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Investors Business Daily also writes about the Chevron Ecuador judgment:

The Law: An Ecuador court’s finding of Chevron liable for $8.64 billion over jungle drilling is a bogus case showing how easy it is for lawyers to manipulate banana republic systems.

Hailing the ruling as a strike for “environmental justice,” plaintiffs known as the Amazon Defense Front and their lawyers successfully convinced a judge in Lago Agrio, an Ecuadorean jungle town locally known as a supplying station for Colombia’s FARC terrorists, that mighty Chevron, whose Texaco subsidiary drilled the rain forest from 1964 to 1990, irreparably polluted the rain forest with its drilling operations. That entitled the activists to $8.64 billion.

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Ecuador responds to New York Federal judge’s temporary restraining order against the collection of any judgment against Chevron:

Ecuadorean officials say they will temporarily block a potential multibillion-dollar judgment against Chevron Corp. for alleged environmental damages.

The Attorney General’s Office says in a statement that Ecuador will obey the order from a U.S. federal judge in New York even though officials “do not agree” with it.

The lawsuit against Chevron is being heard in Ecuador, where a court-appointed expert has recommended the company pay up to $27 billion for the alleged damages.

At Chevron’s request, the U.S. judge on Tuesday blocked any judgment for at least 28 days. The judge said he had concluded that lawyers representing the 30,000 plaintiffs were planning a global disruption of the oil giant’s business to enforce any monetary award.

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More on the development in the Chevron Ecuador case:

International arbitrators ordered Ecuador to suspend enforcement of any judgment against Chevron Corp in its marathon rainforest pollution case, representing another important win for the U.S. oil company.

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Order by international arbitration panel follows New York Federal judge’s granting of temporary restraining order against the collection of any judgment against Chevron in Ecuador:

An international arbitration panel ordered Ecuador to temporarily suspend the enforcement of any potential judgments against Chevron ( CVX) in a pending multibillion environmental lawsuit the oil giant faces in the Andean country.

According to documents posted on Chevron’s website, arbitrators presiding in the Permanent Court for Arbitration in The Hague ordered Ecuador on Wednesday ” to take all measures at its disposal to suspend or cause to be suspended the enforcement or recognition within and without Ecuador of any judgment against” Chevron.

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More coverage of the temporary restraining order against the collection of any judgment against Chevron in Ecuador. The San Francisco Chronicle writes about one of the videotapes that can be watched on The Amazon Post, in which “Donziger laughs at the suggestion that the judge hearing the lawsuit in Ecuador may fear for his life if he rules in favor of Chevron.” -

“We are pleased that the court has issued a temporary restraining order against the … defendants’ scheme,” Chevron spokesman Kent Robertson said in a written statement. “Only the government of Ecuador, however, can take the necessary steps to bring an end to the fraud that is being perpetrated in its court system.”

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More coverage of the temporary restraining order against the collection of any judgment against Chevron in Ecuador. The plaintiffs’ lead counsel through most of the New York discovery proceedings, Emery Celli Brinckerhoff & Abady, also moved to withdraw from the case:

The unprecedented litigation over Chevron’s alleged contamination of the Ecuadorian rainforest took a stunning turn Tuesday when Manhattan federal district court judge Lewis Kaplan granted Chevron’s request for a 14-day temporary restraining order against the Ecuadorian plaintiffs suing the company in the Provincial Court of Justice of Sucumbios, as well as the plaintiffs’ Ecuadorian and U.S. lawyers.

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Breaking news in Chevron Ecuador lawsuit…Federal judge in New York grants a temporary restraining order against the collection of any judgment:

A federal judge in New York has temporarily blocked the ability of Ecuadorean plaintiffs to collect any court award against Chevron for damage done to their land decades ago.

Federal Judge Lewis Kaplan cited evidence of an effort to disrupt Chevron’s business in the event there is an award as a reason Tuesday to grant a temporary restraining order against the collection of any judgment.

A court-appointed expert in Ecuador has recommended that Chevron pay up to $27 billion for environmental damages and related illnesses.

The unusual ruling by Kaplan came in an 18-year-old litigation over claims filed on behalf of 30,000 Ecuadoreans. The lawsuit alleged they are victims of environmental damage due to oil exploration and extraction.

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The Washington Times writes about revelations in the Chevron Ecuador lawsuit that have brought to light overwhelming evidence of fraud, collusion, corruption, and other misconduct on the part of those pressing the Lago Agrio plaintiffs’ case:

Ecuador‘s case against California’s Chevron Corp. has boomeranged against the plaintiffs’ lawyers. Today in Manhattan, federal District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan is considering a RICO (Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) complaint Chevron filed Feb. 1 against attorneys and consultants targeting the oil giant.

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