buzzfeed | Imagine a private, global super court that empowers corporations to bend countries to their will.
Say
a nation tries to prosecute a corrupt CEO or ban dangerous pollution.
Imagine that a company could turn to this super court and sue the whole
country for daring to interfere with its profits, demanding hundreds of
millions or even billions of dollars as retribution.
Imagine that
this court is so powerful that nations often must heed its rulings as if
they came from their own supreme courts, with no meaningful way to
appeal. That it operates unconstrained by precedent or any significant
public oversight, often keeping its proceedings and sometimes even its
decisions secret. That the people who decide its cases are largely elite
Western corporate attorneys who have a vested interest in expanding the
court’s authority because they profit from it directly, arguing cases
one day and then sitting in judgment another. That some of them
half-jokingly refer to themselves as “The Club” or “The Mafia.”
And
imagine that the penalties this court has imposed have been so crushing
— and its decisions so unpredictable — that some nations dare not risk a
trial, responding to the mere threat of a lawsuit by offering vast
concessions, such as rolling back their own laws or even wiping away the
punishments of convicted criminals.
This system is already in
place, operating behind closed doors in office buildings and conference
rooms in cities around the world. Known as investor-state dispute
settlement, or ISDS, it is written into a vast network of treaties that
govern international trade and investment, including NAFTA and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, which Congress must soon decide whether to
ratify.
These trade pacts have become a flashpoint in the US
presidential campaign. But an 18-month BuzzFeed News investigation,
spanning three continents and involving more than 200 interviews and
tens of thousands of documents, many of them previously confidential,
has exposed an obscure but immensely consequential feature of these
trade treaties, the secret operations of these tribunals, and the ways
that business has co-opted them to bring sovereign nations to heel.
The
BuzzFeed News investigation explores four different aspects of ISDS. In
coming days, it will show how the mere threat of an ISDS case can
intimidate a nation into gutting its own laws, how some financial firms
have transformed what was intended to be a system of justice into an
engine of profit, and how America is surprisingly vulnerable to suits
from foreign companies.
The series starts today with perhaps the
least known and most jarring revelation: Companies and executives
accused or even convicted of crimes have escaped punishment by turning
to this special forum.
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