Charges dropped against pair who filmed Wash. pipeline protest
SEATTLE (AP) — Prosecutors have dropped charges including burglary and sabotage against two filmmakers who recorded a protest at an oil pipeline in Washington state last month.
The filmmakers, Lindsey Grayzel of Portland, Oregon, and Carl Davis of Orcas Island, Washington, say they were working on a documentary about climate activist Ken Ward on Oct. 11 when Ward broke through a fence and turned a safety valve along the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline near Burlington. Ward also livestreamed his actions.
The three were among 11 people arrested that day amid attempts to shut down oil pipelines in several states in solidarity with those protesting the four-state Dakota Access pipeline project in North Dakota.
In an order signed Friday, the Skagit County Prosecutor’s Office said it needs more time to investigate and could re-file the charges.