Manteno residents plan to amend lawsuit against China electric-vehicle
battery maker
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[February 06, 2024]
By Catrina Petersen | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – The non-profit Concerned Citizens of Manteno is
suing Gotion, a Chinese electric vehicle battery maker, and the Village
of Manteno. The plaintiffs will be in court later this month to amend
their complaint.
In September, Gotion joined state and local officials in Kankakee County
to announce the company’s plans to bring a $2 billion electric vehicle
battery gigafactory to Manteno. The announcement said the company will
create 2,600 jobs.
Part of that announcement included $536 million in tax credits from the
state of Illinois.
Attorney Robby Dube said they are amending their complaint against the
project because Gotion switched out the old LLC that owned the property
to a new LLC.
"Three days before we filed our complaint the LLC [Transform Manteno IL
LLC] had deeded it to a different LLC [South Spruce LLC]. After we
filed, we were contacted by the old LLC’s lawyers and they told us who
the new property owners were,” said Dube.
Dube’s suspicion is that Transform Manteno IL LLC held the property as a
holding company.
"Gotion doesn’t want to own that property directly. They want to have an
intermediary LLC who can own it. They traded this LLC so Gotion can rent
the property from this LLC that doesn’t seem to have any other assets or
resources," said Dube.
South Spruce LLC got the two parcels of property for $10 each, according
to the deed.
The Center Square reached out to an attorney with Transform Manteno IL
LLC to inquire about the sale price of the land and their correspondence
with Dube. They did not immediately respond for comment.
“I would have loved to have my house deeded to me for $10,” said Dube.
Dube said Gotion may be avoiding ownership of the property because of
tax reasons, liability reasons or even concerns about potential
legislation banning ownership of domestic businesses by foreign
adversaries.
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Protesters in Manteno, Illinois, during a demonstration against tax
credits for Gotion, an electric vehicle battery manufacturer
BlueRoomStream
“Gotion’s whole argument is, ‘Well we are an American company because
they are incorporated in America.’ But their parent company is
incorporated in China and we believe we have the documents to show it is
a [Chinese Communist Party-controlled] entity. But if the legislation is
broad enough, and I think it needs to be in order to protect American
interests, they could get snagged in that legislation,” said Dube.
Dube said the Concerned Citizens of Manteno believe Gotion’s ties to its
parent company represents a possible threat to the American people, an
avenue the attorneys are looking to explore in the lawsuit.
Amanda Piker is the originator of the “No Gotion In Illinois” Facebook
page that has led a movement to prevent the planned Gotion plant from
opening in Manteno. She said a seismograph is located on the west edge
of village limits that collects data regarding “quarry blasts.” The
plaintiffs plan to amend their complaint to include that information.
"There’s clay balls, which is the wording they [the Manteno Police] use
in the report, left the quarry property and entered the roof of the
Kmart building and caused a significant amount of damage," said Piker.
Piker said the location of the planned Gotion plant is right where these
“clay balls” destroyed the roof of the retailer.
"If there was debris that left the quarry due to a blast and entered the
roof … if there were lithium batteries under that roof, how volatile is
that?" she said.
Piker said there is a 2019 Manteno police report with pictures that show
the quarry blasts caused significant damage and that additional
information is being entered into the complaint.
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