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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Han.
v. Crim. No. 16-
GIROLAMO CURATOLO 18 u.s.c. § 371
INFORMATION
The defendant having waived in open court prosecution by Indictment
and any challenge based on venue, the United States Attorney for the District
of New Jersey charges:
BACKGROUND
1. At all times relevant to this Information, unless otherwise
indicated:
The Defendant
a. Defendant GIROLAMO CURATOLO (hereinafter, "defendant
CURATOLO") was a citizen of Italy, who served as the Chief Engineer on board
the Motor Tanker Cielo di Milano (hereinafter, the "MIT Cielo di Milano" or the
"vessel"), from on or about September 22, 2014, through on or about January
16, 2015.
The MIT Cielo di Milano
b. The M/T Cielo di Milano was a 25,382 gross ton ocean-going
oil tanker that was registered in Italy and had an International Maritime
Organization ("IMO") number of 9241815. The M/T Cielo di Milano was
commercially operated and managed by a company referred to herein as "CC 1"
and owned by a company referred to herein as "CC2," both of which had
registered offices in Palermo, Italy. The vessel regularly transported petroleum
products between Canada and the United States.
c. The M/T Cielo di Milano had an Engine Department in which
crew members of different ranks worked. The Engine Department was headed
by defendant CURATOLO, who was assisted by a First Assistant Engineer, a
Second Assistant Engineer, a Third Assistant Engineer, an Engine Cadet, two
Oilers, and two Pipe Fitters. The First Assistant Engineer reported directly to
defendant CURATOLO who, in tum, reported directly to the person having
charge of the M/T Cielo di Milano, namely the Master, and to shore-based
personnel. Each crew member of the Engine Department was an agent or
employee of CC 1 and CC2 and acted within the scope of that agency or
employment and for the intended benefit, at least in part, of CC 1 and CC2.
d. As the Chief Engineer on board the M/T Cielo di Milano,
defendant CURATOLO had overall responsibility for the operation of the Engine
Department, including the supervision of daily operations, formulation and
implementation of engine room procedures, and verification that all systems,
including the Oily Water Separator, a pollution prevention device required by
law, were properly functioning. Defendant CURATOW was also responsible for
maintaining an Oil Record Book that accurately recorded the transfer, disposal,
and discharge overboard of oil residue, oil and oily mixtures, and machinery
space bilge water on board the vessel.
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e. Ocean-going oil tankers, such as the M/T Cielo di MilW1o,
generate large quantities of oil-contaminated waste, the proper disposal of
which may result in costs to the vessel management company. The normal
operations of an ocean-going vessel produce significant quantities of oil sludge
due to the process of purifying fuel oil and lubricating oil. In addition, the
engineering machinery ofyirtually all ocean-going vessels leaks and drips large
amounts of oil-contaminated water that collects in the bottom of the vessel,
known as the bilges. This oil-contaminated machinery space bilge water must
be regularly discharged to help ensure the vessel's seaworthiness.
f. Oil residue and oily mixtures were contained in the M/T
Cielo di Milru1o's Soot Tank, which was used to store condensation generated
from the heating of the waste oil tank. Additional oil residue and oily mixtures
generated from the cleaning of the economizer, a piece of engine-room
equipment that reclaimed heat from steam and reused it in other processes,
were contained in 55-gallon drums on board the vessel.
The Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships and the MARPOL Protocol
g. The Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships ("APPS"), 33 U.S.C.
§§ 1901 et seq., was enacted by Congress in 1980 to implement two related
international treaties to which the United States was a signatory: the 1973
International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships; and the
Protocol of 1978 Relating to the Intemational Convention for the Prevention of
Pollution· from Ships. See 33 C.F.R. § 151.01 et seq. Together, these treaties,
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which sought to minimize pollution from ocean-going vessels, were known as
the "MARPOL Protocol" or "MARPOL."
h. APPS made it a crime for any person to knowingly violate
MARPOL, APPS, or the regulations promulgated under APPS. These
regulations applied to all commercial vessels operating in the navigable waters
of the United States or while in a port or terminal under the jurisdiction of the
United States, including vessels operating under the authority of a country
other than the United States.
i. APPS also authorized the United States Coast Guard
(hereinafter, the "Coast Guard"), an agency within the United States
Department of Homeland Security, to promulgate regulations implementing the
MARPOL Protocol, pursuant to Title 33, United States Code, Section 1903(c)(1).
Pursuant to that authority, the Coast Guard established Title 33, Code of
Federal Regulations, Sections 151.01 et seq., to ensure compliance with the
MARPOL Protocol and to prevent pollution in United States waters.
Regulation of Oil-Contaminated Waste from Ocean-Going Vessels
j. A principal source of water pollution addressed by the
MARPOL Protocol, APPS, and APPS regulations, was the oil residue, oil and oily
mixtures, and oil-contaminated bilge water generated in the machinery space
of large vessels, such as the M/T Cielo di Milano.
k. The oil residue, oil and oily mixtures, and machinery space
bilge water of such vessels are collected in tanks located on board vessels that
are designed to hold the waste for proper disposal. Regulation 17 of MARPOL
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Annex I, and Title 33, Code of Federal Regulations, Section 151.10 (a)(5),
provided that waste generated in machinery spaces could be discharged
overboard into the sea only if it contained no greater than 15 parts of oil per
million parts of water by volume (" 15 ppm"). To facilitate the discharge of oil
contaminated waste without causing pollution, all large vessels were required
to have a pollution control device known as an Oily Water Separator (OWS).
The OWS was designed to remove oil contamination from bilge waste to
produce water containing less than 15 ppm of oil, as measured by the OWS's
Oil Content Monitor, which could then be discharged overboard through an
overboard discharge valve. If the Oil Content Monitor detected an oil content
greater than 15 ppm in the effluent, it sounded an alarm, and shut down the
pumps or diverted flow back to the bilges in order to prevent a discharge
overboard of greater than 15 ppm. APPS and the MARPOL Protocol also
required that oil residue, and other oil or oily mixtures, which could not be
processed through pollution control equipment, be disposed of by either
burning such oily waste in a vessel's incinerator or by off-loading it to shore for
proper disposal.
Requirement that Vessels Maintain an Oil Record Book
1. To ensure that oily waste was properly processed and
disposed of, Regulation 17 of MARPOL Annex I, and Title 33, Code of Federal
Regulations, Sections 151.25(a), (d), and (h), provided that, with regard to oil
tankers of at least 150 gross tons, the person or persons in charge of an
operation involving the transfer, disposal or discharge of oily waste was
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required to fully record every operation, without delay, on a tank-by-tank basis,
in a log known as an Oil Record Book. All transfers, disposals, or discharges of
oily waste were required to be recorded in the Oil Record Book, and all
emergency, accidental, or other exceptional discharges of oil or oily mixtures,
including a statement of the circumstances of, and reasons for, the discharge,
were also required to be recorded in the Oil Record Book, pursuant to Title 33,
Code of Federal Regulations, Section 151.25(g). The Oil Record Book was
required to be maintained on board the vessel for not less than three years and
be readily available for inspection at all reasonable times, pursuant to Title 33,
United States Code, Section 151.25(k).
United States Enforcement of APPS
m. The Coast Guard was authorized to conduct inspections to
determine whether vessels in U.S. waters were in compliance with MARPOL,
APPS, and other applicable federal regulations. In conducting its inspections,
the Coast Guard was authorized to examine the vessel's Oil Record Book to
determine, among other things, whether the vessel had operable pollution
prevention equipment, whether it posed a danger to United States ports and
waters, and whether the vessel had discharged oily waste in violation of law,
pursuant to Title 33, Code of Federal Regulations, Sections 151.23(a)(3) and
151.23(c). In conducting inspections, the Coast Guard relied on the vessel's Oil
Record Book and statements of the crew to determine whether the vessel's crew
was properly handling oily waste pursuant to Title 33, Code of Federal
Regulations, Section 151.23(c).
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CONSPIRACY
2. From on or about September 22, 2014, through on or about
January 16, 2015, at the Port of Bayonne, and in the internal waters and ports
of the United States, in the District of New Jersey and elsewhere, defendant
GIROLAMO CURATOLO
did knowingly and intentionally conspire and agree with CC 1, CC2, engineering
officers, engine room crew members, and others, to violate APPS by failing to
maintain an Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di MUWlo in which all operations
involving the transfer, disposal, and discharge of, oil residue, oil and oily
mixtures, and machinery space bilge water, were fully recorded, contrary to
Title 33, United States Code, Section 1908(a) and Title 33, Code of Federal
Regulations, Section 151.25.
Object of the Conspiracy
3. It was the object of the conspiracy to conceal and cover up
discharges into the sea of machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily
mixtures, from the M/T Cielo di MUWlo, to avoid detection by governmental
authorities, including the Coast Guard.
Manner and Means
4. Among the manner and means used by defendant
CURATOLO and his co-conspirators to effectuate the conspiracy and to further
its object were the following:
a. It was part of the conspiracy that defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, bypassed legally
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required pollution prevention equipment to discharge machinery space bilge
water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly overboard into the sea.
b. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, engineering officers, and engine-room crew members, and others,
used flexible hoses and a Wilden pump to transfer the contents of bilge wells,
which contained oil-contaminated machinery space bilge water, into the
Sewage Holding Tank, rather than the Oily Bilge Water Holding Tank, which
was the tank designated for the collection of oil-contaminated machinery space
bilge water.
c. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, engineering officers, and engine-room crew members, and others,
used flexible hoses and a Wilden pump to transfer the contents of the Soot
Tank, which contained oil residue and oily mixtures, into the Sewage Holding
Tank.
d. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, engineering officers, and engine-room crew members, and others,
used flexible hoses and a Wilden pump to transfer the contents of
approximately five 55-gallon drums, which contained oil residue and oily
mixtures that were produced from washing the economizer, into the Sewage
Holding Tank.
e. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others,
subsequent to the transfers described in Paragraphs 4b, 4c, and 4d, above,
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discharged the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank through an overboard
discharge valve directly into the sea, without filtering the contents through the
vessel's pollution prevention equipment and routinely did so before the vessel
entered port and after the vessel had left port.
f. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others,
disconnected flexible hoses and Wilden pumps and stored them in the steering
gear room prior to the M/T Cielo di Milano entering port and then reconnected
the hoses and Wilden pumps to resume transfers of oil-contaminated
machinery space bilge water from the bilge wells to the Sewage Holding Tank
after the vessel had left port.
g. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOW, and others, made all entries in the Oil Record Book, including
signing and initialing those entries.
h. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOW, and others, failed to record accurately the transfers and
discharges described in Paragraphs 4b, 4c, 4d, and 4e, above, in the Oil Record
Book of the M/T Cielo di Milano, although they were required to do so,
pursuant to MARPOL, APPS, and APPS regulations.
i. It was further a part of the conspiracy that during the M/T
Cielo di Milano's port calls, in and around the Port of Bayonne, New Jersey, and
other United States ports, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-
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room crew members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, a
materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di Milano.
j. It was further a part of the conspiracy that during a port call
of the M/T Cielo di Milano, in and around the Port of Bayonne, New Jersey,
defendant CURATOLO, and others, presented, and caused to be presented, a
materially false Oil Record Book to the Coast Guard during a Port State Control
inspection and examination of the M/T Cielo di Milano, knowing that it
contained material omissions.
k. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others,
made false statements to the Coast Guard during its Port State Control
inspection and examination of the M/T Cielo di Milano at the Port of Bayonne,
New Jersey.
1. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, engineering officers, and others, directed other engineering officers
and engine-room crew members to make false statements to the Coast Guard.
during its Port State Control inspection and examination of the M/T Cielo di
Milano at the Port of Bayonne, New Jersey.
m. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendant
CURATOLO, and others, destroyed documents relating to tank soundings on
board the vessel.
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Overt Acts
5. In furtherance of the conspiracy and to effect the unlawful
object thereof, defendant CURATOLO, and his co-conspirators, committed and
caused to be committed, in the District of New Jersey, and elsewhere, the
following overt acts:
a. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di MUano, ending in
Bayonne, New Jersey, on or about October 3, 2014, defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank, which
contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
b. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di MUano, ending in
Bayonne, New Jersey, on or about October 27, 2014, defendant CURATOW,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank, which
contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
c. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di MUano, ending in
Bayonne, New Jersey, on or about November 12, 2014, defendant CURATOW,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank, which
contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
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d. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di Milano, ending in
Baltimore, Maryland, on or about November 16, 2014, defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank, which
contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
e. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di Milano, ending in
Bayonne, New Jersey, on or about November 18, 2014, defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank, which
contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
f. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di Milano, ending in Port
Everglades, Florida, on or about December 18, 2014, defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tallk, which
contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
g. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di Milano, ending in
Bayonne, New Jersey, on or about December 29, 2014, defendant CURATOW,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank, which
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contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
h. During a voyage of the M/T Cielo di MUano, ending in
Bayonne, New Jersey, on or about January 12, 2015, defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, discharged, and
caused the discharge of, the contents of the Sewage Holding Tank, which
contained machinery space bilge water, oil residue, and oily mixtures, directly
overboard into the sea.
i. On at least one occasion, from on or about September 22,
2014, through on or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, transferred oil
residue and oily mixtures from the Soot Tank to the Sewage Holding Tank,
using a Wilden pump and flexible hoses, instead of disposing of the oily
mixtures at a reception facility.
j. On at least one occasion, from on or about September 22,
2014, through on or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOLO,
engineering officers, engine-room crew members, and others, transferred oil
residue and oily mixtures from approximately five 55-gallon drums to the
Sewage Holding Tank, using a Wilden pump and flexible hoses, instead of
disposing of the oil residue and oily mixtures at a reception facility.
k. On at least one occasion between on or about October 18,
2014, and on or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOW, engineering
officers, and others, directed an engine-room crew member to fill the Oily Bilge
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Water Holding Tank with fresh water to make it appear to governmental
authorities, such as the Coast Guard, that the Oily Bilge Water Holding Tank
was being used, when, in fact, it was not.
1. On or about October 3, 2014, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
m. On or about October 27, 2014, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
n. On or about November 12, 2014, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
o. On or about November 16, 2014, in or around Baltimore,
Maryland, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
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p. On or about November 18, 2014, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
q. On or about December 18, 2014, in or around Port
Everglades, Florida, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room
crew members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
r. On or about December 29, 2014, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
s. On or about January 12, 2015, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
members, and others, maintained, and caused to be maintained, and had
available for inspection, a materially false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo di
Milano.
t. On or about January 16, 2015, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOLO, engineering officers, engine-room crew
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members, and others, presented, and caused to be presented, for inspection to
the Coast Guard a matertally false Oil Record Book for the M/T Cielo diMilano.
u. On or about January 16, 2015, in or around Bayonne, New
Jersey, defendant CURATOW falsely told the Coast Guard, in sum and
substance, that he took his own soundings because the Engin~ Cadet's
soundings were inaccurate.
v. On or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOLO
destroyed a notebook prepared by the Engine Cadet that contained
handwritten engine room tank soundings (hereinafter, the "Engine Cadet's
sounding notebook") by lipping the pages out, rolling them up, and burning
them in the M/T Cielo diMilano's boiler pilot flame in order to conceal the
Engine Cadet's sounding notebook from the Coast Guard.
w. On or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOW told
the Engine Cadet, in sum and substance, to keep the burning of the Engine
Cadet's sounding notebook between the two of them to conceal the burning of
the Engine Cadet's sounding notebook from the Coast Guard.
x. On or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOLO falsely
told Coast Guard inspectors, in sum and substance, that he was not aware of
any illegal discharges.
y. On or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOW falsely
told Coast Guard inspectors, in sum and substance, that he was not aware of
anyone pumping bilge water to the Sewage Holding Tank and that he had not
seen any hoses going to the Sewage Holding Tank.
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z. On or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOLO falsely
told Coast Guard inspectors, in sum and substance, that he had never seen
the Wilden pumps used for anything other than to transfer lube oil from drums
to the vessel or to transfer water to other tanks.
aa. On or about January 16, 2015, defendant CURATOLO
directed all engine room crew members, including the First Assistant Engineer,
the Second Assistant Engineer, the Third Assistant Engineer, two Oilers, the
Engine Cadet, and two Pipe Fitters, in sum and substance, not to be truthful to
the Coast Guard.
All in violation ofTitle 18, United States Code, Section 371.
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