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Friday, April 19, 2024

Ecuadorian plaintiffs not surprised by judge's denial

Kaplan

NEW YORK (Legal Newsline) -- A spokeswoman for the Ecuadorian plaintiffs suing oil giant Chevron says she's not surprised that a federal judge denied their motion to stay a preliminary injunction.

Karen Hinton, spokeswoman for the Ecuadorians, said in a statement Thursday:

"Based on his previous rulings and remarks from the bench, it's clear Judge (Lewis A.) Kaplan has already decided in Chevron's favor without hearing any of the plaintiffs' evidence," she said.

Hinton said the plaintiffs will appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

Kaplan, in a 10-page memorandum and order filed Wednesday, denied the plaintiffs' motion, which was filed last week.

He granted Chevron's motion for a preliminary injunction on March 7. The order aims to prevent the plaintiffs and their counsel from taking any steps to enforce the $9.5 billion legal judgment against the company issued Feb. 14.

Kaplan said in the Wednesday order that the Lago Agrio Plaintiffs Representatives "are not likely to prevail on appeal."

"The balance of the equities strongly favors Chevron," the judge wrote.

"The public interest does not alter the balance in favor of a stay pending appeal. Accordingly, so much of the LAP Representatives' motion as seeks a stay of the preliminary injunction pending appeal is denied."

The court, he said, reserves decision on the balance of the motion.

Chevron said in a response to the plaintiffs' request that a stay of all proceedings pending appeal is "unsupported" and would "substantially harm" its legitimate interests.

"It is just another tactic in their long-running strategy of delay. At the same time that their cohorts assert their intention to disobey this Court's preliminary injunction in the near future, the (Lago Agrio Plaintiffs) Representatives claim that Chevron should just trust in their good offices to respect that Order, and thus there is no legitimate need for a final -- as opposed to preliminary -- finding of unenforceability.

"But any such trust would be unreasonable, since their Ecuadorian co-conspirators and American spokespersons insist that this Court's Order is 'completely ... unenforceable, inapplicable for countries other than the United States.'"

Chevron argues it needs the court's final decision as "quickly as reasonably possible," and that the plaintiffs' only claimed harm -- "the routine expenditure of resources that accompanies all litigation" -- is "insufficient to warrant the 'extraordinary remedy'" of a stay of proceedings.

Lawyers for the Ecuadorian plaintiffs contend Chevron is divesting itself of overseas assets that could be used to enforce the hefty legal judgment against it.

The plaintiffs had requested, in addition to their motion to stay the preliminary injunction, that Kaplan increase a Chevron bond of $21.8 million to reflect the value of assets recently sold, which they say surpasses at least $1.7 billion.

From Legal Newsline: Reach Jessica Karmasek by e-mail at jessica@legalnewsline.com.

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