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Appeals court allows necessity defence in pipeline protest

April 23, 2018 12:32 PM
The Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS – The Minnesota Court of Appeals says four protesters can use an unusual “necessity defence” against criminal charges related to efforts to shut down two Enbridge Energy oil pipelines.

The protesters admit that they turned the emergency shut-off valves on two pipelines in 2016 in Clearwater County of northwestern Minnesota as part of a multi-state protest. They want to tell jurors that the threat of climate change from Canadian tar sands crude is so imminent that they were justified.

A three-judge appeals panel ruled 2-1 Monday that the prosecutor has failed to show that allowing the necessity defence would have a critical impact on the trial’s outcome.

Trial dates have not been set.

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