2 civilians indicted for their role in a Pearl Harbor fuel spill that sickened 6,000 people in 2021
Two workers allegedly conspired to underreport a May 2021 jet fuel spill that contaminated drinking water and sickened over 6,000 people, leading to felony charges.
- A federal grand jury charged two Navy civilian employees, John Floyd and Nelson Wu, with conspiracy and making false statements regarding a fuel leak incident at Red Hill that occurred in early May 2021 in Hawaii.
- The indictment resulted from investigations into a 20,000-gallon jet fuel spill that contaminated drinking water and sickened at least 6,000 people, causing a months-long unsafe water advisory.
- Floyd and Wu allegedly understated the spill as 1,618 gallons, misleading Navy officials and the Hawaii Department of Health while reassurring others that their information was accurate.
- They face felony charges carrying up to five years in prison and fines up to $250,000 per count, with an arraignment scheduled for September 5 before Chief Magistrate Judge Kenneth J. Mansfield.
- The case remains under multiple federal investigations amid claims Floyd and Wu may be scapegoats, and the Defense Department permanently closed the Red Hill facility in March 2022.
57 Articles
57 Articles

2 Civilians Indicted in 2021 Pearl Harbor Fuel Leak
A federal grand jury in Honolulu has indicted two civilian workers on charges that they caused the Navy to provide the Hawaii Department of Health with false information about jet fuel that spilled from a Pearl Harbor storage site before it seeped into drinking water and sickened 6,000 people over Thanksgiving in 2021, media outlets reported. John Floyd, 63, who worked as the Navy's fuels department deputy director, and Nelson Wu, 38, who was th…
2 Indicted in Pearl Harbor Fuel Spill That Sickened 6K
A grand jury has indicted two civilian workers on charges they caused the Navy to provide the Hawaii Department of Health with false information about jet fuel that spilled from a Pearl Harbor storage facility that later seeped into drinking water and sickened 6,000 people over Thanksgiving in 2021....
The prosecution alleges that those involved gave the Navy inaccurate information about a May 2021 spill, six months before the fuel reached drinking water.
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