BISMARCK, North Dakota -- "The Morton County Sheriff's Department sent a letter to President-elect Donald Trump which accused #StandingRock water protectors of crimes that there was no evidence of -- crimes water protectors were never charged with. The letter urges Trump to stop the protest of the #DakotaAccessPipeline."
The "Turtle Island" marathon tour of this worldwide unique film festival on all #nuclear topics and #radioactive dangers includes more than 10 cities in 9 states.
#KleeBenally, #Diné artist, activist and filmmaker, died suddenly on December 30, 2023, just days after completing his designs for the 2024 IUFF tour of North America and the Window Rock festival. We are so sad about Klee's death! Our hearts are with him.
CANNON BALL, North Dakota -- "One of the Standing Rock medics described how police targeted medics, and violently arrested medics, while they were treating people during the violent police attack on Standing Rock water protectors on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016 at Treaty Camp, directly on the path of Dakota Access Pipeline.
"The medic could see silencers on police weapons.
"'If they are here for peace, then why do their weapons have silencers on them?'
"As the medics struggled to treat those who were victims of the police attack, they became victims and were violently arrested.
"'The vehicle we were in had red crosses on it. They knew we were medics.They sprayed me head to toe. They pointed shotguns at my back while I was treating patients."
By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, November 8, 2023
"A federal appeals court ruled in favor of law enforcement who fired rubber bullets, bean bags and projectiles at Standing Rock water protectors, and blasted them with water hoses in freezing temperatures, at Backwater Bridge on November 20, 2016.
"Water protectors suffered critical injuries while seeking to halt the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota. However, the federal appeals court ruled against them in the class action, civil rights lawsuit which revealed excessive force by law enforcement.
"The Eight Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of North Dakota law enforcement -- Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier and Morton County; City of Mandan and Police Chief Jason Ziegler; Stutsman County and Sheriff Chad Kaiser.
"The federal appeals court upheld the lower district court's ruling and affirmed the dismissal of the case on Friday. The court stated that it was not clearly established that law enforcement’s use of force violated the water protectors' constitutional rights. The court said that there was insufficient evidence of deliberate indifference by the supervisors named in the case.
"Dr. Michelle Cook, #Dine' director of Divest, Invest, Protect, said, 'We are not defeated. Our victory is our continued fight for liberation, land, love, water joy, and peace.'"
""More than 50,000 pages of documents were recently made public after the company behind the Dakota Access pipeline lost a court case to keep them secret."
"Leaked documents and public records reveal a troubling fusion of private security, public law enforcement, and corporate money in the fight over the Dakota Access pipeline."
"A new business model for breaking down environmental movements was being hatched in real time. On Labor Day weekend in 2016, private security dogs in North Dakota attacked #pipeline opponents led by members of the #StandingRockSioux Tribe as they approached earth-moving equipment. The tribal members considered the land sacred, and the heavy equipment was breaking ground to build the Dakota Access pipeline. With a major public relations crisis on its hands, the pipeline’s parent company, Energy Transfer, hired the firm TigerSwan to revamp its security strategy.
"By October, TigerSwan — founded by James Reese, a retired commander of the elite special operations Army unit Delta Force — had established a military-style pipeline security strategy.
"There was one nagging problem that threatened to unravel it all: Reese hadn’t acquired a security license from the North Dakota Private Investigation and Security Board. Although Reese claimed TigerSwan wasn’t conducting security services at all, the state regulator insisted that its operations were #unlawful without a license."
Feds leave future of Dakota Access pipeline's controversial river crossing unclear in draft review
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Friday released its draft environmental impact statement of the Dakota Access oil pipeline, but said it's waiting for more input before deciding the future of the line’s controversial river crossing in North Dakota
Jack Dura
Friday 08 September 2023
"Federal officials on Friday released a draft environmental review of the Dakota Access oil pipeline, but said they're waiting for more input before deciding the future of the line’s controversial river crossing in North Dakota.
"The draft was released over three years after a federal judge ordered the environmental review and revoked the permit for the Missouri River crossing, upstream of the #StandingRockSioux Tribe's reservation. The tribe is concerned a pipeline oil spill could contaminate its water supply.
"The environmental review is key for whether the federal government reissues the permit. The pipeline has been operating since 2017, including during the environmental review."
About the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s lawsuit challenging the Dakota Access Pipeline.
"The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, represented by Earthjustice from 2016 to 2022, sued the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for violating the National Historic Preservation Act and other laws, after the agency issued final permits for the Dakota Access Pipeline, a massive crude oil pipeline stretching from North Dakota to Illinois.
"The FAQ and timeline is currently under construction — we apologize for the inconvenience!
"Archival resources related to the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s lawsuit challenging the Dakota Access Pipeline:
Legal documents about the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s lawsuit
Press releases and statements about the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s lawsuit
Feature stories and videos about the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s lawsuit
Federal Appeals Court Heard Arguments Today in Law Enforcement Brutality at Backwater Bridge at #StandingRock
by Brenda Norrell, Censored News, September 19, 2023
"ST. LOUIS -- A federal appeals court heard arguments in the class action lawsuit filed for excessive force at Backwater Bridge at Standing Rock. The issues argued included whether water protectors were free to leave, whether law enforcement feared for their lives, and whether the use of munitions, including bean bags filled with shot, and water sprayed on water protectors in temperatures below freezing, was justified or legal."