An attorney for a Texas pipeline company says he will show at trial that various Greenpeace entities coordinated delays and ...
Dallas-based Energy Transfer and its subsidiary Dakota Access allege trespass, nuisance, defamation and other offenses by ...
Exterior of the Morton County Courthouse in Mandan on Feb. 27, 2025. (Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor)MANDAN, N.D.
A Lakota organizer said in a video deposition played to jurors Monday that the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe led the protests ...
A coalition of media organizations, including the North Dakota Monitor, petitioned the state Supreme Court Thursday seeking ...
Greenpeace attorneys and staff pose for a group photo outside the Morton County courthouse Feb. 26, 2025, after the first day ...
By Karen Zraick Greenpeace went on trial on Monday in North Dakota in a bombshell lawsuit that, if successful, could bankrupt the storied group. The Dallas-based company Energy Transfer sued ...
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 ...
FILE - Dakota Access pipeline protesters defy law enforcement officers who are trying to force them from a camp on private land in the path of pipeline construction, Oct. 27, 2016, near Cannon ...
The lawsuit also names the group's funding arm, Greenpeace Fund Inc. The jury trial in state court in Mandan, North Dakota, is scheduled to last five weeks. What are details of the case?