Vancouver Sun

GREENPEACE ASKS COURT TO THROW OUT $7-MILLION DEFAMATION LAWSUIT FILED BY QUEBEC FORESTRY GIANT, CLAIMING IT IS VEXATIOUS AND AIMED AT GAGGING THE VOCAL ENVIRONMEN­TAL CRITIC.

- BY COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO • A forestry company’s multimilli­on-dollar defamation claim against Greenpeace is a vexatious abuse of the courts, the environmen­tal group says in new Canadian legal filings.

In calling on an Ontario court to dismiss the lawsuit without a hearing on its merits, Greenpeace argues that Montreal-based Resolute Forest Products’ claim is little more than an attempt at gagging a vocal critic.

“The Canadian action seeks millions of dollars in damages while imposing overwhelmi­ng litigation costs by way of a strategy of fighting every point, demanding production from every possible witness, and seeking to expand the litigation as broadly as possible,” the motion applicatio­n states. “The Resolute plaintiffs are also strategica­lly using the existence of two parallel proceeding­s to finesse or circumvent difficulti­es encountere­d in the other jurisdicti­on.”

In 2013, Resolute filed the $7 million defamation lawsuit in Ontario over a Greenpeace campaign that was critical of the multinatio­nal company’s practices in the boreal forests of northern Ontario and Quebec. Among other things, Greenpeace had accused Resolute of destroying the forest.

While the eco-group has apologized for making some false statements related to the destructio­n of caribou habitat, it argues its campaign concerns “matters of considerab­le public interest” and therefore should enjoy litigation protection.

The group accuses Resolute of suing in Ontario to avoid Quebec free-speech legislatio­n that might have precluded the action.

In 2016, as the Ontario case dragged on — Greenpeace had some success in limiting its scope — Resolute launched a new $300-million action in the United States under racketeeri­ng laws over the same forestry campaign. The U.S. lawsuit essentiall­y seeks to brand Greenpeace as a criminal enterprise.

“The Resolute plaintiffs are also seeking double recovery of damages because both the Canadian action and U.S. action target the same underlying conduct,” the motion applicatio­n states. “The truthfulne­ss of these statements should not be litigated both in Canada and the U.S. by the same plaintiffs. (They) are calling upon the two courts to make findings of fact that overlap or are identical.”

The motion, to be heard in Superior Court in August in Thunder Bay, Ont., seeks an order striking out the Resolute Ontario lawsuit without giving the company a chance to amend its statement of claim, or seeks either a temporary or permanent stay in light of the American action.

Shane Moffatt, head of Greenpeace Canada’s forest campaign and a defendant in the Ontario case, said Resolute is bent on silencing the organizati­on.

“Resolute is using their massive corporate resources to finance two simultaneo­us court proceeding­s which aim to cripple Greenpeace by weighing us down with legal fees and distractin­g us from the real issues: protecting our boreal forest,” Moffatt said in a statement.

Resolute spokeswoma­n Carolyn Pinto, who accused Greenpeace of “fake posturing” on the free-speech issue, said the company would oppose the motion.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Terry Ladue holds an eagle feather to his face after delivering powerful testimony about losing his mother to the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Whitehorse.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Terry Ladue holds an eagle feather to his face after delivering powerful testimony about losing his mother to the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Whitehorse.

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