An attorney for a Texas pipeline company says he will show at trial that various Greenpeace entities coordinated delays and ...
Exterior of the Morton County Courthouse in Mandan on Feb. 27, 2025. (Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor)MANDAN, N.D.
In a separate lawsuit over the pipeline, the state of North Dakota seeks $38 million from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Opponents of the Dakota Access Pipeline demonstrate in Bismarck in August 2016. (Kyle Martin/For the North Dakota ...
By Karen Zraick Reporting from the Morton County courthouse in Mandan, N.D. Lawyers for the pipeline company Energy Transfer and Greenpeace fired their opening salvos in a North Dakota courtroom ...
Roughly six years and thousands of court filings after Energy Transfer filed suit, the case is scheduled to begin a five-week jury trial on Monday in Mandan, the North Dakota Monitor reported.
A coalition of media organizations, including The Bismarck Tribune, petitioned the state Supreme Court Thursday seeking ...
In a North Dakota district court, Texas pipeline company Energy Transfer Partners is accusing the international environmental organization Greenpeace of single-handedly organizing a disruptive and ...
Energy Transfer and its subsidiary Dakota Access ... N.D. near their camp in southern North Dakota. Credit: AP/James MacPherson Greenpeace is committed to nonviolence, and only got involved ...
He added that Energy Transfer made 140 adjustments to its pipeline route in order to respect sacred sites. “Our goal was to be a good corporate citizen in North Dakota,” Cox said. More than ...