Environmental attorney Steven Donziger's case regarding the appointment of three special prosecutors after being charged with criminal contempt of court is refused by the U.S. Supreme Court, with two conservative judges dissenting. The decision is seen as siding with oil giant Chevron and denying Donziger a hearing of his appeal.
Environmental attorney Steven Donziger was joined by a number of U.S. Supreme Court observers on Monday in denouncing a decision by seven of the nine justices, who refused to consider Donziger's case regarding the appointment of three special prosecutors after he was charged with criminal contempt of court .
A number of observers noted that a dissent was signed by two conservative judges, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh—suggesting that the three liberal justices on the high court refused to give Donziger a hearing of his appeal, essentially siding with oil giant Chevron. Donziger sued Chevron in the 1990s on behalf of a group of Ecaudorian people who argued Chevron had polluted their community, and helped them win $9.5 billion in the class action lawsuit. 'The three liberal Supreme Court justices decided to let Donziger's absurd contempt conviction stand,' said journalist Alex Shultz of the San Francisco Chronicle. Donziger was jailed for six months—including 136 days under house arrest at the end of his sentence in addition to 800 days under house arrest while he awaited trial—after being charged with contempt of court in 2021 for refusing to turn over his electronic devices to Chevron lawyers in a case filed by the company. The fossil fuel company argued Donziger had won the lawsuit for the Ecuadorians through 'coercion, fraud, and bribery.' The judge appointed three special prosecutors after the U.S
Steven Donziger U.S. Supreme Court Special Prosecutors Criminal Contempt Of Court Chevron Lawsuit Pollution Dissent Conservative Judges Liberal Justices
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