Latin America
Related: About this forumDonziger: Facing Prison for Fighting Chevron
Rights Attorney Pays Price for Defending Indigenous in Ecuador Poisoned by Oil
by Greg Palast
August 6, 2021
Look at his face. Emergildo Criollo, Chief of the Cofan people of the Amazon in Ecuador. Determined, dignified, in war paint, bare-chested.
It was back in 2007, when I found him in his thatched stilt home in the rainforest. Criollo told me his 3-year-old son had jumped into a swimming hole, covered with an enticing shine. The shine was oil sludge, illegally dumped. His son came up vomiting blood, then dropped dead in the Chiefs arms.
I followed him to the courthouse in the dusty roustabout town of Lago Agrio (Bitter Lake) where, with a sheaf of papers, Criollo sought justice for his son.
Behind Criollo, the court clerks, in their white shirts and ties, were giggling and grinning at each other, nodding toward this indio painted up and half naked, thinking he can file a suit against a giant. A giant named Chevron.
In 2011, they stopped laughing. Thats when an Ecuadorian court ordered Chevron to pay Criollo and other indigenous co-plaintiffs $9.5 billion. The courts found that Chevrons Texaco operation had illegally dumped 16 billion gallons of deadly oil waste.
What the gigglers didnt know is that the Chief had a secret weapon: Steven Donziger, a US attorney, classmate of Barack Obama at Harvard law, who gave up everything literally everything to take on Criollos case.
Its been a decade, and Chevron still hasnt paid a dime. But Donziger has paid big time: For the last two years, hes been under house arrest, longer than any American in history never convicted of a crime.
But weeks ago, he was convicted of contempt by a judge who denied him a jury. (The Constitution? Faggedaboudit.) And on October 1, this contemptible judge will sentence Donziger, and could put him behind bars.
Who was the prosecutor? Not the US government, but Chevrons law firm. The first-ever criminal prosecution by a US corporation.
More:
https://www.gregpalast.com/facing-prison-for-fighting-chevron/
hermetic
(8,308 posts)It makes me SO angry. Isn't there a politician out there who can do something about this?
Judi Lynn
(160,527 posts)I've been seeing articles and images of this catastrophe for years and years. It's inconceivable human beings could treat other human beings and the animals and environment like this.
Who but a monster, a right-wing monster, of course, would take advantage of human beings precisely because they have no political voice, no power?
Can you imagine coporations treating Caucasians like this?
The photos are so depressing....
(Conoco formerly owned it and sold this mess to the Chevron company which not only hasn't cleaned up a molecule from the area, but has taken fiendish glee in trying to destroy everyone seeking help because of it.)