I am somewhat surprised that Steven R. Donziger granted an interview to 
Clifford Krauss, who is a disgusting tool of the oil industry as I 
pointed out here: 
http://louisproyect.org/2010/11/07/clifford-krauss-propagandist-par-excellence/.
 
I would also refer you to the documentary on Chevron's rape of Ecuador's 
mostly indigenous peasants here: 
http://louisproyect.org/2009/08/30/the-cove-crude/. Donziger partners 
with an Ecuadorian lawyer on the peasants' case. You can watch the 
documentary on Netflix. I should add that Chevron has also gone after 
the filmmakers with a vengeance. Finally, it is worth noting that 
Chevron is Jared Diamond's idea of a socially responsible corporation.

July 30, 2013
Lawyer Who Beat Chevron in Ecuador Faces Trial of His Own
By CLIFFORD KRAUSS

Steven R. Donziger — environmental hero or charlatan, depending on whom 
you talk to — is one of the toughest lawyers around, or slightly crazy.

Possibly both.

For the last two decades Mr. Donziger has been battling the Chevron 
Corporation over an environmental disaster that happened in the jungles 
of Ecuador. Two years ago, he won an $18 billion case against the oil 
giant, the kind of victory that most lawyers can only dream of.

But Chevron has yet to pay a penny of the award, and has turned the 
tables on him. Now, he is defending himself against a Chevron lawsuit 
charging that he masterminded a conspiracy to extort and defraud the 
corporation. The trial is scheduled for October.

Across a table in his two-bedroom apartment on the Upper West Side of 
Manhattan, Mr. Donziger for the first time in recent years spoke 
publicly about the personal travails that he says have engulfed him. He 
says shadowy men have trailed him. Watched his family. Sat in cars 
outside his home. He had his apartment swept for bugs, but found nothing.

All of that might sound like the ravings of a Grade A conspiracy 
theorist. But Mr. Donziger, who played basketball with Barack Obama at 
Harvard Law School, has a serious following among environmentalists. He 
and his supporters say he is being vilified — potentially ruined — for 
unmasking Chevron’s questionable environmental record. Chevron, which is 
suing him and his associates for damages that could reach billions of 
dollars, says he is simply a con artist.

It is a remarkable turn of events for Mr. Donziger, who has chased after 
Chevron with the single-mindedness of Ahab. Reports of questionable 
ethical conduct have cast doubt over his motives. He is accused of 
engineering the ghostwriting of a crucial report submitted to the 
Ecuadorean court that decided the case, a claim he says is exaggerated 
and misconstrues local legal customs. Some of his former allies have 
abandoned him and signed statements taking Chevron’s side.

Even his lawyer in the fraud case has withdrawn himself because, he 
said, Mr. Donziger could no longer pay his bills. And this month U.S. 
District Court Judge Lewis A. Kaplan denied Mr. Donziger’s plea for a 
delay in the trial, expressing skepticism that he and his backers did 
not have the money to hire another lawyer. (Judge Kaplan noted in his 
ruling that Mr. Donziger stood to gain a fee of over $1 billion should 
the Ecuadorean judgment, which Chevron is challenging, be enforced.)

The particulars of the case have been litigated and relitigated. Mr. 
Donziger insists that Chevron’s predecessor, Texaco, cut through the 
Amazon, spilled oil into pristine rain forests and left behind what 
remains to this day a toxic mess. Chevron says he is an ambulance-chaser 
who has fabricated facts for his own financial ends, blaming the company 
for pollution mostly caused by Petroecuador, the national oil company 
that was once a partner of Texaco and continues to produce oil in the 
region.

But Mr. Donziger, a bear of a man with a quick laugh and a robust ego, 
says he is unbowed.

“It is creepy and scary,” Mr. Donziger, 51, said of his experiences 
during a six-hour interview at his home. Chevron, a company worth $240 
billion, is trying to scare him away, he says. “When I walk into a 
deposition and see 15 Chevron lawyers there ready to eat me for lunch, I 
realize I’ve been bestowed an honor,” he said, smiling.

To which Chevron says: Nonsense. “He thinks he can one-up P. T. Barnum 
and fool all the people all the time,” said Randy Mastro, a lawyer 
working for Chevron. “But it’s his own confidants who have now turned on 
him.”

Many environmentalists, perhaps predictably, are still behind him.

“I have admiration for anyone who is willing to take on a rich, powerful 
oil company,” said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club 
and a longtime supporter of Mr. Donziger’s efforts. “And to do it for 
more than two decades is either crazy or impressive and probably both.”

These days, Mr. Donziger spends much of his time working at his dining 
room table below an expansive portrait of Mao walking among his people — 
more of a joke than an expression of his political beliefs, he says. He 
still finds time to take his 6-year-old son to school, take yoga classes 
and walk the dog. His apartment is virtually a gallery of the case. 
Photographs of Ecuadorean Indians, jungle pipelines and the first day of 
the Ecuadorean trial hang on its walls.

The origins of the case go back to the 1970s, when Texaco, which was 
later acquired by Chevron, operated as a partner with the Ecuadorean 
state oil company Petroecuador in the Amazon.

Mr. Donziger, who had worked as a journalist in Nicaragua, was a Harvard 
Law School student when he heard about the cause from a fellow student 
of Ecuadorean descent. Even though Texaco had reached a $40 million 
agreement with Ecuador that obliged it to clean some of the waste pits 
and well sites, villagers filed a class-action suit in 1993. Mr. 
Donziger dived in and emerged as the lead legal organizer.

Mr. Donziger’s activism is something of a birthright. He remembers how 
his mother, a social activist from Jacksonville, Fla., took him as a 
young boy to a picket line in front of a grocery store to back César 
Chávez’s lettuce boycott. His grandfather, Aaron E. Koota, was a 
Brooklyn district attorney and judge who decorated his office with 
pictures of himself with Hubert H. Humphrey and Robert F. Kennedy.

Inspired by them, he said he went to law school committed to help people 
who otherwise could not get access to legal services.

Two years out of law school, he traveled to Ecuador in 1993. “I saw what 
honestly looked like an apocalyptic disaster, almost like the end of the 
world,” he said, describing seeing entire jungle lakes filled with oil 
and children walking barefoot on oil-covered roads. That set the stage 
for a life dominated by the case.

Chevron never accepted the validity of the Ecuadorean judgment, and has 
looked for any opening to discredit it.

It found one in the documentary film “Crude,” which essentially stars 
Mr. Donziger, and highlighted his unorthodox style. Chevron lawyers 
argued before Judge Kaplan that the release of outtakes could prove that 
the company had been wronged.

Judge Kaplan agreed, and the flood of damaging revelations began.

One outtake filmed in a restaurant showed Ann Maest, a scientist working 
for Stratus Consulting, telling Mr. Donziger that there was no evidence 
that contamination spread from the oil pits and that “nothing has spread 
anywhere at all.” Mr. Donzinger, who had hired the company to research 
the contamination, was unmoved. “This is Ecuador, O.K.,” he said. “At 
the end of the day, there are a thousand people around the courthouse, 
you will get whatever you want. Sorry, but it’s true.”

Mr. Donziger has also been compelled to surrender a diary that revealed 
his secret meetings with Ecuadorean judges. He has been forced to hand 
over e-mail correspondence that contains several messages from one of 
his Ecuadorean colleagues about “paying the puppeteer” that Chevron 
insists are references to bribes to a judge. (Mr. Donziger says that was 
a joke, referring to “a former very bossy lawyer” with whom his team has 
a longstanding fee dispute.)

Sworn statements by environmental consultants who formerly worked with 
him have contended that he ignored scientific evidence that challenged 
his allegations of widespread contamination and that he engineered the 
ghostwriting of the critical report to the Ecuadorean court.

“Donziger created this fiction of massive environmental contamination,” 
said Kent Robertson, a Chevron spokesman, who acknowledged that the 
company had hired private investigators to protect itself from fraud.

Mr. Donziger countersued Chevron for fraud and extortion, accusing 
Chevron of corruption, bribes and threats to officials in Ecuador, but 
Judge Kaplan dismissed the case this week.

Mr. Donziger denies that he has crossed any ethical line, and says the 
sworn statements against him were obtained under legal pressure from 
Chevron, which he refuses to bow to.

“A giant oil company is trying to destroy me because I was able to hold 
them accountable for toxic dumping on a mass scale,” he said.

By Mr. Donziger’s account, however, Chevron is also feeling the heat. 
Even though today it has no meaningful operations in Ecuador, it faces 
enforcement actions to confiscate its assets in Canada, Brazil and 
Argentina. He added with typical bluster, “As I take the long view, it’s 
Chevron that faces the risk, not Steven Donziger.”

As he prepared to leave the lobby of his building the other day to take 
his cocker spaniel for a walk, he said of himself and his family, “It’s 
stressful, but we’ll be fine.”
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to