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Al Gore’s daughter arrested during pipeline construction protest

BOSTON — Former Vice President Al Gore’s daughter was among 23 people arrested during a protest of a pipeline under construction, organizers say.

The arrests happened Wednesday at the site of Spectra Energy’s West Roxbury Lateral pipeline.

Karenna Gore was among demonstrators who tried to block construction activity on the site by lying in a trench dug for the pipeline and refusing to move until firefighters removed them, protest group Resist the Pipeline & Stop the West Roxbury Lateral said.

The group opposes the pipeline because of safety and climate change concerns.

Protesters facing trespassing and disturbing the peace charges were being arraigned Thursday.

Gore, who serves as director of the Center for Earth Ethics at the Union Theological Seminary in New York, and others facing resisting arrest charges will be arraigned Friday.

Representatives for Gore and her father, who won a Nobel Peace Prize for his climate change advocacy, didn’t immediately comment.

Houston-based Spectra Energy Corp. said it does not condone actions that take first responders away from their duties.

“It’s our obligation to safely and securely operate these facilities, and we can neither tolerate nor allow trespassing,” company spokesman Creighton Welch said in a statement.

The 5-mile pipeline is part of a larger, roughly $1 billion plan to expand natural gas capacity in New England.

Protesters said Buddhist, Jewish and Christian clergy members were among those charged with resisting arrest, as was noted climate change activist Tim DeChristopher, who a few years ago tried to stop drilling operations in Utah.

“We can no longer pretend like what Spectra is doing here in West Roxbury is anything other than digging a mass grave,” DeChristopher said in remarks at the protest.

DeChristopher tried to thwart drilling near Utah’s national parks by posing as a buyer during a 2008 government oil and gas lease auction. He served 21 months in federal prison, and his probation ended this April.

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