ABC News October 7, 2021

Criminal investigation launched into Amplify Energy after oil spill off California coast

WATCH: Criminal investigation opened into California oil spill

A criminal investigation has been launched into the energy company that runs the pipeline that leaked hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil off California's southern coast.

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer authorized the criminal investigation into Amplify Energy on Thursday, Spitzer's office confirmed to ABC News. The investigation will be handled by the Orange County District Attorney's Office's environmental crimes unit.

Hundreds of people were participating in cleanups on a 30-mile stretch of beaches and marsh from from Huntington Beach to Dana Point, officials from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife told reporters at a news conference Wednesday.

Crews in the air were identifying affected locations and alerting cleanup teams, said Captain Rebecca Ore of the Coast Guard's Long Beach branch. "Everybody here is absolutely committed to cleaning up our much-loved California beaches."

Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images
Environmental clean up crews wear PPE as they paddle a boat along oil containment booms to contain oil that flowed near the Talbert Marsh after an oil spill in the Pacific Ocean in Huntington Beach, Calif., Oct. 5, 2021.

Michael Ziccardi, director of California's Oiled Wildlife Care Network, said the organization has collected 13 live birds and two dead birds affected by the oil. Four live snowy Plovers, an endangered species, also were found in Huntington Beach.

An estimated 5,000 gallons of oil has been recovered from the water and beaches, Ziccardi added.

PHOTOS: Oil spill closes Southern California beaches, threatens wildlife

Up to 144,00 gallons of crude oil leaked into the ocean after the pipeline, about 4.5 miles off the California coast, known as Elly, was damaged on Saturday morning.

The pipeline was no longer pumping oil as of approximately 8 a.m. Saturday, and the Coast Guard was notified of the leak at that time, said Amplify Energy Corporation CEO Martyn Willsher.

But officials have alleged that the leak actually was discovered more than eight hours earlier. Orange County supervisor Katrina Foley said over the weekend that the pipeline was likely leaking before the damage was discovered Saturday morning, and officials from a division of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife stated in a report that they were notified of an "observed sheen" off the Huntington Beach coast at 10:22 p.m. Friday, according to documents obtained by ABC News.

Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images
A detail of oil floating on water along an oil containment boom is pictures at Talbert Marsh after an oil spill in the Pacific Ocean in Huntington Beach, Calif., Oct. 5, 2021.

The U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Material Safety Administration demanded the failed pipeline be repaired in a letter to Amplify Energy Corp. on Tuesday. The letter, addressed by the associate administrator for pipeline safety, said the oil platform's control room received low-pressure alarms on the San Pedro Bay Pipeline around 2:30 a.m. PDT Saturday, indicating a possible failure. But the line was not shut down until 6:01 a.m. -- 3 1/2 hours later.

Robert Bea, co-director of the Center for Catastrophic Risk Management at the University of California, Berkeley cast doubt on Amplify Energy's claim that the pipeline was shut down at 2:30 a.m. Saturday.

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Bea hypothesized that if the first sightings of the sheen came Friday night, and a large plume of oil was visible from satellite imagery shortly thereafter, the low-pressure alarms would have sounded in the control rooms soon after the leak began, unless the alarms were faulty.

No abnormalities were found when the pipeline was cleaned last week or during an annual spill drill in 2020, Willsher said, adding that he expected the total loss of oil to be lower, given that the damage to the pipeline was just a 13-inch crack.

Robert Hanashiro / USA Today Network
A cleanup crew walk along Huntington Beach looking for spots of oil north of the pier with cargo container ships in the background. More than 125,000 gallons of oil spilled from a pipeline about four miles offshore of Huntington Beach in Southern Calif., Oct. 6, 2021.

"We want to do everything we can to ensure that this situation and this release gets resolved as quickly as possible so that these beautiful areas can be restored, and all of the residents and businesses can get back to normal as quickly as possible," Willsher said.

It's unclear why the company didn't stop pumping sooner, Bea told ABC News.

A class-action lawsuit was filed against the companies that run the oil line on Monday.

ABC News' Matt Gutman and Jenna Harrison contributed to this report.