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"Under the circumstances, I can see why the questions are being raised," Nation said. "But one of the reasons Judge Hughes was chosen to be a lecturer is that he is known as a very ethical person. I would think his being an ethics lecturer for our organization would be a positive, not a negative." Hughes said at a hearing Friday that his work for the geologists poses no conflict and that his other oil and gas investments
-- which include royalties from several mineral rights interests -- are not connected to BP or the other companies involved in the spill lawsuits. Florida attorney Scott Weinstein, whose firm represents charter captains and other companies suffering economic loss from the spill
-- including the owners of the Ripley's Believe It or Not museum in Key West
-- said people might think it's unfair for BP to win its wish with a Texas judge rather than one seated in Louisiana or Florida, where the spill's impacts are greater.
"I would never assume that a judge is biased because of the jurisdiction that he or she sits in," Weinstein said. Still, "if this case winds up in Houston, many of the victims will feel very distant from where that justice is being handed out. It will not make sense to them." Another Florida plaintiffs' attorney, Stuart Smith, was more blunt about the companies' aims. "They would get much more sympathetic judges and perhaps a more sympathetic jury," Smith said. In court papers, BP says that Hughes has the "experience and capacity" to handle the lawsuits and that Houston is the ideal location because most of the defendants' companies have headquarters or major operations there. BP spokesman have repeatedly declined to comment on pending lawsuits. Some attorneys have come up with an unusual assertion: import a New York federal judge with a strong background in environmental lawsuits to Louisiana to preside over the cases. They are recommending that the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation appoint U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin. Scheindlin presided over settlement of some 200 lawsuits brought against BP and other oil companies over a toxic additive called MTBE that contaminated drinking supplies nationally
-- and she has no oil and gas investments, according to her financial disclosure forms. Attorneys with the Weitz & Luxenberg firm in New York said they recommended Scheindlin rather than a Louisiana judge because "most or all of the judges in the (Louisiana) district have a conflict and cannot preside" over the consolidated cases. Scheindlin's deputy said Friday she was out of town and unavailable to comment on whether she would accept such an appointment. The judicial panel meets July 29 in Boise, Idaho, to hear arguments on consolidation of the oil spill cases. Recommendations also have been made for sending the cases to Alabama, Mississippi and South Florida.
[Associated
Press;
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