Chevron Documents Collusion Between Ecuador Court and Trial Attorneys in Response to Latest Ruling

ChevronBy Kevin Mooney — Despite an adverse court ruling out of Ecuador, Chevron continues to remain on the offensive against trial lawyers who are suing the company over environmental allegations that have been hotly disputed.  An Ecuadorian appeals court in Lago Agrio  upheld a ruling earlier this month ordering the company to pay $18 billion in damages to plaintiffs who claim the oil company is responsible for polluting the Amazon and damaging the health of local residents.

Chevron became a target for litigation after it took over Texaco in 2001. Farmers and tribe members claim Texaco damaged parts of the jungle with faulty drilling practices in the 1970’s and 1980’s. In response, Chevron officials have said that Texaco properly remediated the areas where it had operations. Moreover, the company has produced reams of evidence that demonstrate plaintiff attorneys have been operating in collusion with Ecuador’s judiciary to produce fraudulent rulings. Chevron has also sought international legal recourse with considerable success.

Under the U.S.-Ecuador Bilateral Investment Agreement Treaty, a Hague Tribunal has ordered Ecuador to suspend enforcement of the ruling pending further investigation. Several federal judges in the U.S. have also ruled in the company’s favor. Chevron has also submitted a letter to Galo Chiriboga, Ecuador’s prosecutor general that documents the fraud and corruption allegations. The plaintiffs’ representatives including Steven Donziger, Pablo Fajardo, Juan Pablo  Saenz, Julio Priento and Luis Yanza worked in covert partnership with Judge Zambrano to craft a ruling  that would be favorable to their case, according to the letter.

Chevron’s evidence against the Ecuadorian court includes the following:

  • “The judgment copies exact language from a June 2009 email that Fajardo sent to Donziger, Sáenz and Prieto. The body of the email includes a short memo from a not-yet identified third party and a “transcri[ption]” of a published Ecuadorian court opinion. That transcription contains numerous mistakes not found in the published court opinion itself. The judgment repeats all of these mistakes, exactly, as well as a citation error Fajardo made in his email.”
  • “The judgment also refers to several test samples by names that are not found in the record, but rather in private spreadsheets created by the plaintiffs, which contain information from the plaintiffs’ own database. The judgment replicates errors contained in the plaintiffs’ database and replicates errors in the database attributing data to the wrong experts and confuses measurement units.”
  • “The judgment contains language from a private memorandum authored by plaintiffs’ attorney Juan Pablo Sáenz and other members of plaintiffs’ legal team around November 2007 regarding a Chevron subsidiary’s merger with Texaco.  No fewer than 15 instances, significant portions of the Sáenz memorandum, including entire sentences, appear verbatim or nearly verbatim in the judgment.”

Chevron has released a statement in response to the latest ruling out of Ecuador: “The Lago Agrio judgment was procured through a corrupt and fraudulent scheme, much of which was captured on film and memorialized in the plaintiffs’ representatives’ own emails and correspondence. Their misconduct includes fabricating expert reports, manufacturing evidence, bribing and colluding with court officials, waging a campaign of intimidation against judges, and even ghostwriting parts of the verdict itself. Evidence of these crimes has been provided to Ecuador’s courts and prosecutors, but authorities there have taken no corrective actions.”

Chevron’s successful legal efforts to obtain outtakes from the documentary “Crude” also show that U.S. trial attorneys strategized with a court appointed engineer named Richard Cabrera who was charged with making an objective assessment of the pollution allegations. Cabrera recommended a damage figure in excess of $27 billion.

The conflicts do not end here.

Kerry Kennedy, the ex-wife of Gov. Andrew Cuomo and daughter of Robert F. Kennedy, has been crusading against Chevron and on behalf of the environment; or so she says.  Court documents reveal that Kennedy was hired as a “public-relations consultant” by the plaintiffs’ legal team. She was paid $50,000 by Donziger, bank statements show and according to news reports, could receive $40 million if the $18 billion judgment ultimately prevails.

The case in Ecuador calls out for large scale tort reform aimed at exposing questionable allegations that ultimately work to the disadvantage of private industry, consumers and taxpayers. With state legislatures going back into session early this year, now would be an opportune time for lawmakers to advance policy changes that reform the civil justice system.

While the case in Ecuador may be viewed as an extreme example of judicial mischief, it does show the concern trial attorneys and self-described human rights activists have for the environment is often feigned and not real.

As Net Right Daily has previously reported, Chevron has filed a RICO complaint against the attorneys and consultants attached to the case in Ecuador.

Kevin Mooney is a contributing editor to Americans for Limited Government. You can follow Kevin on Twitter at @KevinMooneyDC.

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  • Anonymous

    Normally when a company doesn’t like the way it’s treated there, they can opt to LEAVE. Unfortunately, the way that US companies tend to work, they have the CIA send in terrorists, overthrow the government, and make it so the company no longer problems.
    To them THAT is “free enterprise”, they being FREE to steal whatever they want wherever they want!

  • Wille25

    A typical leftist remark as fabricated as the corrupt attorneys and judges Chevron is fighting. You mistake is assuming that today’s public at large is uniformed of the facts. When it is you in fact that are the uniformed fabricator of factually challenged information. 

  • Anonymous

    You couldn’t be much more wrong. I’m TOTALLY against the Leftists. I have EDUCATED myself as to just what the CIA does. They KILLED RFK, MLK, JFK and lots more. They trained “terrorists” to go into Central America to take over those countries in install puppet “leaders” so they could enable the corporations to do whatever they want.
    Real soon, they’ll be creating a “false flag” event here in the USA so O’Bummer can institute NDAA and put all the “terrorists” (folks who KNOW he’s a fake and are against him) into FEMA camps.
    Attached is a snapshot of Barry’s FAKE birth certificate signature on the bottom, which shows he’s a FRAUD

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Erik-Osbun/100001215333702 Erik Osbun

    Whenever and wherever a corporation is making money, a coven of parasites will gather.

  • topeka

    40 million for selling an American company up the river…

    where can I sign up?
    ;-)

    at least she has the good sense to demand more than 30 pieces of silver…

  • topeka

    wow, que the theme to the X-files….

    … I have known people who have seen private military ops for oil companies – none are CIA – at least on active duty.

    Oil companies expect results – the CIA is the post office of intelligence. 

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_2CT355NER2XOHBBCQZUVK2PEW4 MichaelK

    Pure and simple, greed!

  • DCM

    OIL is the FUEL for the engine of FREEDOM
    VOTE for FREEDOM
    VOTE REPUBLICAN

    Read more at NetRightDaily.com: http://netrightdaily.com/2012/03/no-senate-cloture-votes-on-judicial-nominees-until-unconstitutional-recess-appointments-rescinded/#ixzz1p8tB3Rtw

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