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Case dismissed against climate activists who shut down oil pipelines

Two Seattle activists admitted they shut down two oil pipelines in 2016, but claimed the threat of climate change was so imminent their actions were necessary.
Activists were arrested after shutting down tar sands oil pipelines in solidarity with the protests over the Dakota Access Pipeline.

MINNEAPOLIS — Editor's note: The attached video originally aired November 1, 2016 after the activists were arrested.

A Minnesota judge has dismissed charges against three climate change activists, two of whom are from Seattle, who tried to shut down two Enbridge Energy crude oil pipelines in northwestern Minnesota.

Clearwater County District Judge Robert Tiffany ruled Tuesday that the prosecution failed to prove any damage. He threw out the case even before the protesters could present a so-called "necessity defense" to the jury.

Emily Johnston and Annette Klapstein, of the Seattle area, admitted turning the emergency shut-off valves on two pipelines in 2016 as part of a coordinated action in four states. They were charged with felonies.

The two women and a third defendant had planned to argue that the threat of climate change from Canadian tar sands crude was so imminent that their actions were not only morally right, but necessary.

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