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September 12: Climate, Politics, and Corporate Power: A Conversation with Steven Donziger

By September 5, 2023September 11th, 2023No Comments

FREE! Hear human rights attorney Steven Donziger discuss his fight for justice at the intersection of climate, politics, and corporate power.

Donations encouraged to benefit the Donziger-Amazon Defense Fund. $500 donors receive preferred seating and access to a pre-show reception with Steven, Michael, Ayisha, and Marty.

Join us in conversation with noted human rights attorney Steven Donziger about being targeted with the nation’s first corporate prosecution after helping Amazon communities win a historic $10 billion pollution case against Chevron. Steven is a leading thinker operating at the intersection of climate, law, and corporate power. He is also the first US attorney to be jailed by a corporation in retaliation for his human rights work.

Steven will be joined by actor, writer, director, and activist Michael Imperioli (The Sopranos and White Lotus), climate justice advocate and one of Time Magazine’s 2023 Women of the Year Ayisha Siddiqa, and the legendary civil rights attorney Marty Garbus. Marty has represented Steven for years as Chevron attacked him with 60 law firms, and he formerly represented Nelson Mandela and Vaclav Havel, among others.

FREE! Donations encouraged to support the Donziger-Amazon Defense Fund.
Click Here to RSVP!

More About Steven

After helping Amazon communities win a historic $9.5 billion pollution judgment against Chevron, the company retaliated and prosecuted him for contempt of court in New York after he refused to turn his computer and confidential case file over to his adversary counsel. The federal prosecutor rejected the charges, which were filed by a pro-corporate judge with financial ties to the company.

The judge appointed a Chevron law firm to prosecute Steven in the name of the US government.

The private Chevron prosecutor immediately ordered Steven locked up at home with a 24/7 monitoring device on his ankle, while his trial was delayed for over two years. He ended up spending 993 days in detention and in prison for a misdemeanor offense with a maximum sentence of 180 days; the judge denied him a jury.

He is still the only person ever in the US locked up in retaliation for his human rights work. Chevron used 60 law firms and 2,000 lawyers to attack Steven. He now enjoys the support of 68 Nobel Laureates and more than 150 bar associations and civil society groups around the world and is considered a leading global spokesperson on the issues of human rights, climate justice, Indigenous rights, and the law.

Learn more about Steven at FreeDonziger.com. Follow him on Twitter at @SDonziger and on Instagram at @stevendonziger.

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