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plaintiffs' attorneys required the government's cooperation to bring a potentially lucrative<br />

lawsuit in Ecuador. The U.S. plaintiffs' attorneys had no desire to sue Petroecuador or Ecuador<br />

for the harms that had occurred-despite their actual culpability-because, as Defendant<br />

Donziger explained, "[T]he government here will never pay for any judgment. In contrast,<br />

Texaco can pay." In order to get the "juicy check" that, as Fajardo put it, was the ultimate goal,<br />

the U.S. plaintiffs' attorneys struck a deal with the Ecuadorian government to enable those<br />

attorneys to bring an action against a convenient U.S. target.<br />

61. The U.S. plaintiffs' attorneys agreed not to sue Petroecuador and assured the<br />

Republic of Ecuador that it would benefit from any judgment entered against Chevron in<br />

exchange for public and private governmental support for the U.S. plaintiffs' attorneys' case.<br />

62. The U.S. plaintiffs' attorneys presented Ecuador's Attorney General with written<br />

promises not to pursue legal action against the Republic of Ecuador or Petroecuador or to collect<br />

a judgment against Ecuador ifone were awarded to them. Bonifaz stated, "[I]fthe U.S. court [in<br />

the Aguinda or Jota actions] finds both Petro ecuador and Texaco guilty, we will not accept the<br />

percentage of the claim assigned to [Petroecuador]." And he admitted that the Lago Agrio<br />

Plaintiffs had "committed in legal documents not to sue Ecuador."<br />

63. With reported legislative assistance from the U.S. plaintiffs' attorneys, Ecuador<br />

enacted the Environmental Management Act of 1999 (the "EMA"). For the first time, the EMA<br />

enabled private individuals to bring generalized environmental injury claims previously held<br />

exclusively by the state. It also extended standing for the first time to private citizens to enforce<br />

"collective environmental rights" for environmental harm. These actions are private in name<br />

only, however, because the EMA provides that any monetary judgment be awarded to the<br />

"community."<br />

64. With a new and highly advantageous legal framework thus in place, the U.S.<br />

plaintiffs' attorneys, joined and assisted by other RICO Defendants and their co-conspirators,<br />

filed the Lago Agrio Litigation, Maria Aguinda et al. v. Chevron-Texaco, in May 2003 in the<br />

Superior Court of Nueva Loja, Ecuador. As a result of the EMA, and the RICO Defendants'<br />

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