Click:Prototype machining
Will the fossil fuel industry, which misled the public for decades about the risks of climate change, eventually pay the steep price that Big Tobacco did after lying for decades about the health hazards of smoking?
U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch this week acknowledged that the U.S. Justice Department has “discussed” taking civil legal action—as it did against tobacco companies—against the fossil fuel industry for its decades-long intentional suppression of climate science.
“It’s high time that the Department of Justice investigate how these companies may have lied to the American people, their shareholders, and the federal government.”
Click Here: All Blacks Rugby Jersey—Jamie Henn, 350.org
Lynch’s comments came Wednesday, in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
“Madam Attorney General, the similarities between the mischief of the tobacco industry pretending that the science of tobacco’s dangers was unsettled and the fossil fuel industry pretending that the science of carbon emissions’ danger is unsettled has been remarked on widely, particularly by those who study the climate denial apparatus that the fossil fuel industry has erected,” said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) during the hearing.
Noting that under President Bill Clinton, the Justice Department brought and won a multi-billion-dollar civil case against the tobacco industry, Whitehouse continued: “My question to you is, other than civil forfeitures and matters attendant to a criminal case, are there other circumstances in which a civil matter under the authority of the Department of Justice has been referred to the FBI?”
After thanking him for “raising the issue,” Lynch responded: “This matter has been discussed. We have received information about it and have referred it to the FBI to consider whether or not it meets the criteria for which we could take action on. I’m not aware of a civil referral at this time.”
As Common Dreams reported last week, the DOJ has already forwarded a request from two congressmen seeking a federal probe of ExxonMobil to the FBI’s criminal division.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT