Last August, a US appeals court may have finally brought to a close a
case that the court described as “among the most extensively chronicled
in the history of the American federal judiciary”: a lawsuit, initially
filed in 1993, seeking damages for adverse environmental and health
consequences of oil exploration and drilling by Texaco (later acquired
by Chevron) in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Chevron and the plaintiffs
each have their own version of the long, complicated, and contentious
litigation. (For a concise, relatively balanced summary see here.)
For present purposes, the essential facts are as follows: After eight
years of US litigation, in 2001 Chevron persuaded a US court to send the
case to Ecuador. In 2011, after an additional decade of litigation in
Ecuador, the Ecuadorian courts ultimately found in favor of the
plaintiffs, ordering Chevron to pay an $18.5 billion judgment (later
reduced to $9 billion). Unfortunately for the plaintiffs, Chevron
doesn’t have any assets in Ecuador, so the plaintiffs have been trying
to enforce their judgment in a number of other jurisdictions, including
the United States. In its August ruling, the US appeals court affirmed
the district court’s 2014 holding that the Ecuadorian judgment could not
be enforced in the United States because it was a product of fraud and
corruption—including the shocking finding that plaintiff’s attorneys had
bribed the judge with a promise of $500,000, and ghostwrote the
multi-billion dollar judgment.
Read the whole blog post by Travis Edwards, in the Global Anticorruption Blog: https://globalanticorruptionblog.com/2016/11/21/us-courts-evaluation-of-foreign-judicial-corruption-different-stages-different-standards/
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