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In this powerful and deeply personal conversation, environmental justice attorney Steven Donziger recounts the decades-long legal battle against Chevron over massive oil contamination in Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest.
What began as a class action lawsuit on behalf of Indigenous communities evolved into a historic $10 billion judgment. This is the largest environmental verdict of its kind. But after losing in Ecuador’s highest courts, Chevron struck back.
Donziger details how the corporation deployed 60 law firms, 2,000 lawyers, and billions of dollars in legal firepower to target him personally. He describes being sued under civil RICO, denied a jury trial, disbarred, placed under house arrest for nearly three years, and subjected to what he calls the first corporate criminal prosecution in U.S. history. The detention has since been condemned by the United Nations and international human rights groups.
This episode explores:
• The destruction of the Amazon rainforest by Texaco/Chevron
• The fight for Indigenous sovereignty and environmental accountability
• The weaponization of U.S. courts through SLAPP lawsuits
• The broader threat to free speech and environmental activism
• The parallels between his case and corporate lawsuits against Greenpeace and protest movements
At its core, this is a story about power. About who holds it, who challenges it, and what happens when corporations treat the legal system as a battlefield.
What happens when winning a case isn’t enough?
What happens when the system turns on the lawyer?
Listen. Share. Decide for yourself.
Steven Donziger is an environmental justice advocate and human rights lawyer who helped Amazon communities in Ecuador win the largest environmental court judgment against a fossil fuel company in history. As a result, Chevron sued him for billions of dollars in New York using roughly 60 law firms and 2,000 lawyers. The company also forced him to spend nearly 1,000 days in arbitrary detention following the nation's first corporate criminal prosecution — a detention condemned by the UN and human rights groups around the world. Steven currently serves on the independent committee of legal experts monitoring the landmark Energy Transfer v. Greenpeace court case in North Dakota. He is an outspoken advocate for Palestinian self-determination and the rights of free speech and freedom of assembly.
By Truth and Justice LeagueIn this powerful and deeply personal conversation, environmental justice attorney Steven Donziger recounts the decades-long legal battle against Chevron over massive oil contamination in Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest.
What began as a class action lawsuit on behalf of Indigenous communities evolved into a historic $10 billion judgment. This is the largest environmental verdict of its kind. But after losing in Ecuador’s highest courts, Chevron struck back.
Donziger details how the corporation deployed 60 law firms, 2,000 lawyers, and billions of dollars in legal firepower to target him personally. He describes being sued under civil RICO, denied a jury trial, disbarred, placed under house arrest for nearly three years, and subjected to what he calls the first corporate criminal prosecution in U.S. history. The detention has since been condemned by the United Nations and international human rights groups.
This episode explores:
• The destruction of the Amazon rainforest by Texaco/Chevron
• The fight for Indigenous sovereignty and environmental accountability
• The weaponization of U.S. courts through SLAPP lawsuits
• The broader threat to free speech and environmental activism
• The parallels between his case and corporate lawsuits against Greenpeace and protest movements
At its core, this is a story about power. About who holds it, who challenges it, and what happens when corporations treat the legal system as a battlefield.
What happens when winning a case isn’t enough?
What happens when the system turns on the lawyer?
Listen. Share. Decide for yourself.
Steven Donziger is an environmental justice advocate and human rights lawyer who helped Amazon communities in Ecuador win the largest environmental court judgment against a fossil fuel company in history. As a result, Chevron sued him for billions of dollars in New York using roughly 60 law firms and 2,000 lawyers. The company also forced him to spend nearly 1,000 days in arbitrary detention following the nation's first corporate criminal prosecution — a detention condemned by the UN and human rights groups around the world. Steven currently serves on the independent committee of legal experts monitoring the landmark Energy Transfer v. Greenpeace court case in North Dakota. He is an outspoken advocate for Palestinian self-determination and the rights of free speech and freedom of assembly.