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Climate change activist who disrupted oil pipeline found guilty of burglary

A handout by Nord Stream 2 claims to show the first pipes for the Nord Stream 2 pipeline being delivered by rail to the German logistics hub Mukran on the island of Rugen, Germany, in this undated photo provided to Reuters on March 23, 2017. Axel Schmidt/Courtesy of Nord Stream 2/Handout via REUTERSThomson Reuters

 A climate-change activist who disrupted the flow of millions of barrels of crude oil into the United States to protest global warming was found guilty of burglary in Washington state on Wednesday.

But a Skagit County Superior Court jury deadlocked on a second charge of sabotage against Kenneth Ward, said Jay O’Hara of the Climate Disobedience Center, a group that both men helped co-found.

Ward, 60, was ordered to return to court on June 23 for sentencing on the burglary count, which carries a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison and $ 20,000 in fines.

A first jury weighing the charges against Ward deadlocked on both counts in February.

Prosecutors were expected to decide in the coming weeks whether to put him on trial a third time on the sabotage charge. Prosecutors did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Ward has not disputed that he shut down a valve on Kinder Morgan Inc’s Trans Mountain Pipeline near Burlington, Washington, but maintains that his actions are necessary in the face of the government’s failure to address global warming.

Groups have also protested the nearly completed Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipeline.

He was arrested in October when he and other activists in four states cut padlocks and chains and entered remote flow stations to turn off valves to try to stop crude from moving through lines that carry as much as 15 percent of daily U.S. oil consumption.

Officials, pipeline companies and experts said the protesters could have caused environmental damage themselves by shutting down the lines.

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