Ship's Chief Engineer Pleads
Guilty to Oil Pollution in Alaska Waters
June 19, 2002
Wednesday - 12:05 am
Je Yong Lee, Chief Engineer of
the motor vessel Soho (M/V Soho) pleaded guilty on May 28 to
keeping and presenting a false oil record book, obstructing a
federal investigation and telling crew members to lie to a federal
grand jury in Anchorage, Alaska.
The M/V Soho is a Panamanian flagged freighter that is owned
by a Korean company named Oswego Limited. It carries seafood
to Asia. Lee was the vessel's chief engineer in charge of engine
room operations. During a Coast Guard inspection in February,
inspectors found hose which they suspected was used to bypass
the ship's oil water separator, a pollution control device that
limits the amount of oil a ship discharges into the ocean. Lee
admitted in his plea that he knowingly recorded false information
in the ship's oil record book, thus failing to indicate that
the bypass hose was used to directly discharge oil-contaminated
bilge water and oily sludge into the ocean during the ship's
passage from Japan to Alaska. In addition, Lee admitted that
he instructed engine room crew members to lie to a federal grand
jury about the use of the bypass hose.
Under the terms of the plea agreement, Lee faces a maximum sentence
of up to 33-months in prison. The case was investigated by the
U.S. Coast Guard, EPA's Criminal Investigation Division and the
FBI with the assistance of EPA's National Enforcement Investigations
Center. It is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's office
in Anchorage and the Environmental Crimes Section of the U.S.
Department of Justice in Washington, D.C.
Source of News Release:
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency
Web Site
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