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ICT News on MSNJury selection begins in civil trial brought by Dakota Access Pipeline developer against GreenpeaceA behemoth defamation lawsuit brought by the developer of the Dakota Access Pipeline against Greenpeace began its trial in a ...
The environmental group, battling a multimillion-dollar lawsuit over protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline, told the ...
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A Lakota organizer said in a video deposition played to jurors Monday that the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe led the protests ...
The request is the culmination of multiple unsuccessful attempts to convince Southwest Judicial District Judge James Gion ...
Greenpeace provided supplies, intel and training to demonstrators who spent months camping near the Dakota Access Pipeline ...
An attorney for a Texas pipeline company says he will show at trial that various Greenpeace entities coordinated delays and ...
In a separate lawsuit over the pipeline, the state of North Dakota seeks $38 million from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Energy Transfer, which owns the Dakota Access Pipeline, is seeking $300 million, a sum that Greenpeace says could bankrupt the storied environmental group. By Karen Zraick Reporting from the ...
An attorney for Energy Transfer claimed it was "a day of reckoning," while Greenpeace attorneys said there was no evidence to ...
The attorneys for Energy Transfer began laying out their argument Wednesday as to why they believe the company is owed some ...
the Dakota Access Pipeline. If successful, Energy Transfer’s $300 million lawsuit may end up bankrupting the advocacy group as a whole, both domestically and internationally. That victory was brief.
The pipeline was completed in 2017. Energy Transfer and its subsidiary Dakota Access allege trespass, nuisance, defamation and other offenses by Netherlands-based Greenpeace International and its ...
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