Updates On "Big Oil" Liability: Justice Is Prevailing!

Chevron did not despoil the Ecuadorean jungle and was found liable only by a kangaroo court in that country.

Forbes - Michael J. Krauss 26/06/2018

Helipads are seen aboard the Chevron Corp. Jack/St. Malo deepwater oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Louisiana, U.S., on Friday, May 18, 2018. Photo: Forbes

Several past  columns have dealt extensively with two types of lawsuits against "Big Oil."  On the one hand, California and New York cities are suing Big Oil for creating the "nuisance" of, essentially, causing the Earth's temperature to rise.  On the other hand, Ecuadorean plaintiffs are suing Chevron for, essentially, poisoning indigenous people.  Both sets of suits are nonsense, as my past columns have pointed out.  The cities' suits don't meet any intelligible definition of nuisance.  Chevron did not despoil the Ecuadorean jungle and was found liable only by a kangaroo court in that country.

Today I'm happy to report that the good news keeps coming in on both these fronts.

The bad news just keeps coming in for the Ecuadorean plaintiffs, who were most likely in fact injured by the actions of an Ecuadorean state petroleum company.  As this column has already noted,  in May the Ontario Court of Appeal affirmed a lower court’s decision to dismiss  plaintiffs’ enforcement against Chevron Canada Ltd.. Also in May, the Supreme Court of Gibraltar issued a judgment against plaintiffs’ lead Ecuadorian lawyer and representatives for their role in procuring and attempting to enforce the fraudulent Ecuadorian judgment, ordering them to pay Chevron $38 million in damages.  We do not know whether New York State Bar authorities are investigating the behavior of attorney Stephen Donziger, who was found by United States District Judge Kaplan to have possibly committed RICO violations.  As always, this column will keep you apprised of developments as we get them.

Michael Krauss is Professor of Law at the Antonin Scalia Law School of George Mason University, and is a nationally known scholar of Tort Law and Legal Ethics. His home page is here.

 

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