06-17-2024  12:01 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather
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NORTHWEST NEWS

‘Feeling Our Age’: Oregon Artist Explores Aging Through Portraiture

64 women were painted and asked to reflect on lives well lived.

Off-Duty Guard Charged With Killing Seattle-Area Teen After Mistaking Toy for Gun, Authorities Say

Prosecutors charged 51-year-old Aaron Brown Myers on Monday in connection with the death of Hazrat Ali Rohani. Myers was also charged with assault after authorities say he held another teen at gunpoint. His attorney says Myers sincerely believed he was stopping a violent crime.

James Beard Finalists Include an East African Restaurant in Detroit and Seattle Pho Shops

The James Beards Awards are the culinary world's equivalent of the Oscars. For restaurants, even being named a finalist can bring wide recognition and boost business.

Ranked-Choice Voting Expert Grace Ramsey on What Portland Voters Can Expect in November

Ramsey has worked in several other states and cities to educate voters on new system of voting. 

NEWS BRIEFS

Montavilla Pool to Reopen in July After Mandatory Maintenance

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Coalition of 43 AGs Reach $700 Million Nationwide Settlement With Johnson and Johnson Over Deceptive Marketing; Oregon to Receive $15 Million

Today, Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum and 42 other attorneys general announced they have reached a 0 million nationwide...

Juneteenth 2024 Events in Portland and Seattle

View events celebrating Juneteenth in the Portland and Seattle area ...

Kobi Flowers Crowned 2024 Rose Festival Queen

Flowers has been active in her school community as member of the leadership team at Self Enhancement, Inc., Varsity Cheer...

Summer Events are Shining Through at Multnomah County Library

Start your June by honoring Juneteenth, celebrating Pride and playing the Summer Reading game. ...

Judge could soon set trial date for man charged in killings of 4 University of Idaho students

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — A judge could soon decide on a trial date for a man charged in the deaths of four University of Idaho students who were killed more than a year and a half ago. Bryan Kohberger was arrested roughly six weeks after the bodies of Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle,...

Crews rescue 28 people trapped upside down high on Oregon amusement park ride

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Emergency crews in Oregon rescued 28 people Friday after they were stuck for about half an hour dangling upside down high on a ride at a century-old amusement park. Portland Fire and Rescue said on the social platform X that firefighters worked with engineers...

Kansas lawmakers poised to lure Kansas City Chiefs from Missouri, despite economists' concerns

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 170-year-old rivalry is flaring up as Kansas lawmakers try to snatch the Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs away from Missouri even though economists long ago concluded subsidizing pro sports isn't worth the cost. The Kansas Legislature's top leaders...

Josh Sargent out for Colombia friendly, could miss Copa America

McLEAN, Va. (AP) — United States forward Josh Sargent could miss Saturday's friendly against Colombia and could be dropped from the Copa America roster. A 24-year-old from O'Fallon, Missouri, Sargent scored 16 goals in 26 league games with Norwich in England's second-tier League...

OPINION

Supreme Court Says 'Yes” to Consumer Protection, "No" to Payday Lenders 7-2 Decision Upholds CFPB’s Funding

A recent 7-2 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court gave consumers a long-sought victory that ended more than a decade of challenges over the constitutionality of the agency created to be the nation’s financial cop on the beat. ...

The Skanner News May 2024 Primary Endorsements

Read The Skanner News endorsements and vote today. Candidates for mayor and city council will appear on the November general election ballot. ...

Nation’s Growing Racial and Gender Wealth Gaps Need Policy Reform

Never-married Black women have 8 cents in wealth for every dollar held by while males. ...

New White House Plan Could Reduce or Eliminate Accumulated Interest for 30 Million Student Loan Borrowers

Multiple recent announcements from the Biden administration offer new hope for the 43.2 million borrowers hoping to get relief from the onerous burden of a collective

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE NEWS

Many voters in swing-state North Carolina are disengaged. Party activists hope to fire them up

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Trump visits a Black church, addresses a MAGA activist gathering amid swing through pivotal Michigan

DETROIT (AP) — Donald Trump used back-to-back stops Saturday to court Black voters and a conservative group that has been accused of attracting white supremacists as the Republican presidential candidate works to stitch together a coalition of historically divergent interests in battleground...

South Africa's President Ramaphosa is reelected for second term after a dramatic late coalition deal

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — South African President Cyril Ramaphosa was reelected by lawmakers for a second term on Friday, after his party struck a dramatic late coalition deal with a former political foe just hours before the vote. Ramaphosa, the leader of the African National...

ENTERTAINMENT

Book Review: Yume Kitasei explores space in a heist-driven action adventure novel

Grad student Maya Hoshimoto is having a hard time settling down on Earth after a thrilling career as an art thief, stealing looted objects and returning them to their people. So when her best friend Auncle — an octopus-like being from another solar system — offers one last job, of course she...

Griffin Dunne finds balance between madcap Hollywood adventures and family tragedy in new memoir

NEW YORK (AP) — Griffin Dunne says he’s grateful his parents raised him with what he affectionately calls “benign neglect" in 1970s and '80s Los Angeles because it encouraged creativity and risk-taking that led to some wild experiences he chronicles in his new memoir. “The...

Juan Soto joins Daddy Yankee and Kyle Tucker teams with Travis Scott on Topps Series 2 cards

Juan Soto has been on baseball cards with Ken Griffey Jr., Mike Trout, Fernando Tatis Jr., Manny Machado and Xander Bogaerts. But this one, well, this one was a little different for Soto. This one had the New York Yankees slugger and Puerto Rican musician Daddy Yankee. ...

U.S. & WORLD NEWS

Police identify Michigan splash pad shooter but there's still no word on a motive

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Strong winds, steep terrain hamper crews battling Los Angeles area's first major fire of the year

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The high cost of living is still biting the UK. Many don't think the election will change anything

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German police shot a man allegedly threatening them with a hammer in Euro 2024 host city Hamburg

BERLIN (AP) — German police said Sunday they shot and wounded a man who was threatening them with a pick hammer...

78 countries at Swiss conference agree Ukraine's territorial integrity must be basis of any peace

OBBÜRGEN, Switzerland (AP) — Nearly 80 countries called Sunday for the “territorial integrity” of Ukraine...

Israel's army says it will pause daytime fighting along a route in southern Gaza to help flow of aid

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel's military announced on Sunday that it would pause fighting during daytime hours along a...

Frank Bajak and Gonzalo Solano the Associated Press

Chevron sued documentary filmmaker Joe Berlinger to surrender outtakes from his documentary about the dispute, 'Crude'



QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- An Ecuadorean judge ruled Monday in an epic environmental case that Chevron Corp. was responsible for oil drilling contamination in a wide swath of Ecuador's northern jungle and ordered the oil giant to pay $8.6 billion in damages and cleanup costs.

The amount was far below the $27.3 billion recommended by a court-appointed expert.

But whether the plaintiffs - including indigenous groups who say their hunting and fishing grounds in the headwaters of the Amazon River were decimated by toxic wastewater - can collect remains to be seen.

In a statement Chevron called the decision "illegitimate and unenforceable" and said it would appeal. It has long contended it could never get a fair trial in Ecuador and has removed all assets from this politically volatile Andean country, whose leftist president, Rafael Correa, had voiced support for the plaintiffs. Chevron it did not believe the judgment "enforceable in any court that observes the rule of law."

The marathon high-stakes case, fraught with corporate espionage, geopolitical intrigue, has been winding its way through U.S. and Ecuadorean courts for 17 years.

Even Hollywood had a role, with Chevron successfully forcing documentary filmmaker Joe Berlinger to surrender outtakes from his documentary "Crude" about the dispute, a decision upheld by a U.S. appeals court. Those outtakes were used in attempt to show that a plaintiffs' attorney, Steven Donziger, had both denigrated and unethically influenced Ecuadorean justice.

The plaintiffs' lead lawyer, Pablo Fajardo, called the 187-page judgment "a great step that we have made toward the crystallization of justice" but added that "we are not completely satisfied" with court-specified damage award. He told The Associated Press that the plaintiffs would probably appeal.

The suit was originally filed in a New York federal court in 1993 against Texaco and was refiled in Ecuador three years after Chevron, which earned $19.1 billion last year, bought the company in 2001.

Though it had only 47 named plaintiffs, the suit sought damages on behalf of 30,000 people for environmental contamination and illnesses that allegedly resulted from Texaco's operation of an oil consortium from 1972 to 1990 in a Rhode Island-sized oil patch dug out of virgin rain forest.

Monday's ruling was hailed by the environmentalist groups Amazon Watch and Rainforest Action Network as "proving overwhelmingly that the oil giant is responsible for billions gallons of highly toxic waste sludge deliberately dumped into local streams and rivers, which thousands depend on for drinking, bathing, and fishing."

"It is time Chevron clean up its disastrous mess in Ecuador," they said in a joint statement.

A local indigenous leader, Guillermo Grefa of the Kichwa people, was quoted by the plaintiffs as saying "we can now tell our neighbors and those affected that justice exists. They can now dream of drinking clean water that doesn't have petroleum residues like what we've had to drink up until now."

Chevron invested tens of millions of dollars in its legal defense as well as counterattacks against the plaintiffs and Ecuadorean officials. It has long argued that a 1998 agreement Texaco signed with Ecuador after a $40 million cleanup absolves it of any liability in the case.

Chevron sought relief in a half-dozen U.S. federal courts and requested binding arbitration in an international tribunal in the Netherlands. The oil company even used corporate spies to clandestinely videotape meetings with Ecuadorean officials in which they posed as contractors seeking oil contamination cleanup contracts. The two even coaxed the trial judge - who later resigned as a result - into saying he expected to rule against Chevron.

Just last week, U.S. federal judge Lewis A. Kaplan in New York took the unusual step at Chevron's request of pre-emptively blocking any judgment for at least 28 days after concluding that attempts to collect assets could seriously disrupt the business of a company vital to the global economy.

Issued by Judge Nicolas Zambrano from a ramshackle courthouse in the provincial city of Lago Agrio, Monday's ruling gives Chevron 60 days to set up an escrow account in Ecuador through which the damages would be distributed.

If upheld and enforced, the award would substantially exceed the $5 billion originally awarded to victims of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska's Prince William sound. That jury award was later cut down to $507.5 million by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Zambrano's decision specifies that Chevron pay $6 billion for cleanup of soil and water, $1.4 billion to put build health care systems, $800 million for creating health care plans and attending to cancer patients - the court-appointed expert had calculated 1,401 pollution-cased cancer deaths. The balance is earmarked for recovering native plant species, water distribution systems and repairing cultural damage.

A professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles who has studied the case, Georgene Vairo, said the comparatively small judgment is a signal from Ecuador that it is willing to negotiate a smaller fine.

"This is way low compared with what everyone was expecting to happen," she said. "They are trying to show the world they are reasonable people. This is Ecuador coming to the table."

Fajardo called on Chevron in a statement issued later Monday to comply with the ruling and halt its "campaign of warfare against the Ecuadorean courts and the impoverished victims of its unfortunate practices."

"We believe the evidence before the court deserves international respect and the plaintiffs will take whatever actions are appropriate consistent with the law to press the claims to a final conclusion," he added.

Among actions taken by Chevron against the plaintiffs is a civil suit it filed in New York on Feb. 1 against Donziger and other plaintiffs' lawyers claiming they confected the contamination suit and accusing them of extortion and racketeering.

The San Ramon, Calif. company has long contended that the court-appointed expert in the case was unduly influenced by the plaintiffs. In a statement Monday, it called Zambrano's ruling "the product of fraud (and) contrary to the legitimate scientific evidence."

Chevron spokesman Kent Robertson said via e-mail that Chevron had presented evidence in various U.S. courts showing that the plaintiffs' attorneys and consultants had ghostwritten the court-appointed expert's report that recommended $27.3 billion in damages.

"The legitimate scientific evidence provided to the court, as well as scientific analysis performed by the government of Ecuador, proves Texaco's cleanup worked," he contended Monday.

Chevron contends that Texaco's former partner in the consortium, state oil company Petroecuador, kept polluting after Texaco pulled out. It disputes the findings of the expert, geological engineer Richard Cabrera, who concluded that Texaco left a mess when it departed in the early 1990s.

Cabrera's 14-member team of experts found petroleum hydrocarbons at levels deemed unsafe by national standards in 44 percent of water samples it tested. It also found cadmium, barium, lead and other heavy metals in the mud of wastewater pits and said 80 percent required cleanup. The team also cited scientific studies that found cancer levels nearly twice Ecuador's norm, with stomach and uterine cancer the most common followed by leukemia.

Chevron disputed all those findings, and Wall Street analyst Fadel Gheit of Oppenheimer & Co. told the AP in New York that he did not believe the plaintiffs would be able to collect.

"They think Chevron's a cash cow, so they thought they could get something, but it's not going to happen. If so, it would be unprecedented. Companies like Chevron have been accused of polluting for decades" without being forced to pay, he told the AP.

The news hit during trading hours, but Chevron's stock closed up $1.22, or 1.3 percent, at $96.95.

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Associated Press writer and Chris Kahn in New York contributed to this report. Frank Bajak reported from Bogota, Colombia.

The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast