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The Climate Litigation Database
Litigation

State v. Klapstein

Date
2016
Geography

About this case

Documents

Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
04/23/2018
Decision
State's appeal dismissed.
In a split decision, the Minnesota Court of Appeals dismissed the State of Minnesota’s appeal of a trial court decision allowing defendants who participated in a “valve turner” protest to present a necessity defense. Two defendants who used bolt-cutters to enter an oil pipeline valve station and to cut a chain securing a valve device and one defendant who filmed the activities were charged with felony criminal damage to property, aiding and abetting felony criminal damage to property, gross misdemeanor trespassing, and aiding and abetting gross misdemeanor trespassing, A fourth defendant who accompanied the other three defendants and contacted the pipeline operator to notify it of their actions was charged with conspiracy to commit felony criminal damage to property and aiding and abetting felony criminal damage to property. The appellate court said the State had not made the necessary showing that the trial court’s ruling would have a critical impact on the prosecutors’ case “in the absence of other yet-unmade rulings” regarding what testimony and evidence would be permitted, what objections the State would make, and what the trial court’s rulings would be. One judge dissented, saying that permitting any evidence regarding global warming and the defendants’ belief that the federal government’s response to global warming had been ineffective “would have a critical impact on the outcome of the trial.” The dissenting judge also wrote that the evidence the defendants wished to present did not relate to the necessity defense as interpreted under Minnesota law because the defendants could not establish the three essential elements of the defense: that there was no legal alternative to their actions, that the harm was imminent, and that there was a direct, causal connection between their actions and the prevention of global warming.
12/04/2017
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by law professors and legal education organizations as amici curiae in support of respondents.
11/03/2017
Amicus Motion/Brief
Application by William P. Quigley to participate as amicus curiae and request for leave to file brief.
11/03/2017
Opposition
Memorandum filed by appellant in opposition to respondents' motion to dismiss.
11/03/2017
Amicus Motion/Brief
Application submitted by Minnesota Chamber of Commerce to participate as amicus curiae and request leave to file brief.
11/03/2017
Decision
Motion to dismiss appeal denied.
10/30/2017
Decision
Memorandum submitted in support of respondents' motion to dismiss.
10/30/2017
Motion
Motion to dismiss filed by respondents.
10/19/2017
Statement
Statement of the case filed by appellant.

Summary

Criminal cases against climate protesters who turned pipeline valves.