Caught on tape: Secretly recorded mineral lease negotiations
Posted: Oct 23, 2008 05:32 PM CDT
Updated: Oct 23, 2008 06:37 PM CDT
Caught on tape: Secretly recorded mineral lease negotiations
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Haynesville Shale: A week of the good, the bad and the ugly
by Jeff Ferrell
SHREVEPORT, LA (KSLA) - Caught on tape: What some call the 'darker side' of the Haynesville Shale. Secretly recorded negotiations for mineral rights show the tactics some landmen use to get someone to sign on the dotted line.
There's a battle of wills taking place right now in parts of the Ark-La-Tex. It pits property owners who want the most money for their mineral rights versus leasing agencies and their landmen trying to make a buck. And as we discovered, it's not always pretty, as the following transcript of a recording shows:
LANDOWNER: "Why are ya'll tryin' to pressure everybody to sign today when they, you Know, on a legal document you can take it to your lawyer and have 'em look at it?"
LANDMAN 1: "We're not pressuring anybody to sign today."
Eric Clarke played portions of a recently recorded conversation between some Haughton residents and leasing agents with Baton Rouge-based agency Mark A. O'Neil, which represents Chesapeake Energy in negotiations for natural gas trapped two miles underground and locked inside rock known as shale. The landmen first delivered some bad news to the hastily called group of property owners:
LANDMAN 1: "Chesapeake has dropped the offer from 15-thousand an acre to 5 thousand."
LANDOWNER: "Wow. I don't see how that's legal."
Clarke is president and coordinator of the East 80 Oil and Gas Coalition, which represents 17-hundred people who own more than 69-hundred acres in and around the Haughton area of Bossier Parish. Clarke then played a portion of the recording where the landmen gave property owners a ray of hope:
LANDMAN: "Our boss said, in this neighborhood..."
LANDOWNER: "Right..."
LANDMAN: "Fifteen can stand 'til Friday afternoon."
Clarke said their wording may sound pleasant, but in his opinion their point is clear: "Sign now or we're pulling out! Who's pulling out? Is it the gas company or is it the leasing agents."
Clarke explained that his group made the secret audio recording to document what is sees as very hard sales pitches and played another quote:
LANDMAN: "It's just like our boss told us the other day, 'pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered.' And sure enough, that's, you know, they've proven their point."
Clarke said he and his group hope that the recording sends a strong message to landmen and their companies. "We do not mind ya'll coming out here and making offers, that's what ya'll are out here for. But, these kind of tactics and putting people under this kind of pressure has got to stop."
Clarke added that he does remind coalition members they're free to sign a mineral lease agreement if they want. Members do sign a letter of intent so that Clarke and the group can negotiate on their behalf. "We just want to make sure that the people are protected, the water's protected," concluded Clarke.
KSLA News 12 has contacted "Mark A. O'Neil and Associates" out of Baton Rouge for their comment about the actions of their leasing agents in our report. We're still waiting for a response.
Chesapeake, for it's part, released a statement saying the company does not condone high-pressure tactics, saying,"we believe very strongly in educating landowners and giving them plenty of time to make decisions."