Montana Man Pleads Guilty for Lying Over Explosion Incident That Killed a Marine Veteran

Montana Man Pleads Guilty for Lying Over Explosion Incident That Killed a Marine Veteran
A police officer rolls up caution tape in a file photo. Brandon Bell/Getty Images
The Daily Caller News Foundation
Updated:

A Montana man pleaded guilty in federal court Monday to lying about the cause of an explosion that killed a Marine veteran, a Justice Department press release said.

Stephen Todd Reisinger, 50, pleaded guilty to felony obstruction in an Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) investigation, the press release said. A 28-year-old employee named Dustin Payne, was fatally injured when an uncleaned tanker trailer exploded on Oct. 3, 2014.

Reisinger was in charge of around 40 employees while he was a maintenance manager at the Williston facility of the Nabors Completion and Production Services Company (NCPS), the press release said. Reisinger acknowledged in a plea agreement that he knew tanker trailers transported “’produced water,’ a liquid waste that is generated by oil wells and which contains flammable chemicals.”

Payne was welding on a tanker trailer containing produced water, leading to a fatal explosion. Welding on tanks and containers holding flammable products is against federal law.

Welders had to receive special training in accordance with NCPS policies, which also established internal auditing procedures to ensure the policies were being obeyed, the press release said. Welders in the Williston facility, including Payne, welded multiple times “on uncleaned tanks that contained flammable hydrocarbon residue.”

The Montana man falsely stated in the OSHA investigation that he wasn’t aware of the composition of produced water and its flammable nature, the press release said.

Reisinger falsely said he believed the tanks held “just water” and submitted other false claims, the press release said. The successor company to NCPS, C&J Well Services, was sentenced on Aug. 28, 2019 to submit restitution and fine payments of $2.1 million after pleading guilty over charges connected to the veteran’s death.

The Justice Department told the Daily Caller News Foundation that Reisinger’s “sentencing is scheduled for June 9 and the potential max sentence is 5 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.”

By Mary Rose Corkery
Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact [email protected].