First Jury Award Against #Fracking? In a landmark legal victory - TopicsExpress



          

First Jury Award Against #Fracking? In a landmark legal victory that centered on fracking, a middle-class north Texas ranching family won nearly $3 million from a big natural gas company on April 23, the Los Angeles Times and other media report. They claimed that Aruba Petroleums drilling caused years of sickness, killed pets and livestock, and forced them out of their home for months. Tuesdays $2.95 million civil verdict by a six-person Dallas jury is thought to be the first of its kind in the nation. Other landowners have sued over drilling and reached settlements, but legal experts think this is the first jury verdict. Robert and Lisa Parr filed suit against Aruba Petroleum Inc. in 2011, contending that its operations near their land had contaminated the air and harmed their health. The Parrs allege that Arubas ongoing drilling operations, not merely fracking, created their problems. The trouble began when so many wells began burrowing into the land near their home—20 within two miles, Lisa Parr said. Robert Parr, a 53-year-old stonemason and cattle rancher, has lived on his 40-acre spread near Decatur, about 40 miles northwest of Fort Worth, since 2001. Lisa, 45, and her daughter Emma, now 11, moved in with him in 2007. The couple married a year later. That was about when the fracturing boom reached that part of Texas, smack atop the lucrative Barnett Shale formation, considered among the largest producible reserves of onshore natural gas in the country. Lisa, a stay-at-home mom, said that in November 2008 she started feeling sick to her stomach and suffered from blinding headaches. She brushed it off as the flu, but she didnt get better. She got worse. Soon, she said, she developed a mysterious rash all over her body and open sores that never healed. Sometimes she had trouble standing and became disoriented. Once the rashes and sores became so severe that emergency room doctors had to pack her body in ice. Her daughter, then in first grade, had horrible nosebleeds as she slept and would awaken soaked in blood. Her husband began to have memory problems. Their calves were born with birth defects, and their pets began to die. By January 2010, the Parrs neighbors also complained of mysterious ailments. That family hired a specialist to test the air and suggested the Parrs do the same. The tests found BTEX—benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene—all colorless but toxic chemicals typically found in petroleum products. In April 2010, an environmental medical specialist ran tests on Lisa and found more than 20 toxic chemicals in her blood. As the person who spent the most time in the house, she showed the most symptoms. From August 2010 to March 2011, the terrified Parrs moved out, living in a back room of Roberts business office in Denton, about 30 miles east. In September 2011, the Parrs sued nine companies involved in the drilling operations, asking for $66 million in damages. Over time, some of the companies were dropped from the suit and others settled for an undisclosed sum, said Brad Gilde, a Houston lawyer who drafted the original lawsuit for the family and helped represent them in the two-week trial. larouchepac/node/30617
Posted on: Sun, 27 Apr 2014 20:40:56 +0000

Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015