Tribe asks for restraining order against pipeline project

Greg Nash/The Hill

The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe is asking a federal judge to temporarily halt construction work on the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota to “prevent further destruction of sacred and culturally significant sites.”

The Army Corps of Engineers, which is defending itself in a tribal lawsuit over the pipeline, will not oppose the request, saying it will “preserve peace” amid increasingly intense protests over the pipeline. 

{mosads}In a weekend court filing, the tribe says pipeline developers have bulldozed a sacred site in North Dakota, clearing vegetation, soil and stones along the pipline’s route near Lake Ohae despite tribal warnings about the area’s significance. 

The tribe is seeking a temporary retraining order against construction there while it waits for a federal judge to decide whether to halt construction of the 1,170 mile project and order more environmental and cultural assessments of the pipeline’s route. A decision in that case is expected this week.

“The loss of these sites causes incalculable harm to the Tribe,” lawyers argued in a Monday filing.

“A [temporary restraining order] will prevent additional destruction to this important site and other potential sites nearby that remain unsurveyed pending a ruling on the preliminary injunction.”

The Army Corps of Engineers, in its own filing, said it “does not oppose this short and discrete temporary restraining order” because it could ease tensions at anti-pipeline protests. 

The Dakota Access Pipeline would bring oil from North Dakota to Illinois. While clearing of land for the pipeline has begun, no construction has been done so far.

Protesters and private security guards clashed at a protest site over the weekend. Three security guards were injured, the Bismarck Tribune reported, and the tribe says guards used pepper spray against protesters and allowed security dogs to attack them.

A federal judge called a Tuesday afternoon hearing on the restraining order request. He has said he will rule on a tribe’s request for a long-term injunction against the pipeline’s construction by the end of this week.

Tags Dakota Access Pipeline North Dakota pipeline Standing Rock Sioux tribe U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Regular the hill posts

Main Area Top ↴

Daily News

Hunter Biden's SECOND TRIAL Set To Begin, Prosecutors Look To Bring Addiction Back Into Spotlight

Hunter Biden's SECOND TRIAL Set To Begin, Prosecutors ...
RFK Jr tells Roseanne Barr he staged dead bear cub ...
Kamala Harris's VP shortlist narrows
Harris, Trump court voters in Georgia as they stand ...
More Videos
Main Area Middle ↴
See all Hill.TV See all Video
Main Area Bottom ↴

Most Popular

Load more