3/4/25

March 4 2025 | Deepa Padmanabha: This case is a blatant erasure of Indigenous leadership, of Indigenous resistance.

Deepa Padmanabha, a senior legal adviser for Greenpeace USA, spoke to Democracy Now!:

A closely watched civil trial that began in North Dakota last week could bankrupt Greenpeace and chill environmental activism as the climate crisis continues to deepen. The multimillion-dollar lawsuit by Energy Transfer, the oil corporation behind the Dakota Access Pipeline, claims Greenpeace organized the mass protests and encampment at Standing Rock between 2016 and 2017 aimed at stopping construction of the project. Although the uprising at Standing Rock was led by Indigenous water defenders, Energy Transfer is instead going after Greenpeace for $300 million in damages — an amount that could effectively shutter the group’s U.S. operations. “This case is not just an obvious and blatant erasure of Indigenous leadership, of Indigenous resistance,” says Deepa Padmanabha, a senior legal adviser for Greenpeace USA. “It is an attack on the broader movement and all of our First Amendment rights to free speech and peaceful protest.”

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March 4 2025 | Winona LaDuke: North Dakota has really been trying to squash any kind of resistance.

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Feb 27 2025 | Marty Garbus and Steven Donziger: We have witnessed transgressions of Greenpeace’s fair trial rights.