| Greenpeace Ordered To Pay Over $660 Million For Defaming Oil Company 
  by Tyler Durden
 
 Thursday, Mar 20, 2025 - 09:40 AM
 
 Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times,
 
 A  North Dakota jury has ruled that Greenpeace must pay more than $660  million in damages to Dallas-based oil and gas company Energy Transfer,  finding the environmental group liable for defamation and other claims  related to protests against the Dakota Access pipeline.
 
 
  
 The  nine-person jury delivered its verdict on March 19 in a lawsuit brought  by Energy Transfer Partners, which sought hundreds of millions in  damages from Greenpeace. The case stemmed from the 2016–2017  protests against the pipeline’s Missouri River crossing, located  upstream of a tribal reservation.
 
 The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe has  long opposed the project, citing risks to its water supply and sacred burial grounds.
 
 The  lawsuit cited Greenpeace’s claims that Energy Transfer desecrated  burial grounds and culturally significant sites during construction, as  well as assertions that the pipeline would “catastrophically alter the  climate.” Cox countered that the company had made 140 route adjustments  to protect sacred sites and said Energy Transfer was committed to being  “a good corporate citizen in North Dakota.”
 
 Energy Transfer  accused Greenpeace International and Greenpeace USA of acts including defamation, trespass, nuisance, and civil conspiracy. During  the trial, which began in late February 2025, the company’s attorney,  Trey Cox, argued that Greenpeace funded and organized protesters,  provided blockade supplies, conducted training sessions, and spread  misinformation to block the pipeline’s construction.
 
 Greenpeace  attorneys rejected the allegations, stating there was no evidence  linking the organization to the disruptions caused by the protesters.  They  argued the lawsuit was an attempt to silence activism through financial and legal intimidation.
 
 
 “Beyond  the impact that this lawsuit could have on the Greenpeace entities, one  of the most worrisome things about the case is that it could establish  dangerous new legal precedents that could hold any participant at  protests responsible for the actions of others at those protests,” Deepa  Padmanabha, Greenpeace USA senior legal advisor, said in a Feb. 24  statement. Greenpeace  USA was found liable on all counts, while the other entities were held  responsible for some. The damages will be divided among the three groups  in varying amounts. The total damages amount to nearly $666.9 million.  The jury ruled that Greenpeace USA is responsible for the largest share,  nearly $404 million, while Greenpeace Fund Inc. and Greenpeace  International must each pay approximately $131 million.
 “And you can imagine that this would have a serious chilling effect on anybody who wants to engage in protest.
 
 
 
 Energy Transfer said the verdict is a victory for North Dakotans affected by the protests.
 
 
 “While  we are pleased that Greenpeace has been held accountable for their  actions against us, this win is really for the people of Mandan and  throughout North Dakota who had to live through the daily harassment and  disruptions caused by the protesters who were funded and trained by  Greenpeace,” a spokesperson for Energy Transfer said in an emailed  statement to The Epoch Times.Greenpeace  has not publicly commented on the ruling and did not immediately  respond to a request for comment from The Epoch Times. However, allied  environmental group EarthRights International in a March 19  statement said that Greenpeace intends to appeal the decision to the North Dakota Supreme Court.
 “It is also a win  for all law-abiding Americans who understand the difference between the  right to free speech and breaking the law. That the disrupters have been  held responsible is a win for all of us.”
 
 
 
 EarthRights  also raised concerns about trial irregularities, citing alleged jury  ties to the fossil fuel industry, Energy Transfer’s $3 million donation  to the trial’s host city, and the denial of Greenpeace’s requests for a  venue change.
 
 “These irregularities, which may amount  to a violation of Greenpeace’s right to a fair trial, almost certainly  factored into the verdict, and may form the basis of an appeal,”  EarthRights said in its statement, adding that it “proudly joins  Greenpeace USA in speaking up against brazen legal attacks and ensuring  that the environmental movement only continues to grow stronger, despite  the appalling result in North Dakota.”
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