Chevron's Star Witness In $9.5 Billion Corporate Sovereignty Case Admits He Lied

from the well,-that's-awkward dept

One of Techdirt’s earliest posts on corporate sovereignty was back in October 2013, when we wrote about the incredible case of Chevron. It used the investor-state dispute settlement mechanism to suspend the enforcement of a historic $18 billion judgment against the oil corporation made by Ecuador’s courts because of the company’s responsibility for mass contamination of the Amazonian rain forest. Given the huge sums involved, it’s no surprise that things didn’t end there. As the site Common Dreams reports, in 2013:

Ecuador’s National Court of Justice upheld the verdict but cut the initial mandated payment from $18 billion to $9.5 billion.

Chevron has repeatedly refused to pay the $9.5 billion ordered by Ecuadorian courts and even took the step of removing most of its assets from Ecuador in an apparent effort to avoid paying.

Chevron not only refused to pay, but asked a judge in New York to invalidate the claim. And that’s precisely what happened in 2014, as Vice News explains:

California-based oil giant Chevron hailed a sweeping victory in a two-decade long legal battle in the Ecuadorian Amazon. A New York federal judge, Lewis Kaplan, ruled that a $9.5 billion Lago Agrio judgment leveled against the company by the small Andean country’s highest court, was obtained by way of fraud and coercion.

Vice News notes that central to Chevron’s case in New York was the testimony of Alberto Guerra, a former Ecuadorian judge:

In New York, Guerra testified that he had struck a deal between the plaintiffs [the Ecuadorian government] and the presiding judge [in Ecuador], Nicolas Zambrano: Guerra would ghostwrite the verdict, Zambrano would sign it, and the two would share an alleged $500,000 in kickbacks from the plaintiffs.

Pretty damning stuff, which seems to have played a major part in convincing the New York judge to dismiss the $9.5 billion award. But in a rather dramatic turn of events, the following just emerged:

Guerra has now admitted that there is no evidence to corroborate allegations of a bribe or a ghostwritten judgment, and that large parts of his sworn testimony, used by Kaplan in the RICO case to block enforcement of the ruling against Chevron, were exaggerated and, in other cases, simply not true.

In keeping with the rest of the case, Guerra’s confession is not entirely straightforward, and it’s not clear what really happened during the 2013 Ecuadorian court case — it’s worth reading the fascinating Vice News story to get the full details of the continuing confusion. It does appear that the advantage has passed back to the government of Ecuador in this high-stakes legal battle, but it’s by no means over — all thanks to corporate sovereignty’s disturbing power to overrule otherwise “final” rulings from national courts.

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Companies: chevron

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Comments on “Chevron's Star Witness In $9.5 Billion Corporate Sovereignty Case Admits He Lied”

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17 Comments
That One Guy (profile) says:

No, not really

It does appear that the advantage has passed back to the government of Ecuador in this high-stakes legal battle, but it’s by no means over — all thanks to corporate sovereignty’s disturbing power to overrule otherwise “final” rulings from national courts.

The ‘advantage’ is purely illusionary. If Chevron has refused to pay up so far, I see no reason why they would change their stance, now or ever. What is the Ecuadorian government going to do, seize the assets that the company no longer has in the country as payment for the fine that Chevron doesn’t acknowledge as legitimate?

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

… did you actually read the article? He’s not saying that he lied about the size of the bribe, he’s saying that he lied about there being a bribe at all.

‘Guerra has now admitted that there is no evidence to corroborate allegations of a bribe or a ghostwritten judgment, and that large parts of his sworn testimony, used by Kaplan in the RICO case to block enforcement of the ruling against Chevron, were exaggerated and, in other cases, simply not true.

He exaggerated other stuff, but the bribe and resulting judgement were flat out lies.

BJC (profile) says:

We're not talking about ISDS here

Nothing that happened in New York has anything to do with ISDS.

Yes, Chevron did go to an ISDS tribunal as well, but the New York case is in a regular U.S. court, not a weird international arbitration body. Like the suit over Argentina’s sovereign debt (also in a NY court), this is basically a suit over whether anybody connected to the U.S. should help Ecuador collect against Chevron.

Whether or not TPP or TTIP are ratified, that kind of legal case is still good in cases like this.

BJC (profile) says:

Re: Re: We're not talking about ISDS here

The NY proceeding is about collecting the judgment. The ISDS proceeding is about the judgment itself.

The ISDS proceeding is basically an international law tribunal saying, “Ecuador, your courts screwed up, go fix it.” The ISDS proceeding is against Ecuador to change its own laws and policies.

However, the NY case doesn’t challenge Ecuador’s ability to levy massive money judgments in its own courts. If Chevron had a lot of assets in Ecuador, the N.Y. court wouldn’t have any legal basis to stop them from being confiscated to satisfy the judgment. However, the N.Y. court can say, as a matter of U.S. law, that the judgment is basically an arbitrary attempt to steal stuff from a multinational corporation and therefore Ecuador can’t expect U.S. courts to order Chevron to pay the judgment.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: We're not talking about ISDS here

If Chevron had a lot of assets in Ecuador,

And previously, in the article…

and even took the step of removing most of its assets from Ecuador in an apparent effort to avoid paying.

Convenient, for a company framing the argument as “stealing international assets from a megacorp”.

Hugo S Cunningham (profile) says:

US pension funds and other Chevron stockholders should not be fleeced by Ecuador for the same conduct that Ecuador’s national oil company continues to this day. Let Ecuador shut down their oil industry and start paying their own reparations free and clear to the indigenous plaintiffs, and then I might be open to arguments that Chevron make a proportional contribution.

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