Two western Minnesota men have been ordered by a federal judge to pay more than $1.1 million for damage they inflicted when their gunfire punctured a pipeline and released thousands of gallons of diesel fuel into a creek that feeds a river.
Eric J. Weckwerth-Pineda, 25, of Cottonwood, and Tanner J. Sik, 22, of Ivanhoe, were sentenced Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis after having pleaded guilty to misdemeanor negligent discharge of a pollutant in connection with the incident on April 24, 2019, near Cottonwood Lake in Lyon County.
The men were each put on a year's probation, along with jointly being on the hook for a restitution amount that the U.S. Attorney's Office has acknowledged will not be recouped from the defendants.
Weckwerth-Pineda and Sik also have admitted in state court to felony criminal damage to property, which may be reduced to a misdemeanor upon successful completion of five years' probation.
According to federal court documents, Weckwerth-Pineda and Sik packed up their guns and drove a pickup truck to a bridge that spans a dam between the lake and a creek that flows another 10 miles from the spot of the leak into the Yellow Medicine River.
Sik fired his AR-15 rifle from about 240 yards and hit the pipeline at least three times, while Weckwerth-Pineda used "the scope on his own rifle to spot [Sik's] shots" as a way to aid his friend's aim, court records read.
Soon afterward that day, the two men and a third friend who had been with them returned to the area and "could see a sheen … across the creek and the pipeline was spraying diesel fuel," according to one court filing.
The third friend reported the leak to authorities.