An engineer charged with obstructing 
justice in connection with the 2010 BP well blowout in the Gulf 
of Mexico was found guilty of one count by a federal jury on Wednesday, 
officials said.
Former BP Plc employee Kurt Mix, 52, had 
faced two counts of obstruction for deleting hundreds of messages he 
exchanged with his supervisor and a contractor in the weeks after the 
spill, but was convicted of only one.
Mix was part of a team that scrambled to 
plug the Macondo well and figure out how much oil was leaking in what 
became the worst offshore environmental disaster in U.S. history.
During the two-week trial, government 
lawyers painted Mix as a loyal member of the drilling team who tried to 
shield BP from blame by deleting text and voice messages that may have 
proven BP lied about how much oil was escaping into the Gulf.
Defense 
attorneys, who do not deny Mix deleted messages, insisted he had no ill 
intent and that the deletions were largely accidental.
Mix, of Katy, Texas, did not take the stand in his own defense. He faces up to 20 years in prison and a fine up to $250,000.
Prosecutor Leo Tsao told the jurors that 
Mix had been warned repeatedly not to delete any information from his 
company iPhone and had notified him that he might be subpoenaed before a
 grand jury investigating BP's response to the spill.
By ignoring those warnings Mix displayed "corrupt intent" Tsao said.
"He deleted the messages even though he had
 been told ... that if he did so, he could be criminally prosecuted," 
Tsao told the jury.
Mix's lawyer, Michael McGovern, countered 
that his client was an innocent man who "told the truth to U.S. 
government scientists all throughout the response effort."
McGovern said it was unreasonable to 
believe Mix "a drilling engineer with no law enforcement training 
whatsoever was specifically thinking about the possibility of a grand 
jury when he deleted messages from his iPhone."
Mix is one of four current or former BP 
employees charged with crimes connected with the well incident. His is 
the first case to be tried.
The Macondo well explosion on April 20, 
2010, killed 11 workers on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig and 
triggered an 87-day oil spill in which millions of gallons of crude 
flowed into the Gulf.
Post can be found at:
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/ExBP-Engineer-Found-Guilty-in-Deepwater-Horizon-Case-2013-12-18/
 
 
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