Fashion

As Exxon Tries to Duck Subpoenas, Groups Keep Urging Clinton to Reject Big Oil

Amid the presidential election and with renewed public scrutiny over its role in the decades-long suppression of climate science, oil giant ExxonMobil is going to court in Texas over a subpoena issued by the Attorney General of the U.S. Virgin Islands in an attempt to avoid answering questions.

Exxon on Wednesday filed a petition in Fort Worth after Attorney General Claude Earl Walker and his counterpart from Massachusetts announced they would join the effort, along with those concurrently ongoing in New York and California, to investigate what exactly the fossil fuel industry knew about climate change.

It’s unlikely the company will be successful in blocking the subpoena, writes InsideClimate News, one of the outlets that helped exposed the fossil fuel industry’s collusion in the coverup.

The oil giant claimed the subpoena, issued last month, is “a pretextual use of law enforcement power to deter ExxonMobil from participating in ongoing public deliberations about climate change and to fish through decades of ExxonMobil’s documents with the hope of finding some ammunition. The chilling effect of this inquiry, which discriminates based on viewpoint to target one side of an ongoing policy debate, strikes at protected speech at the core of the First Amendment.”

However, Walker responded by arguing, “The First Amendment does not shield any company from being investigated for fraud.”

On Thursday, activists released a letter urging the Clinton Foundation to return the more than one million in donations it has received from Exxon.

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