An attorney for a Texas pipeline company says he will show at trial that various Greenpeace entities coordinated delays and ...
Dallas-based Energy Transfer and its subsidiary Dakota Access allege trespass, nuisance, defamation and other offenses by ...
Southwest Judicial District Judge James Gion has denied media requests for photography or video during the five-week civil ...
An attorney representing the developer of the Dakota Access Pipeline told a jury of Morton County residents on Wednesday morning that Greenpeace was secretly behind the protests ...
By Karen Zraick Reporting from the Morton County courthouse in Mandan, N.D. Lawyers for the pipeline company Energy Transfer and Greenpeace fired their opening salvos in a North Dakota courtroom ...
By Karen Zraick Greenpeace went on trial on Monday in North Dakota in a bombshell lawsuit that, if successful, could bankrupt the storied group. The Dallas-based company Energy Transfer sued ...
“Our goal was to be a good corporate citizen in North Dakota,” Cox said. More than 500 organizations from more than 50 countries signed on to that letter, said Greenpeace International ...
A $300 million lawsuit a pipeline company brought against Greenpeace in North Dakota has become a flash point in the debate over free speech, with environmentalists warning the outcome could ...
A group of attorneys, activists and academics will be monitoring an upcoming trial between the developer of the Dakota Access ...
N.D. near their camp in southern North Dakota. Credit: AP/James MacPherson Greenpeace is committed to nonviolence, and only got involved at Standing Rock because of tribal outreach, the attorneys ...
The lawsuit also names the group's funding arm, Greenpeace Fund Inc. The jury trial in state court in Mandan, North Dakota, is scheduled to last five weeks. Dallas-based Energy Transfer alleges ...