Posted on 03/04/2005 7:03:38 AM PST by madfly
(Tucson) Judge Richard Fields entered formal judgment on March 2, 2005 against the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental activist corporation, and found that they must pay $600,000 in actual and punitive damages to Arizona rancher Jim Chilton and the Chilton Ranch and Cattle Company.The formal judgment confirmed a Tucson jurys verdict, delivered on January 21, 2005, finding the Center for Biological Diversity guilty of making false, unfair, libelous and defamatory statements against Jim Chilton, a fifth generation Arizona rancher whose pioneering ancestors drove cattle into Arizona in the 1880s.
The jury awarded Chilton $100,000 in actual damages, and $500,000 in punitive damages because the Center for Biological Diversity defamed him and his family business in a two-page press release which included links to 21 photographs posted on the Centers website, from July 2002 until July 2003.
In his ruling, Judge Fields entered a formal judgment declaring that the Center and its employees made false statements in their press release. The judge also found that the press release contained misleading photographs and did not accurately describe the condition of Chiltons 21,500 acre Forest Service grazing allotment, located northwest of Nogales, Arizona. The Center for Biological Diversity, a high profile environmental activist corporation, has written many petitions leading to the listing of species as endangered. Scientists have questioned whether some of these species are actually endangered. At trial, the Center claimed to have filed over 170 lawsuits against federal agencies. According to Chilton, these lawsuits have stopped school construction, terminated thousands of lumber production jobs, put Arizona and New Mexico communities into economic distress, and driven many western ranchers to the verge of bankruptcy. Kraig Marton, an attorney from the Phoenix-based law firm of Jaburg and Wilk, who represented Chilton when he fought back, stated this case shows how pictures can lie, said Marton. We are very pleased with the ruling, he added, and noted it is about time that the tables were turned on this group. Chilton said the suit was filed to challenge the way the Center for Biological Diversity consistently does business. They dont use science, they just wear people down and drive them out of business, said Chilton. They routinely use endangered species to raise money and fund their attacks on the cowboy and the western culture.
Chilton has also stated that after his expenses for this lawsuit are covered, he plans to donate the remaining money to the Arizona Cattle Growers Association to help spread the word that modern ranching conserves habitat for wildlife, increases biodiversity, and reduces threats of wildfire. At trial, the jury was shown the photographs disseminated by the Center that focused on tiny barren areas and implied that the range had been devastated by cattle.
Chiltons lawyer put up photographs taken from the same sites looking north, south, east, and west that revealed a vibrant and thriving environment. Experts testified that the allotment had been well managed by the Chiltons and, in fact, had been written up by leading range scientists as a Success Story, in the professional journal, Rangelands.
The jury agreed with Chiltons claims, finding that the Center knowingly disseminated false and malicious statements in a news advisory, and that misleading photographs were used to harm the Chiltons after the Centers unsuccessful attempt to block the renewal of Chiltons grazing permit. Chilton, who felt elated and vindicated, said the jury had done an admirable job of understanding days of scientific testimony. This case will help the public become aware that ranchers support real recovery of endangered species because quality habitat makes quality ranches.
Chilton emphasized that this case demonstrates the need to strengthen the Endangered Species Act to close loopholes that have allowed groups like the Center for Biological Diversity to make money by suing the federal government. It was revealed at trial that the Center collected over $990,000 in 2003 from lawsuits it filed, mostly against the government. Chilton decried the Centers list-and-sue policy as preventing the agencies and landowners from actually working to recover species.
According to Chilton, Now is the time to get recovery results from the Endangered Species Act by requiring peer-reviewed science for listings, providing incentives for landowners, recreationalists and rural businesses to preserve open space and improve habitat for species. Chilton concluded that we must actually recover species, not just play the game of listing them to put money in activist coffers and put Americans out of work.
For more information regarding this case, please contact Kraig Marton at (602) 248 - 1017 or (602) 570 3510 or PRfect Media at (480) 706-6880.
Are you ready for this guess who one of the biggest contributers and funding organizations is???? Think about who founded CNN. That's right Ted Turner and the Turner Foundation.
As someone once said if Salmon are endangered WHY can you still by them at the Store for eating?
I knew the Turner Foundation was one of CBD's contributors. I did not know they were the largest contributor but it makes sense as both of these leftist organizations are very active in New Mexico.
Muleteam1
LOL! I thought they got funded because of all the Liberal Judges letting them WIN!!! Never did I dream... Now you're evidently educating me to still ANOTHER sad scenario. Can you shoot me a link or too, so I can go read up on this...so I won't be so pitifully ignorant on this subject? ...THANKS!!!
...Oh...and can you recommend a good 'ulcer medicine'...so I'll have something to chew on while I read up on this?
Thanks!
There was a thread on it a couple of months ago where a congressman introduced a bill to repeal the law. I will look.
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