Life in the Oriente Region of Ecuador is full of danger, mystery and intrigue. Located along the border with Colombia in the northeast part of the country, the region is home to ancient people groups who depend largely upon the resources of the Amazon River basin for their survival. It’s home to thousands of exotic wildlife species. And, for the past 16 years, has been a home away from home for New York trial lawyer and Harvard Law School classmate of President Barack Obama, Steven R. Donziger.
Since 1993, Donziger has made myriad trips from his New York City office to the oil-rich jungles of South America in search of what he must have hoped would be easy money. All he had to do was come up with a “tool” he could use to extract boatloads of cash from the deep, oil-soaked pockets of San Ramon, Calif.-based Chevron Corporation. That tool, it appears, turned out to be a lawsuit against “Big Oil.”
After the nonprofit Amazon Defense Coalition (Spanish: “Frente de Defensa de la Amazonía“) was formed to facilitate the lawsuit in Ecuador, Donziger filed suit in New York against Texaco for personal injuries against local people. He alleged that the injuries were caused by actions of the company that had operated in Ecuador as far back as 1964 and, from the 1970s to 1990, in partnership with state-owned PetroEcuador.
Several years of litigation followed, the suit was dismissed in the U.S. court and, in 2003, a new case was filed by the plaintiff in Ecuador. Because it had purchased Texaco in 2001, Chevron was named as the defendant in the new suit.
The suit moved forward and, almost six years later, people on both sides are expecting an Ecuadoran judge to issue a ruling any day. If the plaintiff prevails, the verdict could cost Chevron and its shareholders $27 billion. But will Donziger/ADC win? Many in-the-know writers think they might.
In a letter to the editor (”Ecuador’s Attack on Foreign Companies“) published in the Washington Post May 5, Silvia Santa Cruz, declared, “Chevron is correct to argue that it won’t be treated fairly as long as Mr. Correa runs Ecuador.”
Santa Cruz, the Warren Brookes Journalism Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute and writer-editor for the Ecuador Mining News web site, was, of course, referring to the country’s leftist leader, President Rafael Correa.
In an article May 6, Dan Gainor of the Business & Media Institute, asked and answered his own Ecuador-focused question: “What do you do if your country is too incompetent to drill for oil effectively? Drill an oil company instead.”
Then he took it one step further:
“That’s exactly what tiny Ecuador is trying to do to oil giant Chevron – with the help of brain-dead American celebs, left-wing front groups and American lawyers – including one of Obama’s law school buddies. That select group is trying to rob Chevron and its shareholders of $27 billion.”
A Washington Times editorial (”Ecuador grabs for Chevron’s wallet“) published May 7 summed up the case well by saying, “Corporate America is an easy punching bag in tough economic times, but it often doesn’t deserve the demonization it receives. That’s the case with Chevron, which was attacked by “60 Minutes” on Sunday for an ongoing lawsuit over old oil fields in Ecuador. The CBS show wrongly took the side of the leftist, tinpot government of Ecuador against the 206,000 stockholders (and, indirectly, millions of American pensioners) who own shares of the American oil company.”
While many writers have focused on the battles between lawyers and spin doctors in the kangaroo-court environment that surrounds this case, few have explored the possibility there might be some extra-judicial shenanigans taking place between the plaintiff lawyers and at least one individuals appointed by the court as so-called “technical expert.”
During the past two months, I’ve written several pieces related to the lawsuit, fired hundreds of questions at the media relations people on both sides of the case and came across some very interesting documents. One of the most-intriguing things I’ve discovered of late, however, is related to the possibility mentioned in the paragraph above.
Recently, I came into possession of copies of six checks totaling more than $206,000 and signed by Luis Yanza, a senior official with ADC [Note: Click on images of checks that appear in this post to learn more about each.].
All of the checks are payable to Richard Cabrera, the man known to followers of the lawsuit as the author of the so-called Cabrera Report (pdf), the document upon which the $27 billion estimate is based. Similarly, all of the checks were issued by Selviva, a limited-liability company formed in Ecuador in 2004 by Alberto Wray, the lead attorney in charge of the litigation when it began in Ecuador the previous year, and three other individuals.
During its first five years of existence, Selviva seems to have produced no products, provided no services and operated, for the most part, under the radar, giving no visible signs that it was indeed a “going concern.” It’s only purpose, it seems, was to pay Cabrera. And then it disappeared. A highly-placed source tells me that Selviva was declared “inactive” in February 2009 by Ecuador’s Superintendency of Companies, a government agency that organizes and supervises businesses.
Now, I’m not telling you that the money paid to Cabrera was a bribe. Not at all! I am, however, pointing out the undisputed fact that a “court-appointed expert” of questionable qualifications was paid large sums of money by an Ecuadoran company established by the ADC, the financial beneficiary of the lawsuit.
Karen Hinton, media advisor for the plaintiff, said that making of such payments is the normal practice of courts in both Ecuador and the United States, and I didn’t argue the point during a phone conversation this afternoon. However, Hinton’s counterpart at Chevron, Kent Robertson, disputed the point.
Robertson said his company has not paid Cabrera anything — even through the court! Why? For several reasons, including the fact that Cabrera’s resume (pdf) is extremely weak. In addition to the weak resume, the content of the last paragraph that appears on page two of a Chevron document filed Sept. 8, 2008, seems to justify Chevron’s reasoning quite well:
Moreover, a preliminary analysis of the 60-page report and accompanying appendices submitted by Richard Cabrera to the Superior Court in Nueva Loja, Ecuador concludes that Cabrera’s report is riddled with so many mistakes, inconsistencies, unsubstantiated conclusions and transparent bias as to render it fatally flawed and unreliable in evaluating the environmental condition of the Oriente region of Ecuador.
Now we know, perhaps, why fighters on one side of this lawsuit were willing to pay for Cabrera’s services and those on the other — the deep-pocketed oil giant from the United States — were, rightfully, not.
Final thought: A “little birdie” who hails from South America told me that Cabrera has submitted what is thought to be his final invoice to the Ecuadoran court for services rendered in the amount of $43,000. Now, since Selviva is no more, I wonder how Cabrera will be paid his final fee and by whom?
More to come…
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See also: To learn more about the ADC’s spurious lawsuit against Chevron in Ecuador, read these BMW posts.






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10 responses so far ↓
1 » What Will Be The Outcome of the Amazon Defense Coalition’s Lawsuit Against Chevron in Ecuador? NoisyRoom.net: “Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in the face of tyranny is no virtue.” Barry Goldwater // Jun 11, 2009 at 5:53 pm
[...] By: Bob McCarty Bob McCarty Writes [...]
2 Yolanda Garcia-Lemaitre // Jun 11, 2009 at 10:07 pm
Dear Sir,
The Amazon rainforest, known as Amazonia, contains the world’s greatest natural resources, it continuously recycles carbon dioxide into oxygen. Now, the Amazon Rainforest also is filled of oil and you know it. Clearly, we need to be the bigger brother here and clean the mess that Texaco left. We need to take care of the Amazon Rainforest for our own sake and the future of our children. The Planet Earth is in distress, and a way to help it is by saving the Amazon. This is a call from all human beings to you as a very wealthy company, you can do it, you can be a pioneer and start doing the right thing!! HELP ME SAVE THE AMAZON RAINFOREST, OUR FUTURE DEPENDS ON IT
3 What Will Be The Outcome of the Amazon Defense Coalition’s Lawsuit Against Chevron in Ecuador? « Amazon Defense Coalition Watch // Jun 12, 2009 at 10:18 am
[...] Read the full article. [...]
4 Chevron accuser paid $200K to Ecuador court’s economist « Amazon Defense Coalition Watch // Jun 17, 2009 at 7:43 am
[...] Chevron accuser paid $200K to Ecuador court’s economist One of the key claims made by ADC was that an economist, Richard Cabera, appointed by the court in Ecuador where Chevron’s being sued, discovered damage estimated at $16 billion; Cabrera then updated his study to $27 billion. While Chevron has long dsiputed that study, the ADC, and much of the media, used those numbers in articles and blog posts to dramatize the extent of Chevron’s alledged impact. But a new finding has been reported, one that should alter the course of events in this case; Cabrera was paid $207,000 by the ADC, according to the work of blogger Bob McCarty. [...]
5 Jack Sandberg // Jun 24, 2009 at 3:49 pm
Actual research and presentation of the unbiased facts is what differentiates real journalists from conspiracy theorists. Unfortunately, this article shows that Mr. McCarty falls into the latter category.
The judicial system of Ecuador is not like ours in the U.S. A court appointed expert is not paid by one side or the other, but rather the costs are shared between both parties. Your findings only show that the plaintiffs followed the court’s order to pay the court appointed expert for its work. It does not show bias or a deeply hidden conspiracy to influence the expert.
Sorry, but you are simply blowing smoke on this one and deceiving your readers into believing in a conspiracy that does not exist.
6 hotoffthepress2 // Jun 24, 2009 at 3:54 pm
Jack, you must be on the payroll of the ADC.
7 everyone // Jun 25, 2009 at 1:50 am
I don’t understand your attacks…first of all, this has been an ongoing struggle since the 70’s, and if the suit was filed in 1993…then why are you linking it with trying to squeeze money from the big Oil companies. Have you been to the Amazon? I’ve seen pictures of children with big puss oozing from their faces, because they live close to open oil pits where Chevron disposed of thousands of tons of waste, thinking, eh, it’s remote, who cares? They have polluted these peoples homeland, they have reeked havoc on our eco system. Do you have any scope outside of your financial fears? Steve Donziger has donated alot of time to help the indigenous people…no one spends the time that he has, without getting paid, unless he his conscience felt it was the right thing to do. Do you ever do anything because your conscience tells you to, Bob?
Or do you just sit in your laz-e-boy chair and bitch about everybody else…don’t answer, i already know.
8 hotoffthepress2 // Jun 25, 2009 at 5:52 am
For someone afraid to use his/her real name, you sure are bold — NOT. I base my coverage of the Chevron Ecuador lawsuit upon facts, not upon Amazon Defense Coalition PR spin (i.e., Karen Hinton) and trial lawyer creativity. You ought to try using that gray matter inside your skull once in a while. It’s amazing what you might discover.
9 V. Kaplan // Jul 3, 2009 at 2:53 pm
Bob, I might suggest you call back Mr. Robertson, the Chevron PR flak, and rephrase your question regarding his corporation’s payments to the court-appointed scientific experts in this case. As it turns out, we can find the signature of Rodrigo Perez Pallares, Chevron’s long-time legal representative in Ecuador, on checks worth more than $20,000 to Dr. Marcelo Munoz, the court-appointed scientific expert who just last week turned in the final report on oil well site contamination as evidence, requested by Chevron, for consideration in the trial.
That’s just the way it works in Ecuador, where Chevron wanted this trial. Each side pays the experts appointed by the court to gather evidence.
Your readers might also want to know that Chevron previously had accepted the appointment as a court expert Richard Cabrera, the person who oversaw the damages assessment. Why is it that Cabrera’s resume makes the grade when the scientific results look good for Chevron, and the minute the evidence reveals Chevron’s culpability, suddenly Cabrera’s not the trustworthy, objective, respected scientist he once was in Chevron’s eyes?
10 hotoffthepress2 // Jul 3, 2009 at 2:57 pm
Hey V. Kaplain,
I trust the Chevron folks. Do I trust you? Not so much. As I said in a reply to one of your comments on another of my Chevron posts, I find it hard to take you seriously, since the IP address ( 190.154.65.27 ) attached to your comment leads to Quito, Ecuador. I’m guessing you’re a paid shill for the Amazon Defense Coalition. How much of the anticipated $27 billion judgment will you receive? Inquiring minds want to know!
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