FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 26,
2012
Illinois Man Sentenced
to 10 Years in Prison for Clean Air Act Violations Involving
Asbestos
WASHINGTON – Duane
“Butch” O’Malley, 59, of Bourbonnais, Ill., who was convicted by a federal jury
on September 26, 2011, for the illegal removal, handling and disposal of
asbestos from a Kankakee building in August 2009, was sentenced to 10 years in
prison by Federal District Court Judge Michael McCuskey. O’Malley was also
ordered to pay restitution of $47,086 to the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) related to the clean-up of illegally disposed asbestos and ordered
to pay a fine of $15,000. Asbestos is a mineral fiber that has been used
commonly in a variety of building construction materials. When
asbestos-containing materials are damaged or disturbed by repair, remodeling or
demolition activities, microscopic fibers become airborne and can be inhaled
into the lungs, where they can cause serious health problems, including lung
cancer and mesothelioma.
“Asbestos must be removed in a safe and legal
way in order to protect people's health and reduce the risk of exposure,” said
Cynthia Giles, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Enforcement and
Compliance Assurance. “The defendant’s actions endangered the health of his
workers and the surrounding community and the sentence shows that those who
violate critical environmental safeguards will be prosecuted.”
“To
increase his profits, a jury found that O’Malley knowingly disregarded federal
environmental laws that require asbestos-containing materials be safely removed
and properly disposed,” said U.S. Attorney Jim Lewis, Central District of
Illinois. “This sentence is a consequence of the defendant’s flagrant disregard
for his workers, the public, and the environment in exposing them to dangerous
airborne asbestos fibers.”
During O’Malley’s trial, the government
presented evidence that O’Malley, owner and operator of Origin Fire Protection,
was hired by Michael J. Pinski in August 2009 to remove asbestos-containing
insulation from pipes in a five-story building in Kankakee, Ill. that was owned
by Pinski through his company, Dearborn Management, Inc. Evidence was presented
that neither O’Malley nor his company was trained to perform the asbestos
removal work and that O’Malley agreed to remove the asbestos insulation for an
amount that was substantially less than a trained asbestos abatement contractor
would have charged to perform the work. Further, O’Malley arranged for James A.
Mikrut to recruit and oversee workers to remove the asbestos.
The
government’s evidence showed that various provisions of the Clean Air Act (CAA)
and EPA regulations were violated, including, failure to properly notify the
EPA, failure to have trained on-site representatives present, failure to ensure
the asbestos insulation was adequately wetted while it was being stripped and
removed, failure to mark vehicles used to transport the asbestos containing
waste material and failure to deposit the asbestos in a waste disposal site for
asbestos. Instead, the asbestos insulation was stripped from the pipes while
dry, and then placed in more than 100 large, unlabeled plastic garbage bags. The
bags were then dumped in an open field in Hopkins Park, resulting in soil
contamination and exposing the workers hired by O’Malley to dangerous
asbestos-laden dust.
Under the CAA there are requirements to control the
removal, handling and disposal of asbestos, a hazardous air pollutant. Any owner
or operator of a renovation or demolition activity which involves removal of
specified amounts of asbestos-containing material must comply with the EPA
regulations.
O’Malley was charged in June 2010 with five felony
violations of the CAA, along with Michael J. Pinski, 42, of Kankakee, Ill., and
James A. Mikrut, 49, of Manteno, Ill. Pinski entered a plea of guilty on Aug.
19, 2011, to one count of violation of the Clean Air Act. Mikrut pleaded guilty
on Aug. 24, 2011, to five counts of violation of the CAA. The sentencing
hearings for Pinski and Mikrut will be scheduled at a future date.
The
charges were investigated by EPA’s Criminal Investigation Division, with
assistance from the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency’s Superfund Division. Assistant United States
Attorney Eugene L. Miller and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney James Cha are
prosecuting the case.
More information about EPA’s criminal enforcement
program: http://www.epa.gov/oecaerth/criminal/index.html
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