped, the amount of pollution increased. And, experts say upset releases are consistently underreported.

    This hidden pollution can produce harm. Over the last five years, records show, upset events have yielded almost 4 million pounds of toxic air pollutants in Texas alone — the 189 chemicals deemed so harmful to health Congress sought to bring emissions under control two decades ago. That’s 2 percent of all upset emissions.

    “These are a major public health threat,” acknowledges Larry Soward, a former commissioner at the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, who served on its board from 2003 to 2009.

    “Upsets” occur when equipment breaks down or production units are shut off, restarted and repaired; or, as regulations state, when there’s an “unavoidable” accident.

    Under law, plant managers must notify officials when accidental releases exceed certain hazardous air thresholds, known in regulations as “reportable quantities.” In Baton Rouge, Exxon did this. Yet the figures it reported kept escalating.

    At 5:10 a.m. that day, Exxon supervisors told the state the benzene leak would likely exceed the 10 pound reportable quantity. Within hours, they classified it “level 2,” barricading areas and monitoring the air. According to a call log, company officials found benzene levels “so high” bordering a rail yard, they advised the railroad “not to let anyone go through that area.” By 12:30 p.m., the company was testing 400 workers for exposure to the cancer-causing chemical.

    The following day, Exxon reported that benzene emissions totaled 1,364 pounds during the leak’s first three hours. By June 20, it increased the number to 28,688 pounds. In its final report filed 60 days later, Exxon revealed the benzene total was actually 31,022 pounds. State regulators later deemed the leak “preventable,” issuing an enforcement order contending that Exxon “failed to provide notification of a change in the nature and rate of the discharge.”

    The company, saying it accurately reported the release, is appealing the state’s order. While plant supervisors acknowledge the “large” leak, they say it didn’t threaten residents. Tests along the fence line showed “no community impact,” their records state; air sampling by state regulators back up the company.

    “It was a large number. We regret that number,” says Derek Reese, Exxon Baton Rouge’s environmental manager. “But we believe we did an appropriate response to mitigate the impact.”

    That’s little consolation to residents, like Bowman. “Everything seems to stop at that magical gate,” she says, motioning to Exxon’s South Gate adjoining her neighborhood. “But if you live here, you know. Chemicals are let out on you.”

    Upsets plague plants, communities
    The hazards extend far beyond Baton Rouge. In Texas and Louisiana, the vast number of plastics, power and gas plants provide an on-the-ground case study of a national problem.

    Data collected by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, TCEQ, offer a rare window into this pollution peril; the state agency requires companies to report events online within 24 hours, as well as annual totals.

    From 2007-11, just over 2,400 of the largest facilities across Texas spewed almost 180 million pounds of upset emissions, contamination on top of the 14.8 billion pounds of routine air emissions in that time. Nearly half the facilities experienced at least one event in that period, pumping out sulfur dioxide and other smog-inducing pollutants. The greatest concentration came in 2011: 58.1 million pounds.

    The 20 biggest offenders — oil refineries and natural-gas plants in Kermit, Beaumont, Corpus Christi and beyond — account for more than half of all such emissions in Texas.

    “It’s a lot of stuff,” says Neil Carman, a former state air pollution inspector who investigated upset events. Carman now heads the air program for the Sierra Club’s Lone Star chapter, which has filed several citizen lawsuits targeting illegal emissions.

    Industry portrays the discharges as an inevitable — and overwhelmingly harmless — byproduct of manufacturing. Regulators have encouraged this casual attitude, some experts say.

    For decades, critics say, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and state regulatory agencies have effectively ignored the emissions. Officials don’t count upset events in facility permits and compliance records, notes Kelly Haragan of the environmental law clinic at the University of Texas-Austin, because they “aren’t supposed to happen.” In August 2004, Haragan penned a 215-page report showing how easily facilities could get away with releasing more pollution than allowed by the federal Clean Air Act.

    At times, she says, “It’s like having a whole other plant no one is even acknowledging.”

    These incidents skirt normal pollution controls, instead venting into the atmosphere through flares and leaks. Plants can have scores of events a year, giving off a constant cloud of invisible pollution.

    “A big dose of toxins are coming out of these facilities,” says Soward, the former TCEQ official, who now works for Air Alliance Houston, “and into fence line communities.”

    The health effects are harder to measure; little research exists on the threat to residents. But recently, Dr. Mark D’Andrea, an oncologist at the University of Texas Cancer Center, began tracking 4,000 residents exposed to the poster child of all upsets — the “40-day Release” at the BP refinery, in Texas City, which belched 514,795 pounds of benzene and 20 other pollutants throughout the spring of 2010. Earlier this year, D’Andrea unveiled preliminary data showing the residents have “significantly higher” white-blood cell and platelet counts than their Houston counterparts. The data suggests BP’s release may have increased their risk of developing such cancers as leukemia, the doctor says.

    In a statement, BP says it does “not believe any negative health impacts resulted from” its 40-day release. “To our knowledge, the University Cancer Centers’ pilot study does not support a claim for any plaintiff alleging injury from that flaring and has no relevance to those claims,” the company wrote, referring to pending litigation filed by 47,830 residents and workers against BP alleging health ailments caused by the release. D’Andrea has not been hired as an expert witness for either side in the case, but has testified in pre-trial discovery.

    ‘An invisible poison’
    In Baytown, Texas, about 250 miles from Baton Rouge, ExxonMobil operates the nation’s largest petrochemical complex, replete with an oil refinery and two chemical plants. The mass of stacks, tanks and pipes spans 3,400 acres on Houston’s ship channel, looming over blue-collar neighborhoods nestled in its shadow. In Harris County, a manufacturer’s Mecca, Exxon’s refinery tops all 155 upset emitters, spitting out 3.8 million pounds’ worth from 2007 to 2011. 

    Here, residents describe fiery flares that have rattled windows, belched black smoke and cast a sooty substance on the ground. At times, they’ve unleashed a thunderous boom, “like an Air Force fighter jet,” says Shae Cotter, who lived across a highway from the complex. He remembers the sound jolting him from sleep at 3 a.m. Occasionally, he videotaped flares aglow like celestial globes, flames ballooning toward his home.

    Read the full report by The Center for Public Integrity

    The Exxon complex ranks among the state’s biggest upset emitters involving carcinogens and noxious gases. Top chemicals include hydrochloric acid, 1,3-butadiene and benzene, toxins that can trigger skin irritations, respiratory problems, neurological disorders and gastro-intestinal diseases.

    In a statement, ExxonMobil Baytown says it has worked with regulators to “greatly” reduce emissions. “We are proud of the overall reductions we have made,” the company wrote. Since 2000, Exxon notes, it has decreased total emissions at the Baytown complex by more than 50 percent. The company declined to provide similar statistics for the facility’s upset emissions. “ExxonMobil is committed to continuously improving the environmental performance of our Baytown Complex,” the company said.

    Since December, the Baytown facility has set off a wave of upset emissions. One, triggered by a tripped compressor in the refinery’s Booster Station Four, pumped out 114,000 pounds of sulfur dioxide in 18 hours. It was the 20th upset recorded there by company reports.

    “Exxon is emitting all of these day after day,” says resident Marilyn Kingman. “Anybody who lives in the Baytown area is suffering.”

    Smells drive some homeowners inside. Stuart Halpryn, whose house sits a quarter mile from Exxon, says he tried to adapt to the odors, along with the runny noses and allergy-like symptoms that he believes the odors caused. That changed in February 2009, when he says a valve leak at the refinery sickened his family. His four children suffered from such severe indigestion, he says, they missed school for a week. Later, he learned from reading Exxon’s report the leak had unleashed 17,432 pounds of six different toxic chemicals.

    “Nobody really understands what’s being dumped on them,” says Halpryn, who moved his family to Kentucky in June. “It’s an invisible kind of poison that’s being rained down.”

    The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit, independent investigative news outlet. For more of its stories on this topic go to publicintegrity.org. 

    More from Open Channel:

    • DOJ's secret subpoena of AP phone records broader than initially revealed
    • Fracking boom triggers water battle in North Dakota
    • Witness Protection Program audit finds gaps in tracking suspected terrorists

    Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook 

    58 comments

    big oil and chemical companies don't care as long as the profits are obscene...and politicians don't care as long as the kickbacks keep coming....face it...the usa public doesn't matter

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  • Updated
    25
    Apr
    2013
    8:22am, EDT

    Twister leaves two-mile path of damage near New Orleans

    TODAY's Al Roker gets us up to the minute with the latest weather updates, including a mulch fire in Prince George's County, Md., and damage to homes near New Orleans after two tornadoes touched down there Wednesday.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    A tornado tore through the New Orleans area Wednesday, damaging homes and ripping trees out of the ground, as intense storms lashed the area with rain.

    The National Weather Service (NWS) said the twister was one of two that caused damage in Kenner, Louisiana, near New Orleans International Airport.

    No injuries were reported, according to the Times Picayune’s website NOLA.com, but about 5,000 Entergy Louisiana customers lost electrical service.

    The first tornado's path stretched two miles and 75 yards wide and packed winds of 75 mph. The second's path was a half a mile long and 50 yards wide and recorded winds of 90 mph.

    Residents posted pictures on social media of torn roofs, fallen trees and flash floods caused by torrential rains, weather.com reported.

    PRELIMINARY INFO: Survey team found 2nd tornado in Kenner, EF0 Wind 75 mph @ Veterans & Transcontental. 2 miles long & 75 yards wide

    — NWSNewOrleans (@NWSNewOrleans) April 24, 2013

    Witness Adine Humphrey told NOLA.com: "The wind picked up. The rain picked up. You kind of heard that noise like a train a little bit. I looked next door. I seen the debris going in circles. I ripped my mother inside."

    The NWS said the airport tower lost power during the storms, which struck during the middle of the day on Wednesday.

    Uptown #NOLA flooding. Photo credit: Arynne Fannin cc @margaretorr #lawx twitter.com/Conductor222/s�¢ï¿½�¦

    — Caroline Carson (@Conductor222) April 24, 2013

     

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 25, 2013 4:21 AM EDT

    61 comments

    At 90 mph sounds like an F1. just a breezy day here in Kansas :). These things have been happening for a very long time, with instant connectivity the media makes it sound like this is all new. Years ago this would never have made national news.

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  • 27
    Mar
    2013
    6:54am, EDT

    On-the-lam killer nabbed near LA's Skid Row after 1,800-mile trip

    AP

    Keana Barnes, who was serving a 25-year sentence for manslaughter, escaped from a Louisiana prison but has now been recaptured in Los Angeles. This photo was released Jan. 4, 2013, by the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections.

    By Samantha Tata, NBCLosAngeles.com

    LOS ANGELES -- A nationwide search for a convicted killer ended in Los Angeles when police spotted a fugitive who has been on the lam for months after escaping prison in Louisiana, according to the U.S. Marshals Service.

    Keana Barnes broke out of the Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women in January. She was arrested on Monday near Skid Row, some 1,800 miles west of the prison where she was being held.

    The U.S. Marshals Service added Barnes to the agency's 15 Most Wanted list 11 days before she was captured. Barnes initially refused to give the officers her name, but ultimately confessed her identity.

    Prison officials discovered the window was broken in Barnes’ cell. She was serving a 25-year sentence after being convicted of two counts of manslaughter in 2002, U.S. Marshals officials said.

    More news from NBCLosAngeles.com

    Authorities said Barnes’ “extremely violent criminal history” dates back to 1999. She has prior convictions of aggravated assault, battery, theft and manslaughter.

    In 2002, Barnes fatally stabbed one victim 17 times, U.S. Marshals officials said.

    While awaiting the outcome of her murder trial, Barnes allegedly shot and killed a man while he slept in 2003, authorities said.

    225 comments

    "near LA´s skid row" - that could be anywhere in LA!

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  • Updated
    13
    Mar
    2013
    2:39pm, EDT

    Fire rages after tugboat, barge strike Louisiana gas pipeline

    Gerald Herbert / AP

    A fire still burns on Wednesday after a tugboat and barge hit a gas pipeline Tuesday evening in Perot Bay in Lafourche Parish, La., about 30 miles south of New Orleans.

    By Kevin McGill, The Associated Press

    NEW ORLEANS -- A gas pipeline burned Wednesday morning in a bayou south of New Orleans hours after it was hit by a tug boat pushing an oil barge, but authorities say no oil appeared to be leaking from the barge.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Coast Guard Cmdr. Russ Bowen said it appears the barge is intact and none of its cargo of crude oil was leaking, though there were patches of oily sheen in the area. The Coast Guard was investigating whether those sheens were related to the accident.

    A plume of smoke rising from the site could be seen from downtown New Orleans Wednesday morning. Bowen said authorities planned to allow the gas to burn itself out before approaching for a closer inspection. The area is thinly populated and no evacuations had been ordered.

    Four people aboard the 47-foot tug Shanon E. Settoon were injured, one severely, in the collision Tuesday at about 6 p.m. CDT. Water at the collision site is very shallow.

    The 19-mile section of pipeline was carrying liquefied petroleum gas. It had been isolated from other conduits by its owner, San Ramon, Calif.-based Chevron, so only what was inside could burn.

    "All crew members were able to exit the tug; the captain reportedly suffered second to third-degree degree burns," the Coast Guard said in a news release early Wednesday.

    The barge was holding 92,000 gallons of crude oil, the Coast Guard said. The tug boat had 1,000 gallons of diesel fuel. Settoon Towing of Pierre Part, La., lists the tug among its vessels on its website.

    Bowen said it was believed that the diesel fuel aboard the tug had burned up.

    WWL-TV reported that the tug's captain was transferred to the burn center at Baton Rouge General Hospital.

    It was not immediately known who owns the 154-foot oil barge.

    The area is along the northern reaches of Barataria Bay, which was heavily affected by oil from the BP spill in 2010. It is mostly small communities where people often make their living from the sea, either working in the oil and gas industry or as fishermen.

    The 92,000 gallons the Coast Guard says was being carried by the barge is a fraction of the millions of gallons that spewed into the Gulf of Mexico during the 2010 spill.

    The region where the fire was burning is crisscrossed by pipelines and wellheads are a common sight in the shallow waters of the bayou and bay shoreline.

    Bowen said it's not unusual for tugs to operate in shallow areas. "That's just the nature of coastal Louisiana," he said.

    Beyond that, he said he couldn't comment on why the accident happened.

    Bayou Perot was the scene of an explosion and fire on a specialized oil rig in December 2010 in which three men were injured. The explosion happened while the men were welding and there was no pollution, the Coast Guard reported.

    Related:

    BP to pay $4.5 billion, plead guilty to manslaughter in spill

    3,675 gas wells OK'd by US -- and environmentalists

    This story was originally published on Wed Mar 13, 2013 5:19 AM EDT

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    47 comments

    I'm a bit horrified by the lack of empathy, selfishness, and ugliness of most of the comments. Really? "The tug driver must have been hand picked by Nobama." The tug driver has burns over 75% of his body and is fighting for his life.

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    Explore related topics: new-orleans, chevron, natural-gas, fire, pipeline, gas, louisiana, featured, updated, bayou-perot
  • 24
    Feb
    2013
    12:57pm, EST

    Hot sauce king, Tabasco company CEO Paul McIlhenny, dies at age 68

    By Jane Sutton, Reuters

    Paul McIlhenny, the chairman and chief executive of the Louisiana company that makes Tabasco brand pepper sauce, has died at age 68, the McIlhenny Co said on Sunday.

    McIlhenny died on Saturday, the family-owned company said in a news release that described him as "a true bon vivant" whose passions included hunting, fishing, wine-tasting and game cooking.

    He was a sixth-generation member of the McIlhenny family to live on Avery Island in the southern Louisiana bayou, and a fourth-generation member to produce pepper sauces sold worldwide under the Tabasco brand.

    The McIlhenny company was founded in 1868 on Avery Island. It supplies hot sauce to the U.S. presidential plane Air Force One and to Britain's royal family, the Times-Picayune newspaper said on its website.

    Paul McIlhenny joined the company in 1967 and directly oversaw the production of its sauces for 13 years, expanding both its line of spicy sauces and the array of aprons, neckties and other merchandise bearing the familiar red-and-green Tabasco logo.

    He spent much of his time in New Orleans and in 2006 he reigned as Rex, the first King of Carnival during Mardi Gras celebrations after the city was devastated by Hurricane Katrina.

    "All of McIlhenny Company and the McIlhenny and Avery families are deeply saddened by this news," said Tony Simmons, president of McIlhenny Co and fifth-generation McIlhenny family member. "We will clearly miss Paul's devoted leadership but will more sorely feel the loss of his acumen, his charm and his irrepressible sense of humor."

    134 comments

    RIP. Tabasco sauce on scrambled eggs is the best!

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    Explore related topics: ceo, louisiana, tabasco, mcilhenny
  • 27
    Jan
    2013
    2:59am, EST

    Gunman kills officer, wounds two deputies after fatal trailer fire

    By Gil Aegerter, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A police officer was killed and two deputies critically wounded when a man opened fire on them in southern Louisiana, authorities said Saturday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    State Police Trooper Stephen Hammons told NBC station WDSU of New Orleans that a Chitimacha tribal officer and two St. Mary's Parish sheriff's deputies were responding to a fire at a trailer in Charenton when the man began shooting.

    Wilbert Thibodeaux was arrested and was being treated for a gunshot wound, the Baton Rouge Advocate reported. It was unclear if he had been charged.


     

    The burned body of a man was found in the mobile home after the fire was extinguished, the Advocate reported.

    The Advocate gave this account of the shooting, citing a State Police news release and a phone interview with Hammons:

    After the report of the fire and of a man armed with a shotgun, the Chitimacha officer found Thibodeaux walking down the road. Thibodeaux opened fire and the Chitimacha officer died on the scene. The deputies then arrived and were fired on.

    Thibodeaux was wounded in a shootout, but it was unclear who shot him.

    Fire consumed the trailer, a shed and two vehicles, and after the blaze was put out, authorities found the body of Eddie Lyons, 78.

    Charenton is about 115 miles west of New Orleans.

    135 comments

    Your anit-gun rhetoric is really repetitive and annoying. Almost as annoying as having to watch 20 school children get buried. Really tedious, I mean 3 or 4 would have been enough.

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    Explore related topics: police, louisiana, crime
  • 10
    Jan
    2013
    7:07pm, EST

    Louisiana governor declares state of emergency as storm drenches region

    Abby Tabor / AP

    Vehicles drive through floodwaters on Canal Boulevard in Thibodaux, La., Jan. 10. Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a statewide emergency Thursday after storms rolled across Louisiana, dumping huge amounts of rain and flooding some areas. The declaration lets Louisiana use state money to help local governments recover from storm damage.

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency Thursday, as the National Weather Service issued multiple flood warnings after severe weather drenched the state's southeast region.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In addition to flooding concerns, the National Weather Service confirmed at least three tornadoes touched down in Louisiana Thursday morning: one near New Iberia, another in Breaux Bridge and a third near Plaquemine.

    "The state anticipates additional parishes will declare states of emergency and that assistance may be needed to assist the parishes in their response to this continuing threat," the declaration read.

    The state's Acadia, Avoyelles, Concordia, East Carroll, Evangeline, Livingston and St. Landry parishes also made emergency declarations, which will help prepare funds and resources for responding to flooding from the storms, WDSU reported.


    Widespread street flooding was reported in Ascension, St. James, St. John and Livingston parishes, according to WDSU.

    The Louisiana National Guard is on standby and has sent high-water trucks to some areas, according to WDSU.

    The region won't be drying out anytime soon. Another storm system is expected to bring heavy rainfall Saturday night through Monday, according to the National Weather Service.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    7 comments

    Not everyone who lives in Louisiana is a redneck. Are all people who live near you yankees? It's amazing how someone so quickly places people into a sterotype. Don't worry we would'nt dream of asking for your help. We people down here in the south are not spoiled folks who can't handle a little rain …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, louisiana, storms, state-of-emergency, severe-weather, bobby-jindal
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