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Army Corps let off the hook for Katrina flooding

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“I feel like somebody should be held liable,” Holmes said.

Neither Holmes nor Alexis were plaintiffs.

Despite the tens of billions of dollars in reconstruction money spent so far in New Orleans, some 500,000 people, businesses and government agencies have sought additional compensation by filing claims against the corps.

But federal laws grant the corps extensive immunity against flood-related lawsuits and give the government lots of leeway in how agencies conduct their business.

The small army of lawyers fighting the corps over Katrina have long lamented how difficult it is to take on the federal government, a fact reinforced by Monday’s ruling.

“It’s a Herculean task,” said Pierce O’Donnell, a lead attorney in the case. “The government makes the laws – they created the immunity; it prints the money – they have unlimited funds; and the case is tried in a building called the U.S. courthouse.”

Under federal law, the government cannot be sued over actions that were based “on considerations of public policy,” the appeals panel wrote. The corps’ decisions regarding the shipping channel fall under that protection, the judges wrote.

Specifically, the ruling dealt with allegations that the Army Corps let a shipping channel called the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet erode wetlands and swamp forests southeast of New Orleans. The channel was built as a short-cut between New Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico, but the economic benefits never paid off, and only a few ships used it before Katrina.

The corps poorly maintained the channel known locally as “Mister Go,” and the erosion and other damage has been called one of the nation’s worst environmental disasters by some. Scientists have blamed Mister Go on the loss of about 18,000 acres of marsh and 1,500 acres of cypress swamps.

Wetlands are considered a crucial natural buffer to hurricanes, acting as a buffer that can help keep floodwaters at bay. Attorneys have argued the MRGO became a “hurricane highway” that funneled water into New Orleans and overwhelmed the city’s floodwalls, though the government has said the floodwalls would have failed even if the waterway had never been dug.

The Justice Department and the Army Corps declined to comment Tuesday.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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