Update: Carnival Corp has has agreed to reimburse the U.S. government for costs related to the high-profile fires aboard the Carnival Triumph in February and Carnival Splendor in 2010. Read more here.
The juxtaposition is priceless. OK, priceless may be the wrong word as specific sums of money are involved. Last month, we posted about a letter written by Senator Senator Jay Rockefeller to Mickey Arison, the billionaire chairman of Carnival Corp, asking if Carnival intended to reimburse the $4.2 million dollars spent by the US Coast Guard and Navy in responding to the Carnival Splendor and Carnival Triumph casualties. Carnival, which pays little, or no, federal income taxes, responded to Senator Rockefeller, by saying “No, not our problem,” or at least words to that effect.
On Wednesday, Carnival’s subsidiary, Costa Lines, agreed to a plea bargain to pay a 1 million euro ($1.3 million) fine to avoid a possible criminal trial, on charges related to the grounding and sinking of the Costa Concordia off the Italian island of Giglio, last year, killing 32 people. While the captain and five other of the firm’s employees will face criminal charges including manslaughter, the cruise line will not face a criminal trial. The company is still exposed to civil lawsuits, however.
Costa Concordia firm fined $1.3 million for shipwreck off Italy