Chevron Whistleblower Leaks ‘Smoking Gun’ in Case of Ecuadorian Oil Spill
Published on Wednesday, April 08, 2015 by Common Dreams by Lauren McCauley, staff writer In what...
Read MorePublished on Wednesday, April 08, 2015 by Common Dreams by Lauren McCauley, staff writer In what...
Read MorePublished on Wednesday, November 05, 2014 by Common Dreams by Nadia Prupis, staff writer A slew of...
Read MorePublished October 31, 2014 by Democracy Now! The oil giant Chevron is being accused of attempting...
Read MoreIncident took place at Chevron-operated well in southwestern Pennsylvania
Read More“Chevron go home!” protesters chanted as they tore down barriers and briefly entered the site where the gas giant hopes to drill
Read Moreoil giant Chevron went to court in New York this week to try to escape paying $19 billion in damages in Ecuador
Read MoreFollowing their guilty sentence for the dumping of 18.5bn gallons of toxic waste in the Ecuadorian Amazon, Chevron is amassing the personal information of the environmentalists and attorneys who fought against them in an effort to prove ‘conspiracy.’
Read MoreA forensic study conducted by Det Norske Veritas, into the cause of the BP Oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico has determined that a blowout preventer cannot work once the pressure event meant to trigger the valves to close goes off a well head, because the valves become misaligned by the event. Nevertheless, the US Department of the Interior continues to issue deep water drilling permits in the Gulf to known bad corporate actors like BP, Chevron, Shell and more.
Read MoreChevron is trying to play themselves off as the victim here, which is quite extraordinary, of course— and one of the extraordinary things here is that Chevron fought for years, actually, to have the jurisdiction moved from the United States to Ecuador
Read MoreChevron acquired Texaco in 2001 and claims that all contamination was mitigated prior to 1992. Plaintiffs are seeking $113 billion in compensation
Read MoreEcuador, long a victim of resource extraction schemes and corporate malfeasance, has offered a ‘no questions asked’ asylum to the founder of the whistle blower site, Wikileaks.
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