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US Judge reduces Standing Rock verdict to $345 Million

Greenpeace, an environmental group that protests against Dakota Access Pipeline construction, was awarded $667 million in damages by a jury in North Dakota. The judge reduced this amount to about half on Wednesday.

The State District Judge James Gion ruled that the amount Greenpeace is owed by Energy Transfer, a pipeline company, should be limited at $345 million. He found some of the damages to be excessive or duplicative.

Greenpeace's interim general attorney, Marco Simons said that the group "still believes that the remaining allegations are legally unfounded." The case, he added, "has always involved a wealthy corporate using the legal system in order to intimidate and muzzle its critics and protesters who threatened its business model."

Energy Transfer's spokespeople and attorney did not immediately reply to our requests for comments on this decision.

Dakota Access, a project located near the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, began in 2016 but was completed by 2017.

Environmental and tribal groups protested the construction of the pipeline that transports approximately 40% of oil produced in North Dakota’s Bakken region. They claimed it would poison local water supplies and worsen climate change.

Energy Transfer, a Texas-based company, sued Greenpeace first in North Dakota federal courts in 2017. It accused Greenpeace of spreading lies about the project and paying for protesters to disrupt its construction. In March, the North Dakota jury handed down its verdict, which included damages for defamation and conspiracy, as well as trespassing.

In February, Greenpeace filed a counter-suit against Energy Transfer in The Netherlands under a European Law aimed at curbing lawsuits brought to silence or harass activists. This lawsuit is still ongoing. Blake Brittain, Washington, and Edwina Gibbs edited the report.

(source: Reuters)