By JOHN SEEWER – 21 hours ago
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Jurors on Tuesday convicted a former nuclear
plant engineer of hiding information from government regulators about
the worst corrosion ever found at a U.S. reactor.
Prosecutors
said Andrew Siemaszko and two other workers lied in 2001 so the
Davis-Besse plant along Lake Erie could delay a shutdown for a safety
inspection. Months later, inspectors found an acid leak that nearly ate
through the reactor's 6-inch-thick steel cap.
Siemaszko covered
up the damage to the plant's reactor vessel head and lied to the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the federal jury said.
It's not clear how close the plant, midway between Toledo and Cleveland, was to an accident.
Siemaszko
faces up to five years in prison and $250,000 in fines. He was
convicted on three of five counts, including concealing material
information from the government. The jury cleared him on two counts of
making false statements.
Following the discovery of the leak, the
NRC beefed up inspections and training and began requiring detailed
records of its discussions with plant operators.
Siemaszko's
attorneys said the plant's owner set him up as a scapegoat because he
spoke out about safety concerns. They will consider an appeal.
"I'm disappointed," Siemaszko said. When asked what message the verdict sends, he said: "Do not go against a big company."
Siemaszko
was responsible for making sure the reactor vessel head was cleaned and
inspected. He said he was wrongly fired and that he had told
supervisors the reactor needed to be cleaned. He said managers rejected
his requests.
Defense attorney Billie Pirner Garde said nuclear
workers will be less likely to raise concerns about safety. "This makes
the nuclear industry less safe," she said.
The plant's operator, Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp., said Siemaszko deserved to be fired and should have caught the damage.
FirstEnergy
paid a record $28 million in fines a year ago while avoiding federal
charges. It also spent $600 million making repairs and buying
replacement power while the plant was closed from early 2002 until 2004.
None of the company's senior leaders was charged in the investigation.
Another
former worker at the Davis-Besse plant was sentenced to three years'
probation in May for concealing information from the government. A
private contractor was acquitted.
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