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View Full Version : New Orleans-Area Residents 'Vindicated' by Katrina Ruling Against Army Corps of Engin



wardog99s
11-19-2009, 04:42 PM
Thursday, November 19, 2009


New Orleans-area residents have been "vindicated" after a historic ruling that found the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers negligent in failing to prevent devastating Hurricane Katrina flooding, an attorney in the case said Thursday.

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the corps' failure to properly maintain a navigation channel led to massive floods when Katrina hit in August 2005.

Lawyer Joe Bruno, who represented plaintiffs in the case against the Corps of Engineers, praised the decision at a news conference Thursday. He said those affected by the monster storm — which at its peak was a Category 5 hurricane — have been "vindicated."

"We're seeking compensation," Bruno said.

Lawyers said residents are finally seeing justice served and vowed that the decision will stand.

Those whose lives were turned upside down after Katrina struck on Aug. 29, 2005, said it's important to hold the corps responsible for its part in the catastrophe.

"It's just about holding the corps accountable for what they did," one woman who lived through the hurricane said at the news conference. "They knew there were problems. I think the Corps of Engineers failed us."

"There's things we all lost. I lost things that are unreplaceable," she said through tears. "It was a long and hard road."

U.S. District Judge Stanwood Duval sided with five residents and one business who argued the Army Corps' shoddy oversight of the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet led to the flooding of New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward and neighboring St. Bernard Parish.

He said, however, that the corps couldn't be held liable for the flooding of eastern New Orleans, where one of the plaintiffs lived.

"The failure of the Corps to recognize the destruction that the MRGO had caused and the potential hazard that it created is clearly negligent on the part of the Corps," Duval said in his ruling.

"Furthermore, the corps not only knew, but admitted by 1988, that the MRGO threatened human life and yet it did not act in time to prevent the catastrophic disaster that ensued with the onslaught of Hurricane Katrina."

Duval awarded the plaintiffs $720,000, or about $170,000 each, but the decision could eventually make the government vulnerable to a much larger payout.

The ruling should give more than 100,000 other people, businesses and government entities a better shot at claiming billions of dollars in damages.

Bruno said the ruling underscored the Army Corps' long history of failure to properly protect the New Orleans region.

"It's high time we look at the way these guys do business and do a full re-evaluation of the way it does business," Bruno said Wednesday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

wardog99s
11-20-2009, 02:04 AM
my opinion is the Cort ruling is total bullshit!

That is why we have appeals

nastyleg
11-21-2009, 12:31 AM
Even if they had started the upgrades in 2003 or earlier it would have made no difference in 2005 because they would be in the middle of the upgrades and the temporary fixes would have failed just the same. I hope the Corps of Engineers appeals the decision....BTW the government told them to get out weeks in advance and many chose to stay.

dmaxx3500
11-21-2009, 12:37 AM
more lib bs,,the corp is doing what they can ,but they can't fix everything they ever built,those people were told to leave,and the city had buses to get them out but didn't ,,its the city and states fault,each of those leavys had corupt boards of directors running them,,and pres bush did try to help