A North Dakota judge on Friday finalized a $345 million judgment against Greenpeace in a lawsuit pursued by pipeline company Energy Transfer over the environmental group's role in protests against ...
Greenpeace is fighting for its life in North Dakota, where a lawsuit threatens the environmental group's future with a ...
A North Dakota judge said this week he would order Greenpeace to pay damages estimated to total $345 million to Energy ...
Greenpeace must pay $345 million in damages to the operator of the US oil pipeline it protested, a North Dakota court ordered ...
A North Dakota judge officially ordered Greenpeace to pay $345 million to the developer of the Dakota Access Pipeline following a nearly yearlong tug-of-war over a Morton County jury’s verdict. The ...
A North Dakota judge finalized a $345 million judgment against Greenpeace in a lawsuit by Energy Transfer, linked to protests ...
Greenpeace and an energy pipeline company are both expected to appeal a North Dakota court’s final ruling Friday that the ...
Greenpeace has said the verdict could bankrupt it. The lawsuit was over the group’s role in protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Harvestone Low Carbon Partners is considering transporting CO2 from Dakota Spirit ethanol plant near Jamestown for ...
Group says case far from over after being found liable for defamation and other claims brought by energy firm ...
Opinion
Port: If Greenpeace's actions in North Dakota cause the group's demise, that would be justice
Greenpeace's support for the #NoDAPL protests may well cost that group its existence. If so, so be it. The ends cannot justify the means.
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) - Documents show that American Indian artifacts found in North Dakota along the route of the Dakota Access oil pipeline last month weren't reported to state regulators for 10 days.
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