The Star Late Edition

ExxonMobil says US prosecutor is abusing his investigat­ive powers

- Ernest Scheyder and Emily Flitter

EXXONMOBIL asked a New York court on Friday to reject another subpoena request from Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an, arguing the prosecutor’s recent claim to have found evidence ExxonMobil misled investors was false and that he was abusing his investigat­ive powers.

The company said that Schneiderm­an’s allegation that ExxonMobil had neglected to estimate the impact of future environmen­tal regulation on new deals was “frivolous” and that no “legitimate law enforcemen­t need” would be served by giving his office more documents.

“For a prosecutor proceeding in good faith, the absence of any evidence of wrongdoing is grounds for closing an investigat­ion, not expanding it,” Exxon wrote in its filing with the court.

Schneiderm­an’s office denied the allegation­s.

“As detailed in our filing last week, the Attorney General’s office has a substantia­l basis to suspect that ExxonMobil’s proxy

“We look forward to next week’s hearing”, she said.

Schneiderm­an sought more materials from the oil producer as part of an ongoing probe that has already reviewed nearly 3 million documents.

He is examining whether ExxonMobil misled the public about its understand­ing of the effects of greenhouse gas emissions on the earth’s climate.

The probe has already revealed that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who until December had been chief executive of ExxonMobil, used a separate e-mail address and an alias, “Wayne Tracker,” to discuss climate change-related issues while he was employed at the company.

Testimony Schneiderm­an made public on June 2 offered more details about how the company handled the “Wayne Tracker” account, which was first created in 2007.

ExxonMobil employee Connie Feinstein, an informatio­n technology manager for the oil company, told prosecutor­s changes in the e-mail programme ExxonMobil used, along with an automatic process that deleted internal e-mails after 13 months, may have erased years’ worth of “Wayne Tracker” e-mails.

“We realised that the automated file sweeper had not been disabled for a period of time as it should have been,” Feinstein said in the April 26 interview.

Exxon has been fighting Schneiderm­an’s requests for informatio­n about its climate change policies in both state and federal court, claiming it should not have to turn over records because the New York prosecutor’s probe is politicall­y motivated.

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