Chevron: Release The Secret Evidence That Proves Your Guilt
Chevron: Release The Secret Evidence That Proves Your Guilt In Ecuador
In the wake of a controversial U.S. court
ruling that a $9.5 billion Ecuador judgment against Chevron
is fraudulent, the oil giant has been touting loudly its
innocence of any environmental crimes in the South American
country.
Chevron's lawyers even successfully pressured
some CBS News corporate suits to yank a damning 60 Minutes
piece from the network's website about the deliberate
contamination of the Ecuador rainforest from 1964 to 1992 by
Texaco, which Chevron later bought.
(See the dead link here. You can see the segment on my company's web site. So sue me, CBS.)
Instead of succumbing
to Chevron's pressure tactics, CBS' lawyers should grow a
backbone and demand to see contamination "playbook"
documents that Chevron has been forced to produce in an
international arbitration proceeding.
They are explosive
and prove 60 Minutes got it right, and the U.S. judge got it
wrong.
The playbook details how the company hid evidence of contamination during an eight-year Ecuador trial resulting in a $9.5 billion damage award that the Ecuadorians are waiting for Chevron to pay.
Meanwhile, Chevron is claiming in arbitration that the Republic of Ecuador should pay the judgment, and the two parties are duking it out before a panel of corporate trade lawyers who rent office space at The Hague and act as "judges" -- more about them later.
The playbook took center stage in a recent arbitration filing by Ecuador. It appears the country's lawyers have gotten their hands on much, if not the entire, playbook, but the corporate trade lawyers are requiring Ecuador to redact or cover up the really damning evidence.
Even so, a recent rejoinder filed by Ecuador reveals enough to demonstrate what a morally bankrupt company Chevron is. (See the redacted rejoinder here.)
Here's what we know about the
playbook, pieced together from the filings of both the
Ecuadorians in U.S. court and the Republic of Ecuador in
arbitration.
In 2011, the Ecuadorians obtained a few pages from the playbook and tried to
enter them into evidence during Chevron's "fraud" trial, but
Federal Judge Lewis Kaplan refused to allow any evidence of contamination
into the record, including the small excerpt from Chevron's
playbook.
(See my recent blog about this legal
travesty, and this earlier 2011 press release about the
playbook.)
During the Ecuador trial Chevron's paid
experts wrote the playbook to document how to handle the
contamination they found at the well sites in soil and water
tests.
Without the knowledge of the Ecuador court,
Chevron's experts conducted unofficial and secret
pre-inspections of the sites so they could avoid the badly
contaminated areas during the official judicial inspections.
(See page 63 in the rejoinder.)
Their
pre-inspection findings would have been devastating to their
case had they been turned over to the court. So they never
were. (See page 63.)
Instead, they used the results to avoid the contaminated areas and test at clean spots, usually from soil and water at elevations higher than the huge, unlined and open pits Texaco built to store permanently pure crude and toxic water.
[Quick backgrounder: Texaco explored for oil in Ecuador from 1964 to 1992 and was the sole operator of the well sites during that time. The Ecuadorians filed their original lawsuit in the U.S. against Texaco in 1993, one year after Texaco left Ecuador. A U.S. judge dismissed their lawsuit ruling in 2001 at Texaco's urging the litigation should be heard in Ecuador. That year, Chevron bought Texaco. In 2003, the Ecuadorians re-filed their case in Ecuador but not before the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals instructed Chevron that it must accept Ecuador's jurisdiction, which it did.]
Chevron routinely used deceptive methods, such as mixing clean soil with dirty and undercounting hydrocarbons, to hide or reduce toxic chemicals in samplings. (Seepages 66-72.)
This table below, taken from the arbitration filing, reflects just a few of the thousands of pages of playbook notes Chevron's experts and field personnel took, describing the contamination and advising the company about ways to avoid it during the official judicial inspection.
It's heavily redacted. If it's true
-- as Chevron says it is -- that the oil giant is innocent,
and the truth is what it seeks, then why won't Chevron
release the un-redacted, unedited playbook for all to
see?
Maybe it has something to do with the 1995
remediation agreement that Chevron argues is its
get-out-of-jail-free card.
The agreement, between Texaco
and the Republic of Ecuador, released Texaco from government
liability in exchange for a cleanup of a relatively small
number of pits. It did not, however, release Texaco from
third-party claims.
During the Ecuador trial, tests found
contamination levels at the so-called remediated Texaco pits
as high or higher than the ones not cleaned. The Ecuadorians
accused Texaco of simply throwing dirt on top of the
contamination to hide it.
Chevron's playbook backs that up.
At pits Texaco said it cleaned, Chevron -- according to its own playbook -- found contamination during its secret PIs or pre-inspections. To avoid or reduce the contamination Chevron, during the official judicial inspection, took soil only from the top layer.
Ecuador's rejoinder references
the playbook notes of Shushufindi 24, Sacha 21 and Lago
Agrio 6, all three well sites that Texaco said it
cleaned.
In its secret, pre-inspections Chevron
discovered otherwise. (See pages 68-69.)
The rejoinder reads: "During the JIs (judicial inspections) Chevron's experts sought to avoid finding pollution by sampling only to depths that it knew to be clean. For example, at Shushufindi 24, the soil boring log at pit 2 shows that during its PI, (pre-inspection) REDACTED "Then at the JI, Chevron strategically chose to take surface soil samples only -- avoiding the known contamination below."
Chevron: What did
you find at Shushufini 24, Sacha 21 and Lago Agrio 6?
If
you found little or no contamination, then all is
well.
If you found contamination and withheld it from the
court, then your remediation agreement comes unraveled as
does your entire legal case.
Chevron will say today that pre-inspections were allowed, but that's not what its attorneys said during the trial. Chevron wrongfully accused the Ecuadorians of pre-inspections, telling the court that pre-inspections were a "violation of legal security and due process of law," and "no technical team from ChevronTexaco Corporation has performed any secret tests here."
The rejoinder reads:"Yet by that time, Chevron's experts had conducted PIs at least REDACTED (number of) sites and taken over REDACTED (number of) samples." (See page 65.)
Chevron wants its
shareholders to believe the Ecuadorians are history, even
though enforcement lawsuits are underway in three countries
and an appeal of the U.S. ruling is pending before the
Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which reversed an earlier
Kaplan attempt to stop enforcement of the Ecuador
judgment.
And, while the Republic of Ecuador is fighting
aggressively Chevron's arbitration claim, it is doubtful the
arbitration panel will rule against the oil giant.
Brought in 2009, Chevron's arbitration action is based on alleged violations of Ecuador's Bilateral Trade Agreement with the United States.
For some time now, multi-national corporations have been abusing these trade agreements. Allowing it to happen are the corporate trade lawyers who sit on arbitration panels as judges and then rotate off as lawyers representing corporations before panels composed of their trade lawyer buddies.
Best example is the successful
claim by Phillip Morris against Australia because the
country placed warning signs on cigarette packs about the
dangers of smoking after Phillip Morris began selling
cigarettes there. See here.
International arbitration is
fraught with serious conflicts of interest, and some
countries are considering ending bi-lateral trade agreements
due to numerous upside down arbitration rulings that have
put the interest of corporations above a country's
residents.
The Ecuadorians' best bet is in Canada, Brazil and Argentina where they have filed enforcement lawsuits to seize Chevron's assets in those countries as payment for the judgment.
Who knows? The entire Chevron playbook may see
the light of day in one of those courtrooms soon. Or, 60
Minutes could stand by its work and demand to see
it.
Ironically, during Chevron's "fraud" trial, Kaplan
quoted former Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis'
famous maxim that "sunlight is said to be the best of
disinfectants" but when it comes to the allegations leveled
by the Ecuadorians and their lawyer, Steven Donziger, Kaplan
and the corporate trade lawyers hanging out at the Hague
prefer the dark side of the
moon.
ends