Texarkana Gazette

Judge: Dakota Access developer can’t sue BankTrack

- By Blake Nicholson

BISMARCK, N.D. — A federal judge has ruled that the developer of the Dakota Access oil pipeline has no claim under federal racketeeri­ng law for damages against a Dutch environmen­tal group that urged banks not to finance the $3.8 billion project.

U.S. District Judge Billy Roy Wilson in an order dated Tuesday dismissed Netherland­s-based BankTrack as a defendant in a lawsuit that Texasbased Energy Transfer Partners filed in August against that group, Greenpeace and Earth First. In separate rulings this week, he also cast doubt on whether the lawsuit will succeed against the other two groups.

ETP contended in its lawsuit that BankTrack used “disinforma­tion and extortive schemes” to try to get banks not to fund the company, threatenin­g the banks with “brand damaging campaigns.” More broadly, the lawsuit connects BankTrack with what ETP says was a campaign by pipeline opponents to incite acts of terrorism by protesters such as arson fires.

Wilson said the lawsuit “vaguely attempts” to connect BankTrack to acts of radical ecoterrori­sm, but he concluded that the group’s conduct amounted to “writing a few letters” and said ETP did not have a valid claim against the group under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­ons Act.

“None of BankTrack’s actions promoted, assisted or condoned violent criminal conduct,” he wrote.

ETP did not respond to a request for comment. The company has said previously it does not comment on pending litigation.

BankTrack Director Johan Frijns in a statement said the judge’s ruling “confirms that this type of advocacy work is legitimate.”

“Energy Transfer’s allegation­s about our supposed involvemen­t in directing acts of ‘radical ecoterrori­sm’ were hard to take seriously from the outset, and we are pleased that the judge has confirmed that these were sweeping statements without any basis in fact,” he said.

ETP sued BankTrack, Greenpeace and Earth First for up to $1 billion, alleging they worked to undermine the pipeline that has been moving oil from North Dakota to Illinois for the past year. The groups said the lawsuit was an attack on free speech.

The lawsuit alleges the groups disseminat­ed false and misleading informatio­n about the project and interfered with its constructi­on. The company maintained that the groups’ actions interfered with its business, facilitate­d crimes and acts of terrorism, incited violence, targeted financial institutio­ns that backed the project and violated defamation and racketeeri­ng laws.

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