Top New Orleans Chef Sues BP Over Seafood Losses
Spicer, who runs the restaurant Bayona in New Orleans’ French Quarter, is seeking class-action status on behalf of restaurants and others in the seafood industry that have suffered damage since the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig.
In a complaint filed late Friday in New Orleans federal court, Spicer’s lawyer Serena Pollack said the restaurants depend heavily on the availability of local seafood.
Because of the spill, they expect to lose customers because of lower tourism and convention business, contamination fears and significantly higher prices, the 18-page complaint said.
“Much of plaintiff’s business is based on the unique quality of Louisiana seafood, as well as the chain of delivery of that resource from the initial harvester (be it fisherman, oyster grower or shrimper),” Pollack wrote. “Because this chain of delivery can not be maintained, plaintiff’s business has been, and continues to be, materially damaged.”
BP spokesman Mark Salt said the British company does not comment on litigation.
Bayona opened in 1990, and according to its website has since 1995 been one of New Orleans’ top five restaurants in the Zagat Survey.
Spicer has received a James Beard Foundation award, and appeared as a judge on Bravo’s “Top Chef” and Food Network’s “Iron Chef America.” She has also opened the New Orleans restaurants Herbsaint and Cobalt.
The lawsuit seeks compensatory and punitive damages from BP. It also names as defendants Transocean Ltd, which operated the rig; Cameron International Corp, which provided a blowout preventer; and a Halliburton Co unit that provided cementing services.
More than 250 lawsuits have been filed over alleged damage from the oil spill, according to the Westlaw database. Westlaw is a unit of Thomson Reuters.
The case is Bayona Corp v. Transocean Ltd et al, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana, No. 10-01839.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel, editing by Maureen Bavdek)
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