
Attorney Steven Donziger at his contempt of court trial (Intercept, 5/17/21) (photo: Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
Steven R. Donziger—the human rights attorney who in 2011 won a $9.5 billion legal victory in Ecuador over the Chevron Corporation for the dumping of roughly 16 billion gallons of toxic waste in the Ecuadorian Amazon—has been under house arrest for 696 days (as of July 2) (FAIR.org, 9/11/20).
This unprecedented legal situation is happening in New York City, the hometown of the New York Times—but the paper of record has yet to report on Donziger’s arrest.
Manhattan Federal District Court Judge Lewis A. Kaplan brought a misdemeanor contempt of court charge against Donziger in August 2019, for which he could serve a maximum of 180 days in prison (Intercept, 5/17/21). Kaplan issued the charge after Donziger refused to turn over his computer, cell phone and passwords to Chevron, choosing instead to appeal Kaplan’s order on constitutional grounds.
In 1993, Donziger tried to get an ecocide case on behalf of Ecuadorian villagers heard by a US jury, but in 2002, Chevron convinced US courts to send the case to Ecuador, where the energy corporation had no seizable assets. Chevron then pressured US courts to get protection from the rulings being made against them in Ecuador.
Shortly thereafter, “Chevron ran back to US courts to attack Donziger” (Canary, 7/17/19), where Kaplan denied Donziger a jury trial and subsequently ruled in 2014 that the human rights attorney had defeated Chevron in Ecuador through “corrupt means.” Afterwards, when the Department of Justice (DoJ) under the Trump administration refused to prosecute Donizger, Kaplan made the extremely unusual decision to hire a private law firm to prosecute the case. (For a complete timeline of events related to Chevron v. Donziger, visit FreeDonziger.org.)
Why the silence?

Theodore Boutrous, lawyer for the New York Times—and for Chevron.
The Times has not covered Chevron’s bizarre conflict with Donziger since 2014. Why has the paper kept silent for seven years?
Donziger pointed out on Twitter (3/17/21) that billionaire “Robert Denham sits on the boards of both Chevron and the NYT.” Later, noting that his apartment is just a 30-minute walk from the Times‘ offices, Donziger (Twitter, 6/24/21) added that the paper’s “main outside lawyer on press issues, Ted Boutrous Jr., also works for Chevron.”
Boutrous of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher was one of the lead lawyers representing Chevron in the Chevron v. Donziger proceedings. Regardless of whether the paper’s lawyer has had any influence over its Chevron reporting, the fact that the paper has retained the corporate lawyer to handle its freedom of the press issues reflects its priorities as a news organization.
‘An extraordinary campaign against him’

“Donziger’s current prohibition from working, traveling, earning money and leaving his home shows how successful Chevron’s strategy has been,” reported the Intercept‘s Sharon Lerner (1/29/21).
Democracy Now! (3/15/21) reported that Chevron “ended Donziger’s legal career” with its judicial onslaught against him, which involved “dozens of law firms.” Scores of environmentalists, activists and lawyers have called for an end to this ongoing persecution.
Investigative reporter Sharon Lerner (Intercept, 1/29/21) described the legal assault on Donziger as “one of the most bitter and drawn-out cases in the history of environmental law,” adding that Chevron hired
private investigators to track Donziger, created a publication to smear him, and put together a legal team of hundreds of lawyers from 60 firms, who have successfully pursued an extraordinary campaign against him.
To choose a judge to preside over Donziger’s prosecution, Lerner reported, Kaplan “bypassed the standard random assignment process and handpicked someone he knew well, US District Judge Loretta Preska, to oversee the case being prosecuted by the firm he chose” (Intercept, 1/29/20). The Frente de Defensa de la Amazonia (FDA)—a grassroots organization in Ecuador’s northern Amazon region that has sought to hold Chevron accountable—pointed out in a blog post (12/31/20) that Preska is affiliated with the Federalist Society—“a pro-corporate society of lawyers and judges to which Chevron is a major donor.” The FDA (4/7/21) later complained that Preska “denied all Zoom access” to Donziger’s trial, which would proceed with “a biased judge, no jury and a private Chevron prosecutor.”
Martin Garbus, Donziger’s defense attorney, filed a motion on June 22 alleging that appointment of a private prosecutor in Chevron v. Donziger was unconstitutional (citing the recent US Supreme Court ruling in United States v. Arthrex). In the filing, Garbus described the “prosecutorial crusade” as “deeply troubling” (Twitter, 6/23/21).
Dependent on a fabricator

Common Dreams (10/27/15) reported that “Chevron’s payments to Guerra for his false testimony” included “some $12,000 per month, plus other perks which included a car, healthcare, and relocating him and his family to the United States.”
The legal foundation for everything Donziger is going through today is Kaplan’s 2014 ruling that Donziger beat Chevron in Ecuador through corrupt means. But that judgment rests very heavily on the testimony of a defrocked Ecuadorian judge, Alberto Guerra, who was handsomely rewarded by Chevron for his testimony that he now says was fabricated. Guerra’s name appears an average of about once per page in Kaplan’s 500-page ruling.
In total, the Times has published three news articles—two in 2013 (11/13/13, 11/19/13) and one in 2014 (3/4/14)—about the Donziger case. Each of them had the byline of Clifford Krauss, the Times‘ “national energy business correspondent” based in Houston. The Times’ reporting was largely anchored in Guerra’s testimony, whose claims to have been bribed by Donziger–later revealed to be lies–constituted the thrust of Kaplan’s judgment.
“[Chevron v. Donziger] largely hung on Chevron’s star witness, Alberto Guerra, a former Ecuadorian judge who has admitted to receiving substantial amounts of money and other benefits to cooperate with Chevron,” Vice (10/26/15) reported, adding that Guerra confessed that
large parts of his sworn testimony, used by Kaplan in the RICO case to block enforcement of the ruling against Chevron, were exaggerated and, in other cases, simply not true.
Siding with Chevron
National corporate media coverage of Chevron v. Donziger has largely favored Chevron (FAIR.org, 9/11/20). Outlets like Reuters paid little attention to how Indigenous Ecuadorians have suffered from the detriments of illegal dumping—let alone Chevron’s now-exposed strategy to demonize Donziger (Intercept, 1/29/20).
The last story that the Times published on the subject was an opinion piece by business columnist Joe Nocera, who explored the “darker narrative about Donziger” (9/22/14)—a narrative that Bloomberg business writer Paul Barrett laid out in his book Law of the Jungle. Like Barrett, Nocera depicted Donziger as a “rogue lawyer willing to do virtually anything to win.”
In his lifetime of litigation against big oil, Donziger has fought to hold corporations accountable for placing their own profits over the well-being of Indigenous Ecuadorians living in the Ecuadorian Amazon. As writer Joe Emersberger (FAIR.org, 9/11/20) put it, bullies like Chevron
are usually served by US judges, lawyers and corporate journalists. That’s the path a Harvard Law graduate like Donziger could easily have taken. He is being brutally punished for not taking it.
Donziger’s persecution by Chevron is happening in the Times’ own backyard, but the paper has ignored this high-profile case for at least seven years. As the human rights attorney said in an interview with BreakThrough News (6/5/21):
No matter what you think of me or Judge Kaplan, isn’t it newsworthy that an American lawyer is under house arrest for two years on a misdemeanor? It’s just a newsworthy story!
ACTION:
Please ask the New York Times to cover the case of Steven Donziger.
CONTACT:
Letters: letters@nytimes.com
Readers Center: Feedback
Twitter: @NYTimes
Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective. Feel free to leave a copy of your communication in the comments thread.
Thanks to Joe Emersberger for research assistance.




I am amazed that the New York Times has failed to cover the story of Steven Donziger and the fight of the Ecuadoran people against Chevron. This is a serious environmental and human rights issue where the defendant has been imprisoned in his own home for two years for a misdemeanor.
Please cover this environmental case and its human rights issues.
I’d suggest astonished not amazed Amrita. Save amazed for the dropping of magic mushrooms, or MDMA
My NYT letter to editor:
Editor
I knew the Steven Donziger case well enough I had only to skim FAIR’s recent post about it to its listserve. Your lack of coverage of the case illustrates the larger part of de facto state censorship: omission.
Dear journalists at the Times,
I imagine I’m one of many people who are writing to you about the human rights lawyer Steven Donziger, who’s been under house arrest here in NYC for 698 days and counting for a misdemeanor charge.
This story has it all. Ghastly destruction of our planet/people by a corporation that’s allowed—to this day—to act with impunity for its profit. Corporate abuse of US justice system to retaliate against the human rights lawyer who won a judgement against them. Chevron has refused to pay or clean up in Ecuador and instead has spent billions to punish Steven. The judges and prosecutor on this case are all connected to Chevron. This is a corporate sponsored, private prosecution happening right now, right here in the US, right here in NYC.
Please do not be silent on this matter. It is so important that the Times tell this story. This is not about one person but about corporate abuse of power on par with authoritarianism and corporate-caused climate crisis and all the human suffering and death that comes with it.
Gerald
This is what I wrote:
Dear New York Times,
Where is the coverage of the bizarre Chevron-led house arrest of Steve Donziger? Your silence on this case is deeply troubling, raising questions about the Times’ business and legal connections to Chevron.
If you are interested in maintaining your journalistic integrity as “the newspaper of record,” you will put aside the connections between Chevron and both Mr. Denham and Mr. Boutrous Jr. and launch a deep investigative probe into the nefarious actions of Chevron and the highly unusual judicial abuses committed by Judges Lewis A. Kaplan and Loretta Preska. Both judges sit on the bench in your own backyard, after all. Your readers are currently forced to learn about the outrageous corporate and judicial abuses of power witnessed in this case from other sources.
Hoping to see journalistic integrity,
Ed Kilcullen
Too bad the NYT has been so remiss in reporting on this very serious human rights atrocity,even complicit We the littly people should not need to remind the grown ups of what is right & what is outrageously wrong. Shame on YOU…..
The New York Times has derided many progressives, yes? Can you send a list of them, even a shirt list, since my son has sent me its critique of Dr Mercola.
Dr Mercola is an alternative credentialed physician and you may like to respond to it, as well as the CDC, which fir years downplayed the number of Lyme cases in the US. This meant that the now under-reported over 400,000 Lyme cases every year were cited as being 30,000 by the CDC for years. (You may know that the bio lab where the Lyme crisis originated was across from New York on Plum Island.) It has been the persistent bold work of alternate physicians like Dr Mercola — some legally then barred from practicing medicine — who have stood up to the medical establishment and sacrificed so much for the Lyme community. This s called “the Lyme wars”.Thank you so much!
Whoever is not covering this story is complicit.
This is the time where climate change and environmental injustice is all over us and the big media is silent. A crime!
This is how they don’t even allow an awareness. When I wrote to the NYT, they replied :
The letter must be exclusive to The Times (no prior publication in other news outlets, except for nytimes.com). They should generally refer to an article that has appeared within the last seven days.
So, in not covering stories, they don’t publish letters.
To Whom it May Concern,
As a born and bred New Yorker, almost as long NYTimes reader and someone who has visited and revelled in the beauty of the Ecuadorian Amazon, I am astounded at the hypocrisy of the NYTimes to choose financial allegiance over truth and justice in regards to the Stephen Donziger case.
Your organization diligently revealed the former president’s falsehoods day after day for four years of his term, but do not pledge nor display the same integrity when it comes to truths that may affect your coffiers. This story and its repercussions for our entire planet should be quite literally front page news. A NY human rights lawyer held under house arrest for two years for being brave enough to take on a giant oil company guilty of atrocities and now headed to a dangerous NYC jail for six months for telling the truth and winning in court. But your front page news includes a story about an over the hill supermodel’s botched attempt to cosmetically remain viable.
How can we expect honesty and bravery from our children, our leaders and ourselves when an enormously powerful newspaper like your own does not have the integrity to tell the truth.
Sincerely,
Jennifer Thornton