Several U.S. government agencies are preparing a criminal probe of at least three companies involved in the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, though it could take more than a year before any charges are filed, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday.

BP Plc, Transocean Ltd and Halliburton Co are the initial targets of the wide-ranging probe, which aims to examine whether their cozy relations with federal regulators contributed to the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, the newspaper said, citing law enforcement and other sources.

The federal government is assembling in New Orleans a BP squad composed of officials from the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Coast Guard and other agencies to look into whether company officials made false statements to regulators, obstructed justice, or falsified test results for devices such as the rig's failed blowout preventer.

On Tuesday, BP said the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department had launched a probe into market trading connected to the spill.

The oil giant's newly named chief executive, Bob Dudley, on Tuesday called the spill a wake-up call for the entire industry as the company tallied up its losses.

The newspaper said one emerging line of inquiry for the BP Squad is whether inspectors for the government agency that regulates the oil industry went easy on the companies in exchange for money or other inducements.

Investigators plan to get witnesses to turn against others to get insider information, the Post said.

The newspaper cited a law enforcement official saying no decisions are imminent and You can bet it would be more than a year before any indictments.

(Reporting by Corbett B. Daly; Editing by Philip Barbara)