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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

West Coast senators want refinery probe

Kevin G. Hall McClatchy-Tribune

WASHINGTON – Six U.S. senators from West Coast states urged the Justice Department on Tuesday to conduct a refinery-by-refinery probe to determine the causes of punishing gasoline price spikes earlier this year.

“We are requesting a Department of Justice investigation of possible market manipulation and false reporting by oil refineries, which may have created a perception of a supply shortage, when in fact the refineries were still producing,” said the letter sent to Attorney General Eric Holder.

Signing the petition were Sens. Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein of California, Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley of Oregon, and Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray of Washington, all Democrats.

Their letter followed a mid-November report presented to a California state legislative committee by McCullough Research that used environmental data to show that refineries were making gasoline in May, during a period in which news reports said they were offline.

The McCullough findings, first reported by McClatchy Newspapers, provoked controversy in West Coast states, where motorists were paying at least 50 cents more per gallon in May and October than motorists in the rest of the nation were. The McCullough report alleges there was production in May but stops short of the same accusation for October, the other spike period, as environmental data wasn’t yet made public.

West Coast motorists were led to believe that the price spikes were tied to outages and production problems, but McCullough showed that inventories were building at a time when there were news reports, which refiners didn’t dispute at the time, of possible supply shortages. That all happened as the price of crude oil, the key component needed to make gasoline, was falling.

Refiners dispute the allegations by McCullough Research and the six senators.