Helena Chemical Company wins case against community activist

Uribe ordered to pay $75k in punitive damages
By Laura Paskus

New Mexico Independent
Apr. 09, 2010

Wednesday night, a jury found a southern New Mexico activist guilty of defamation and harassment against a chemical company.

Now, Arturo Uribe, a 40-year old social worker, owes the Tennessee-based Helena Chemical Company $2 in damages and $75,000 in punitive damages.

"The most important thing is we wanted the lies to stop--the amount of money was not something that was important to Helena--and we wanted to set the record straight in a forum where proof and evidence matter," Robert Soza, Jr., Helena's attorney told The Independent. "Though, I think that the money does send a message to Mr. Uribe and others who think that defamation is way of getting their point across:  It's not going to be permissible. It's unlawful."

In December 2008, Helena Chemical Company sued Uribe in New Mexico's Third Judicial District Court in Las Cruces, saying he had repeatedly defamed Helena in public statements. According to the company, Uribe had harassed employees at the Mesquite branch and defamed the company via six individual slides within various presentations at community meetings, and when he told a television reporter: "We're gonna allow companies and industry to contaminate us and knowingly do it and do nothing about it?  I'm insulted; I'm hurt more than anything."

The lawsuit was filed to silence an outspoken activist, Uribe’s attorney says

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