A trial is underway in North Dakota in a lawsuit against Greenpeace over its support for protests of the Dakota Access ...
The environmental group, battling a multimillion-dollar lawsuit over protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline, told the ...
Representatives of several tribal nations demonstrate in August 2016 in Bismarck against the Dakota Access Pipeline. (Kyle ...
The good people of Morton County had to live through the often violent and unlawful Dakota Access Pipeline protests. They ...
A closely watched civil trial that began in North Dakota last week could bankrupt Greenpeace and chill environmental activism ...
Energy Transfer, which owns the Dakota Access Pipeline, is seeking $300 million, a sum that Greenpeace says could bankrupt ...
The case is tied to protests in 2016 and 2017 of the Dakota Access Pipeline and its controversial Missouri River crossing ...
Greenpeace attorneys and staff pose for a group photo outside the Morton County courthouse Feb. 26, 2025, after the first day ...
If they can try to shut down Greenpeace, they’re going to shut down everybody,” says Indigenous activist Winona LaDuke.
The request is the culmination of multiple unsuccessful attempts to convince Southwest Judicial District Judge James Gion ...
An attorney for a Texas pipeline company says he will show at trial that various Greenpeace entities coordinated delays and ...
A Lakota organizer said in a video deposition played to jurors that the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe led the protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline, not Greenpeace.