The two activists were making their stand for the environment, latching themselves together inside one of the large pipes during construction of the Line 3 oil pipeline in Minnesota.
Prosecutors say what they were doing that day in July 2021 was criminal, even beyond what's typically charged after civil disobedience. St. Olaf College student Madeline Bayzaee and Amory Lei Zhou-Kourvo of Michigan were both charged with one count of felony aiding attempted suicide — each other's. They also face charges of felony obstruction of legal process and gross misdemeanor trespass on critical public service facilities.
Canadian tar sands oil has been flowing for nearly a year now through Enbridge Energy's pipeline and the law enforcement teams in riot gear are long gone. The charges against Bayzaee and Zhou-Kourvo are among the approximately 200 criminal cases still open from the long series of Line 3 protests, one of the largest environmental actions in Minnesota history.
Nearly 800 of several thousand demonstrators were charged with crimes, most of them stemming from protests during last year's construction. The prosecutions jammed county courthouses in northern Minnesota.
About a fifth of the cases remain open, according to Marla Marcum, director of the nonprofit Climate Disobedience Center. Marcum has been tracking the pipeline litigation jointly with the Pipeline Legal Action Network in Minnesota.
Calgary-based Enbridge Energy argued that the old Line 3 needed to be replaced because it was crumbling. Opponents have fought it as a threat to land and waters subject to Ojibwe treaty rights, and a driver of climate change.
"We're still seeing counties that are struggling to even schedule hearings let alone resolve cases," said Claire Glenn, a lawyer with the Line 3 Legal Defense Project, backed by the Civil Liberties Defense Center and the Water Protector Legal Collective.
The arrests occurred as states across the country have further criminalized protests against fossil fuel and oil lines. Seventeen states have passed laws in recent years further restricting protests of oil and gas pipeline projects by ramping up penalties, said Elly Page, who manages the U.S. Protest Law Tracker at the Washington, D.C.-based International Center for Not-For-Profit Law.