Author: Ted Folkman

  • Lago Agrio: Jarndyce & Jarndyce, or Death-Cage Match?

    Julian Ku of Opinio Juris participated in discussions about the Lago Agrio case at the recent ASIL meeting. Read the summary of his presentation (no longer available online) not just for his conclusion about what happened in Ecuador (he concludes that “Chevron seems to have been seriously wronged in the Ecuador proceeding”), but for an……

  • Case of the Day: European Community v. RJR Nabisco

    I’m going outside the official Letters Blogatory Scope of Coverage to write about European Community v. RJR Nabisco, Inc. (E.D.N.Y. 2011), an interesting reversal of the usual FSIA case. In the usual case, a sovereign defendant asserts immunity from jurisdiction in the US courts. In today’s case, the sovereign—or the supposed sovereign—was the plaintiff. The……

  • Lago Agrio Developments

    [Updated: A knowledgeable source has told me that in fact the AFP report referenced below was incorrect and that the Ecuadoran Supreme Court has made no decision on the case one way or the other. Stay tuned!] There are two developments to note in Ecuador on the Lago Agrio case. First, the appellate court in……

  • Update on the Hague Service Convention In Mexico

    Back in July 2011, I commented on some problems with implementation of the Hague Service Convention in Mexico. The Mexico situation caught others’ attention, too. In November 2011, the Consultoría Jurídica of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in collaboration with the Permanent Bureau of the Hague Conference and the Mexican Central Authority, held a workshop……

  • We’re Back!

    No, Letters Blogatory was not hacked. I did, however, press a wrong button, so to speak, and the server went down for several hours. I apologize to all readers—as the blog of international judicial assistance, Letters Blogatory has responsibilities, the first of which is to be available for you to read!