The case is one of dozens that aim to hold oil and gas companies accountable for Louisiana's disappearing wetlands.
The jury found the oil giant liable for environmental damages. Industry and business groups derided the decision.
A jury in Plaquemines Parish has ordered Chevron to pay at least $740 million to restore Louisiana's coastal wetlands.
A Louisiana jury has decided that Chevron must pay more than $740 million to restore damage caused to coastal wetlands in a ...
A $744 million jury verdict in Louisiana is at the center of a coordinated legal effort to force oil companies to pay ...
The lawsuits Louisiana's state and local governments are pursing against oil companies will not solve the coastal erosion ...
A 2019 study by the Pelican Institute found that coastal lawsuits against oil and gas companies cost Louisiana’s economy ...
A colossal Louisiana legal showdown began this week in a Plaquemines Parish courtroom, as attorney John Carmouche, who has ...
Less than a year after moving to Texas to escape California’s extreme environmental laws, Chevron now finds itself embroiled in a Louisiana lawsuit defending itself against a $3 billion claim that ...
Chevron finds itself the victim of a political alliance between the tort bar and Louisiana Republicans.
In a historic decision with sweeping implications for Louisiana's energy sector and environmental restoration efforts, a jury ...