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 For Immediate Release, June 30, 2010 
              
                | Contact:  | Miyoko Sakashita, Center for    Biological Diversity, (415) 658-5308 or [email protected] Todd Steiner, Turtle Island Restoration    Network, (415) 663-8590 x 103 or [email protected]
 Carole Allen, Turtle Island Restoration Network, (281) 444-6204 or [email protected]
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              Restraining  Order Sought to Stop BP From Burning Turtles:Lawsuit Asks Court to Halt BP Oil  Burning Until Endangered Sea Turtles Are Saved
 NEW ORLEANS— The Center for Biological Diversity joined  shrimp-boat captains and conservation partners in a lawsuit filed in New  Orleans to halt BP oil-burning operations immediately until the safety of sea  turtles can be ensured. The lawsuit seeks a temporary restraining order against  BP for violating its lease under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act.  The lease that governs BP’s operations requires the company  to comply with all environmental “statutes and regulations.” BP’s actions in  killing and otherwise harming and harassing endangered sea turtles constitute  flagrant violations of its lease with the United States. Killing or harming  endangered sea turtles is a violation of the Endangered Species Act.  “The spill was tragically timed for sea turtles that are  nesting in the Gulf right now,” said Miyoko Sakashita, oceans director at the  Center. “Newly hatched sea turtles are swimming out to sea and finding  themselves in a mucky, oily mess. News that BP has blocked efforts to rescue  trapped sea turtles before they’re burned alive in controlled burns is  unacceptable.” In an effort to contain the massive oil spill, BP began  using “controlled burns,” that
              involve using shrimp boats to create a corral of the oil by  dragging together fire-resistant booms and then lighting the enclosed “burn  box” on fire. The “burn boxes” are approximately 60 to 100 feet in diameter.  Endangered sea turtles, including Kemp’s ridleys, that inhabit the Gulf of  Mexico are also being caught in the corrals being created by BP. This fact has  been confirmed by Obama administration wildlife officials at National Marine  Fisheries Service. The turtle burning was exposed by shrimp boat captain  Michael Ellis, whose comments were videotaped.
 “This is the most inhumane thing I have ever heard, to light that oil when sea  turtles are out there trying to escape it,'' said Carole Allen, Gulf director  of Turtle Island Restoration Network in Houston, Texas.
 “BP is burning turtles  alive and it is cruel, heartless and a crime we can't and won't allow to  continue,” said Todd Steiner, biologist and executive director of Turtle Island  Restoration Network. “Sea turtles were critically endangered before BP created  America's worst environmental catastrophe, and every effort possible must be  taken to rescue endangered turtles from this oil spill. BP needs to reverse  course and help double our efforts to rescue sea turtles, not prevent their  recovery.” As of today,  officials have collected 436 dead sea turtles in the Gulf area since the oil  spill. Many more have likely been injured or killed but not found. In  addition to the Kemp’s ridley, four other threatened and endangered sea turtle  species are found in the Gulf of Mexico: greens, loggerheads, hawksbills and  leatherbacks. They rely on areas throughout the Gulf of Mexico for nesting,  reproduction, feeding and migration. All of these turtles are at risk from  poisoning from oil and careless controlled burns.
 The lawsuit was filed in the United States District  Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana in New Orleans by Meyer  Gliztenstein & Crystal of Washington, DC on behalf of Turtle Island  Restoration Network, the Center for Biological Diversity, Animal Welfare  Institute and Animal Legal Defense Fund.
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