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Donziger has also admitted that the new expert reports were intended to give the RICO<br />

Defendants "an argument" allowing them to "attempt to shut down Chevron's 1782 efforts in the<br />

U.S."<br />

192. The link between the fraudulent Cabrera Report and the work of the "new"<br />

experts is made explicit in the retention agreement signed by the Weinberg Group, a consulting<br />

firm, which, in turn, retained the "new" experts. The Weinberg Group's retention agreement<br />

provides that it was retained for the purpose of"conduct[ing] a comprehensive review of selected<br />

sections of an expert report prepared by Richard Stalin Cabrera Vega, "-not to produce a new,<br />

independent scientific report. As one co-conspirator has described it, the role of the Weinberg<br />

Group is merely to "provid[ e] a submission with their name on it."<br />

193. The Weinberg Group provided copies of the Cabrera Report to the experts it<br />

retained for use in their own reports. According to Donziger and his co-conspirators, all the<br />

"new expert[ s]" needed was the "Cabrera report in and of itself' along with the data that Cabrera<br />

relied upon. As the RICO Defendants and their co-conspirators intended, these "new" experts<br />

then relied heavily on the Cabrera Report. According to Donziger, none of these "new" experts<br />

had "go[ ne] to Ecuador," "did any kind of new site inspection," "did any kind of new sampling,"<br />

or indeed, did "environmental testing of any kind."<br />

194. One of the "new" experts, Douglas Allen, for example, made no independent<br />

evaluation of the evidence, instead relying on the unsubstantiated findings contained in the<br />

Cabrera Report. Indeed, the conspirators instructed Allen to use the Cabrera Report as his<br />

"starting point." He relied entirely on the Cabrera Report for, among other items, the number of<br />

pits requiring remediation. Despite the fact that he "[ did]n't know if there are in fact 917 pits<br />

that require remediation," he relied on that number anyway-drawn from the fraudulent Cabrera<br />

Report-in developing his own estimate. He relied on the Cabrera Report despite his opinion<br />

that the conclusions in the Cabrera Report are unreliable and that that the report lacked<br />

appropriate citations and references. Allen has admitted, however, that had he known that the<br />

77

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