Plaintiffs’ Representatives Promised Presiding Judge
In a sworn
declaration filed today in
“Another participant in the fraud has now come forward rather than wait
to be exposed by others,” said
Guerra’s declaration, which is corroborated by computer, bank, and
shipping records, as well as the plaintiffs’ lawyers’ own internal
e-mails, provides a direct account of corruption that has tainted the
trial for years. Guerra describes multiple meetings with the plaintiffs’
lawyers and representatives – namely,
-
“I was Mr. Zambrano’s ‘ghostwriter’ and I wrote the great majority of
the rulings issued in civil cases assigned to Mr. Zambrano, including
the
Chevron case.” - “Mr. Donziger thanked me for my work as ghostwriter in this case and for helping steer the case in favor of the Plaintiffs’[sic]. The payments from the Plaintiffs’ representatives were given to me by Mr. Fajardo in cash, or were deposited into my savings account at Banco Pichincha. I remember that while I was writing court rulings for Mr. Zambrano I would regularly meet with Mr. Fajardo, perhaps twice per month, to discuss my work.”
-
“Mr. Zambrano told me he was in direct contact with Mr. Fajardo and
that the Plaintiffs’ representatives had agreed to pay him USD
$500,000 from whatever money they were to collect from the judgment, in exchange for allowing them to write the judgment in the Plaintiffs’ favor.” -
“Approximately two weeks before the trial court in the
Chevron case issued the judgment, Mr. Zambrano gave me a draft of the judgment so that I could revise it. It was through him that I found out that the attorneys for the Plaintiffs had written that judgment and had delivered it to him.” - “I worked on that document in Mr. Zambrano’s residence in Lago Agrio using Mr. Fajardo’s computer.”
- “Based on what Mr. Zambrano told me, it is my understanding that the Plaintiffs’ attorneys made changes to the judgment up to the very last minute before it was published.”
-
“I knew at the time, and I know now, that the agreement in which I
participated, and by which the Plaintiffs’ representatives drafted the
judgment in the
Chevron case which Judge Zambrano issued, with my help, was a violation of Ecuadorian law. According to Ecuadoran law, only a judge is authorized to write rulings and judgments. For these same reasons I knew at the time, as I know now, that the arrangement in which I participated, whereby I drafted court rulings for Mr. Zambrano steering the case in favor of the Plaintiffs, and was paid by the Plaintiffs’ representatives for that work, was a violation of Ecuadoran law. And I knew at that time, as I know now, that the agreement that Mr. Zambrano told me he had reached with the representatives’ attorneys, to let them draft the judgment in favor of the Plaintiffs and againstChevron , in exchange for him receiving USD$500,000 once they collected the money from the judgment, was a violation of Ecuadoran law.”
One year after issuing the judgment against
Guerra’s account is corroborated by contemporaneous documentary evidence. For example, his computer contains drafts of numerous court orders Zambrano issued, including in the Lago Agrio case. And his bank records (here, here, here, and here) document payments made to him by a representative of the plaintiffs. Shipping records and Guerra’s calendar further corroborate his testimony.
Sworn statements by several other witnesses also corroborate Guerra’s
account. Chevron’s Ecuadorian lawyers and others known to them now
attest to the fact that, at various times during Zambrano’s tenures on
the case, Guerra directly approached them to solicit bribes on
Zambrano’s behalf in order to fix the Lago Agrio judgment, and that
Guerra’s testimony and corroborating evidence confirm what the extensive
overlap between the plaintiffs’ lawyers’ internal files and the judgment
itself already supported – that the plaintiffs’ lawyers corrupted the
Ecuadorian court and actually wrote the
Contemporaneous e-mails between the plaintiffs’ lawyers and
representatives, produced through court-ordered discovery in
This revelation is the latest in a recent series
of instances where individuals and groups formerly aligned with the
plaintiffs have either accused the plaintiffs’ lawyers of fraud or
provided first-hand accounts of corruption tainting the trial and
judgment. Earlier this month, it was revealed
that
Because of the risks to Guerra and his family from coming forward,
Additional evidence produced by the plaintiffs’ American lawyers provides corroborating proof that the Lago Agrio plaintiffs’ representatives participated in the drafting the judgment. In at least eight separate instances, the judgment tracks the plaintiffs’ lawyers’ own documents, in some cases word-for-word, reciting content from the plaintiffs’ lawyers’ internal materials that did not form part of the record, as well as copying errors and idiosyncratic reference citations that only appeared in the plaintiffs’ internal documents.
“Chevron once again calls on Ecuadorian authorities, and authorities wherever these plaintiffs’ lawyers are trying to advance their fraud, to investigate and bring an end to this scheme,” said Pate. “Ecuador should not tolerate American lawyers using Ecuador’s institutions and citizens as puppets.”
In now coming forward, Guerra has also agreed to make himself available to appear before other courts, tribunals, and investigators if requested to do so.
Source:
Chevron Corp.
Kent Robertson, +1-925-790-3819