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not reflect substantial differences in costs between the U.S. and Ecuador, and are often<br />

meaningless outside the larger U.S. regulatory context. For example, the report asserts that the<br />

cost of remediating the pits-including the imaginary ones-would be $2.2 million per pit. This<br />

is 25 times greater than Petroecuador's average actual cost of ongoing pit remediation at $85,000<br />

per pit.<br />

171. Other intentional errors abound. Even though Cabrera did not take a single<br />

sample of drinking water and despite the existence of literally dozens of public drinking water<br />

systems in the concession area, the report assesses $428 million in damages for potable water<br />

systems. The conspirators also included $8.4 billion in damages for "unfair profits" TexPet<br />

allegedly earned, a penal levy that the Lago Agrio Plaintiffs never requested in their complaint,<br />

and included allocations such as millions of dollars to create a husbandry farm to produce<br />

hunting game for local residents.<br />

172. Finally, the RICO Defendants relied on unreliable, manipulated sampling data<br />

that they selected in order to maximize their damages claims. While claiming to use independent<br />

laboratories, the RICO Defendants actually processed much of the material themselves, often at a<br />

makeshift lab in a hotel room, which they referred to as "Selva Viva Labs." This work was so<br />

shoddy, however, that they sometimes had to simply "lose" reports that would not stand up to<br />

any review. They would also change their analysis when the results were not coming out the<br />

way they wanted. For example, in 2004 they stopped analyzing for certain contaminants because<br />

they realized that the presence of those contaminants in the samples would "show that the<br />

contamination is much more recent than we would desire," thus indicating that the source was<br />

Petroecuador activity after TexPet ceased operations.<br />

173. The Cabrera Report also unilaterally expanded the scope of Cabrera's mandate<br />

and went far beyond the expertise of his publicly disclosed team by addressing additional issues<br />

unrelated to the Lago Agrio Plaintiffs' claims for environmental remediation and medical<br />

monitoring. Despite the failure to identify a single individual with cancer or produce a single<br />

medical report, the report initially assessed $2.9 billion for "excessive cancer deaths" and then<br />

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