https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinidad_Petroleum_Holdings#Paria_Fuel_Trading_Company_diving_tragedy
Of course, there is no direct admittance of “we knew it would be cheaper to let them die.”
Instead, they say “we had no legal obligation to rescue them.” That’s the answer for the people who were born yesterday.
Big oil truly is a disgusting thing.
OSHA sent them to court in January, which, well, is court, so it goes long I guess. Apparently they’re waiting for a ruling.
So at most they’ll get a couple million in fines that the company had already budgeted for.
The report says that’s because they could not find evidence to attribute the charge to any person, and figureheads cannot be imprisoned just for a crime of their company in the primitive laws of this very small island country in the Caribbean, since nothing like this has happened in that country before, apparently. The report is sort of “exploiting” the existing rule that corporations may be accused as perpetrators to accommodate for the punishment of this crime to actually be able to convict and punish; the charge of “corporate manslaughter” has never happened before either. c.f. https://hfpsc.org/corporate-homicide-manslaughter/