Current:Home > MyTwo Louisiana Activists Charged with Terrorizing a Lobbyist for the Oil and Gas Industry -InvestTomorrow
Two Louisiana Activists Charged with Terrorizing a Lobbyist for the Oil and Gas Industry
View
Date:2025-04-14 17:10:00
Two Louisiana environmental activists face up to 15 years in prison after they were arrested Thursday for terrorizing an oil and gas lobbyist by leaving a box of plastic “nurdles” on his front porch.
Anne Rolfes and Kate McIntosh with the Louisiana Bucket Brigade turned themselves in at 8:30 a.m. and were held for nearly nine hours by Baton Rouge police, their attorney, Pam Spees, said Thursday evening.
“These charges have zero legal merit,” Spees said in a written statement earlier. “They do not even pass the laugh test.”
She said she would be asking local prosecutors “to look carefully at these arrests and reject the charges against these two dedicated advocates as soon as possible.”
Rolfes and McIntosh are part of a broad coalition fighting to stop the Taiwanese Formosa Petrochemical Corp. and its subsidiary, FG LA LLC, from constructing a massive, $9.6 billion plastics and petrochemical complex, proposed on 2,400 acres in a predominantly Black portion of St. James Parish.
The plant is part of a planned plastics expansion in the United States that’s facing fierce opposition from grassroots activists, environmentalists and members of Congress.
An analysis by ProPublica found the complex could more than triple the level of cancer-causing chemicals that residents of St. James are exposed to. It also found that the area around the site is already more saturated with those toxins than more than 99 percent of industrialized areas in the country.
The Louisiana Bucket Brigade is an environmental nonprofit with a goal of ending petrochemical pollution in Louisiana.
As activists have fought development across the state in recent years, Louisiana lawmakers have twice moved to stiffen criminal penalties for trespassing on oil and gas infrastructure.
In 2018, the state enacted a law that made trespassing on pipelines or industry sites a felony, punishable with up to five years in prison. This year, Gov. John Bel Edwards vetoed a bill that would have imposed a mandatory minimum three-year sentence if the trespassing occurred when the state is under a state of emergency.
The incident that prompted the arrests happened on Dec. 11, after a report of a “suspicious package” left on the porch of a residence, said Don Coppola, a spokesman for the Baton Rouge Police Department.
A lobbyist for the oil and gas industry lived in the home, The Times-Picayune and The New Orleans Advocate reported. There was a note on the package “indicating not to open the container as the contents could be hazardous,” Coppola said. It contained plastic nurdles—the raw material from which plastic products are made—that had been manufactured at another Formosa plant.
The arrest prompted the formation of a new regional alliance to defend democracy and promote free speech.
A press release from the newly formed Alliance to Defend Democracy said the plastic nurdles had come from a Formosa plant in Port Comfort, Texas, which had, according to a federal lawsuit, spilled massive amounts of the pellets into Lavaca Bay.
“The sealed package was labeled with a written disclaimer,” explaining what was in it, and advocating that Formosa’s air permit be denied, the alliance said.
In early January, the plant was granted the air quality permits it needed by the state of Louisiana.
In December, a federal judge in Texas approved a $50 million settlement in a citizen-lawsuit over the spilled nurdles and other pollution.
“(Formosa) was unaware that this action was going to be taken by the Baton Rouge Police Department and had only heard secondhand that deliveries of plastic pellets were made to several personal residences in the Baton Rouge area some months ago,” said Janile Parks, the FG LA LLC director of community and government relations, in a written response.
The new coalition includes community leaders, clergy, free speech advocates and various environmental organizations, and was created as Louisiana has cracked down on people protesting oil and gas development.
“We have fought hard for our constitutional rights and we take them seriously here in Louisiana,” said Sharon Lavigne, a member of the newly formed Alliance to Defend Democracy.
The women were not booked under the law that made trespassing on oil and gas facilities illegal, but a different statute that prohibits “terrorizing,” according to the new alliance’s press release. Spees said both face a punishment of up to 15 years in prison.
“These charges will have a chilling effect on our democracy unless they’re swiftly dismissed,” Lavigne said.
InsideClimate News’ Nicholas Kusnetz contributed to this report.
veryGood! (241)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Unlawful crossings along southern border reach yearly high as U.S. struggles to contain mass migration
- Taco Bell worker hospitalized after angry customer opens fire inside Charlotte restaurant
- You Don't Wanna Wait to Revisit Jodie Turner-Smith and Joshua Jackson's Private Marriage
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Family using metal detector to look for lost earring instead finds treasures from Viking-era burial
- Dancing With the Stars Judge Len Goodman’s Cause of Death Revealed
- Journalist dies after being shot 7 times in his home; no arrests made
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Congress didn’t include funds for Ukraine in its spending bill. How will that affect the war?
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Search resumes for missing 9-year-old girl who vanished during camping trip in upstate New York park
- House Speaker Kevin McCarthy says his priority is border security as clock ticks toward longer-term government funding bill
- Almost entire ethnic Armenian population has fled enclave
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- DNA helps identify killer 30 years after Florida woman found strangled to death
- Spain’s king begins a new round of talks in search of a candidate to form government
- Who is Jenny in 'Forrest Gump'? What to know about the cast of the cinema classic.
Recommendation
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Anya Taylor-Joy Marries Malcolm McRae in Star-Studded Italy Wedding
'Carterland' puts a positive spin on an oft-disparaged presidency
US expands probe into Ford engine failures to include two motors and nearly 709,000 vehicles
Travis Hunter, the 2
Unlawful crossings along southern border reach yearly high as U.S. struggles to contain mass migration
Who is Jenny in 'Forrest Gump'? What to know about the cast of the cinema classic.
8-year prison sentence for New Hampshire man convicted of running unlicensed bitcoin business