Court hears Pacific Lumber case
State justices to decide whether to reinstate suit over Headwaters Forest
Last Modified: Friday, May 9, 2008 at 3:32 a.m.
The state Supreme Court heard arguments Thursday in an environmental case stemming from the nearly $500 million public purchase of Headwaters Forest.
A 1999 lawsuit filed by the Sierra Club and the Environmental Protection Information Center claims that the now-bankrupt Pacific Lumber Co. duped state regulators into agreeing to less stringent logging rules for 210,000 acres of company timberlands in Humboldt County.
Similar allegations were at the center of a 2002 decision by Humboldt County District Attorney Paul Gallegos to file civil fraud charges against Pacific Lumber because of the terms of the Headwaters deal.
Two weeks ago, Supreme Court justices refused to hear Gallegos' appeal of the dismissal of his fraud case.
Now the high court is reviewing the original Headwaters lawsuit filed by the Sierra Club and the environmental center in Garberville.
Environmental attorneys want the state high court to overturn a lower court's dismissal of their case, contending that there are "far reaching" timber-management consequences involved for the North Coast and California.
After Thursday's arguments, attorneys on both sides agreed the numerous questions asked by the justices gave no hint as to which way they might be leaning.
"I think it would be very difficult to read anything into the questions posed by the justices," said Edgar Washburn, a San Francisco attorney representing Pacific Lumber.
Scott Greacen, a spokesman for the environmental center, agreed. "It was a very lively session, and we're hopeful. But the issues are very complicated."
You can reach Staff Writer Mike Geniella at 462-6470 or mike.geniella@pressdemocrat
.com.
Events Calendar More Events Submit Event
- Bodies ID'd in fiery crash
- Man describes skate park beating
- Stony Point Road reopen after crash
- Petaluma lays off 15 workers
- 2 accused of attacking Santa Rosa officers
- 49ers draft busts
- Petaluma lays off 15 employees
- Bus crash victims ID'd
- Fears spread down Main St.
- Injured teens released from hospital
- Man describes skate park beating
- Stony Point Road reopen after crash
- Sebastopol vote likely to shape apple-district plan
- Woman feared swept into sea is teacher from Ireland
- Petaluma lays off 15 workers
- Even Myanmar shunning tainted Chinese milk
- Petaluma lays off 15 employees
- Bodies ID'd in fiery crash
- Ocean search resumes for tourist
- New teen club director expands offerings
- Maria Carrillo boys, Casa Grande girls top soccer rankings 7 min ago
- Tuesday's low gas prices 24 min ago
- Fears spread down Main St. 25 min ago
- Wall Street volatile 42 min ago
- New Bank of America slashes dividend 2 hrs ago
- Litigation frozen in Wachovia battle 2 hrs ago
- Ex-Goldman Sachs exec to lead bailout 2 hrs ago
- BofA deal may help borrowers keep homes 2 hrs ago
- Global anxiety 2 hrs ago
- More city layoffs 2 hrs ago

Add a Comment
Start or join a forum on this topic.