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.
Representatives of several tribal nations demonstrate in August 2016 in Bismarck against the Dakota Access Pipeline. (Kyle ...
Lawyers for Greenpeace said so themselves in a petition filed in North Dakota’s Supreme Court. They asked the court on Thursday to move the trial out of Morton County, arguing the jury is not ...
The organization is asking the North Dakota Supreme Court to move the civil trial brought forth by Energy Transfer to Cass ...
A coalition of media organizations, including the North Dakota Monitor, petitioned the state Supreme Court Thursday seeking ...
In a separate lawsuit over the pipeline, the state of North Dakota seeks $38 million from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
BISMARCK — Greenpeace has asked the North Dakota Supreme Court to move its Dakota Access Pipeline defamation case out of Morton County, arguing the jury is incapable of rendering a fair verdict.
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 ...