When a catastrophic accident happens on an offshore platform or vessel in the Gulf of Mexico — an explosion, a blowout, a helicopter crash, a fatal fall — the alarm bells ring, emergency crews scramble, and families’ lives change forever in an instant.
If you’ve lost a loved one or been severely injured in an offshore accident, you’re probably asking: What happens now?

The hours and days following a major offshore incident are chaotic. Multiple government agencies descend on the scene. Companies activate crisis management teams. Lawyers start building defenses. Evidence gets collected — or disappears.
And in the middle of all this, injured workers and grieving families are left confused, overwhelmed, and vulnerable.
This guide explains what actually happens after a major offshore accident, who investigates, what they’re looking for, and — most importantly — what you need to do right now to protect your legal rights.
After 40+ years representing offshore accident victims, we’ve seen how these investigations unfold. We know what companies do to protect themselves. And we know what families need to do to protect their futures.
What Counts as a “Major Offshore Accident”?
Not every offshore injury triggers a full-scale investigation. But certain incidents require immediate reporting and comprehensive investigation by federal agencies:
Major accidents include:
If any of these happened, multiple agencies are probably already investigating — or will be soon.
The First 24-48 Hours: What’s Happening Right Now
In the immediate aftermath of a major offshore accident, several things happen simultaneously:
Emergency Response (Minutes to Hours)
What’s happening:
What you need to know:
Initial Notifications (Hours 1-24)
What’s happening:
What you need to know:
Scene Preservation (Hours 1-48)
What should be happening:
What actually happens:
This is why you need your own lawyer investigating immediately — not weeks or months later.
Who Investigates Major Offshore Accidents?
Multiple government agencies and the company itself will investigate. Understanding who does what helps you know what to expect.
U.S. Coast Guard (USCG)
What they investigate:
What they do:
Timeline: Initial investigation 30-90 days; final report can take 6-12 months
What you should know:
Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE)
What they investigate:
What they do:
Timeline: Preliminary findings 30-60 days; comprehensive reports 6-18 months
What you should know:
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
What they investigate:
What they do:
Timeline: Initial investigation 30-90 days; citations issued within 6 months
What you should know:
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
What they investigate:
What they do:
Timeline: Preliminary reports within 30 days; final reports 12-24 months
What you should know:
The Company’s Internal Investigation
What they investigate:
What they do:
Timeline: Begins immediately; continues throughout litigation
What you should know:
Helpful Resources from Government Agencies
If you want to learn more about offshore accident investigations, these official government resources provide detailed information:
**Note:** While these resources are helpful for understanding the process, they don’t replace the need for experienced legal representation to protect your rights.
What These Investigations Look For
Understanding what investigators examine helps you understand what evidence is important:
Human Factors
Company defense strategy: Blame the worker for not following procedures, being careless, or lacking skill.
The truth: Most “human error” accidents result from systemic company failures — inadequate training, pressure to cut corners, poor supervision, or impossible working conditions.
Equipment and Mechanical Failures
Company defense strategy: Claim equipment was properly maintained and the accident was unforeseeable.
The truth: Deferred maintenance, skipped inspections, and known defects are extremely common in offshore operations where downtime costs money.
Safety Systems and Procedures
Company defense strategy: Point to written safety policies and blame workers for not following them.
The truth: Companies often have impressive-looking safety manuals that nobody actually follows because production pressure makes compliance impossible.
Environmental and Working Conditions
Management and Corporate Culture
This is often where the real cause is found — but companies fight hard to keep this information hidden.
The Evidence That Disappears (And Why You Need Your Own Investigation)
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: Critical evidence routinely disappears after major offshore accidents.
Sometimes it’s accidental. Often it’s not.
Evidence That Vanishes:
Physical Evidence:
- Defective equipment gets “repaired” or replaced.
- Accident scenes get “cleaned up.”
- Damaged machinery gets disposed of as “scrap.”
- Safety equipment mysteriously goes missing.
Electronic Evidence:
- Maintenance logs get “lost.”
- Email communications get “accidentally deleted.”
- Video footage gets “recorded over.”
- Computer files get “corrupted.”
- GPS and tracking data gets “overwritten.”
Witness Evidence:
- Workers get transferred to other locations.
- Key employees suddenly “retire” or “resign.”
- Witnesses become “unavailable” for interviews.
- Stories change after workers talk to company lawyers.
Documentary Evidence:
- Inspection reports go missing.
- Training records disappear.
- Safety complaints vanish.
- Previous incident reports can’t be found.
Why This Happens:
Innocent reasons:
- Genuine confusion in the chaos after an accident
- Normal business operations continuing
- Records legitimately lost in the incident itself
Not-so-innocent reasons:
- Evidence that proves negligence is quietly destroyed.
- Documents that show prior warnings are “lost.”
- Equipment that would reveal defects gets “disposed of.”
- Witnesses are coached, intimidated or paid off.
This is why you need your own lawyer investigating within days — not months — of the accident.
What You Should Do Right Now (A Timeline for Protecting Your Rights)
Within 24 Hours:
1. Get proper medical treatment
2. Contact a maritime attorney
3. Write down everything you remember
4. Take photos if possible
5. Preserve everything
6. Identify witnesses
Within 7 Days:
1. Follow up with your attorney
2. Obtain copies of all medical records
3. DO NOT give recorded statements
4. Keep a journal
5. Keep all documentation
Within 30 Days:
1. Your attorney should have:
2. You should be:
3. Understand deadlines:
Missing these deadlines means losing your rights forever.
The Company’s Defense Playbook (What to Expect)
Companies use the same tactics in almost every offshore accident case:
Tactic #1: Blame the Worker
What they say: “He didn’t follow safety procedures. He was careless. He wasn’t properly trained.”
The reality: Workers follow the procedures they’re taught and the examples they see. If “proper procedures” are ignored daily because production demands it, that’s the company’s fault, not the worker’s.
Tactic #2: Minimize the Injuries
What they say: “His injuries aren’t that serious. He can return to work. He’s exaggerating.”
The reality: Companies send injured workers to “independent” doctors who systematically minimize injuries to avoid liability.
Tactic #3: Delay, Delay, Delay
What they say: “We need more time to investigate. The case is complicated. We’re still gathering information.”
The reality: Delay benefits the company. Evidence disappears. Witnesses forget. You get desperate. Pressure builds to settle for less.
Tactic #4: Claim Limited Liability
What they say: “Workers’ comp is your only remedy. DOHSA limits damages. The contract caps our liability.”
The reality: Experienced lawyers know how to find claims beyond workers’ comp, argue for OCSLA instead of DOHSA, and identify third parties not protected by contracts.
Tactic #5: Make Low Early Offers
What they say: “Let’s settle this quickly. Here’s $50,000 to avoid the hassle of a lawsuit.”
The reality: Early offers are almost always 10-20% of actual case value. They’re hoping you don’t know what your case is really worth.
Tactic #6: Attack Your Credibility
What they say: “He has a history of workers’ comp claims. His story keeps changing. He posted on Facebook that he was fine.”
The reality: Companies hire investigators to find anything they can use against you — old injuries, social media posts, anything to question your credibility.
This is why you need experienced lawyers who’ve seen all these tactics and know how to counter them.
Critical Legal Issues That Get Decided Early
Several legal battles often determine whether you recover $100,000 or $3 million:
Which Law Applies? (OCSLA vs. DOHSA vs. Jones Act)
Why it matters:
The fight: Companies push for DOHSA (limited damages). You want OCSLA or Jones Act (full damages).
Difference: Often $1-2 million in additional compensation
Who’s Liable? (Your Employer vs. Third Parties)
Why it matters:
The fight: Identifying all potentially liable third parties
Difference: Third-party claims can be worth millions while workers’ comp maxes out at minimal benefits
What Caused the Accident? (Negligence vs. Product Defect vs. Unseaworthiness)
Why it matters:
The fight: Proving the strongest legal theories that provide maximum recovery
What Are Your Damages? (Current Injuries vs. Future Needs)
Why it matters:
The fight: Comprehensive life care planning vs. company’s lowball medical estimates
Difference: Often $500,000 to $2 million in future medical costs and lost earnings
These battles happen in the first 6-12 months of the case and often determine the entire outcome.
Common Questions Families Ask After Major Accidents
Why Early Action Matters More Than You Think
Every day you wait:
Evidence disappears:
Your case gets weaker:
Deadlines approach:
The company’s defense gets stronger:
We’ve seen families wait 6-12 months to contact a lawyer, only to discover:
Don’t let this happen to you. The investigation that happens in the first 30 days often determines whether you win or lose.
What Makes LKSA Different in Major Accident Cases
When a catastrophic offshore accident happens, you need more than just a lawyer — you need a legal team with the resources and expertise to match the companies you’re up against.
LKSA provides:
Most importantly: We know what evidence to look for, how to preserve it, and how to use it to maximize your recovery.
Take Action Now: Protect Your Rights After an Offshore Accident
If you or a loved one has been involved in a major offshore accident — a platform explosion, helicopter crash, fatal fall, or serious injury — the actions you take in the next few days will determine your family’s future.
Contact Lewis, Kullman, Sterbcow & Abramson, LLC today for a free, confidential consultation. Our experienced maritime attorneys will:
✓ Immediately begin preserving evidence
✓ Launch an independent investigation
✓ Determine which laws provide maximum compensation
✓ Fight for your family’s rights while you focus on recovery
We’ve spent 40+ years representing offshore accident victims. We know what happens after the alarm bells ring — and we know how to protect your rights. No fees unless we win. Your consultation is completely free.
