Current:Home > ScamsJudge Scales Back Climate Scientist’s Case Against Bloggers -AssetPath
Judge Scales Back Climate Scientist’s Case Against Bloggers
View
Date:2025-04-12 06:53:32
A Washington, D.C. judge has ruled that the conservative think tank the Competitive Enterprise Institute cannot be held responsible for an outside blogger’s 2012 online attack on a prominent climate scientist.
At the same time, the judge decided that a jury should decide whether the blogger, Rand Simberg, should be held liable for his post, which excoriated Pennsylvania State University climatologist Michael Mann and suggested that he had engaged in fraud. Mark Steyn, an outside blogger for the National Review, another conservative publication, also should face a trial over his own post, two days after Simberg’s, Superior Court Judge Alfred Irving Jr. ruled.
Steyn had quoted extensively from Simberg’s original broadside, comparing the climate scientist to Jerry Sandusky, the disgraced Penn State assistant football coach in the wake of Sandusky’s conviction for child sexual abuse, writing that Mann “molested and tortured data in the service of politicized science.” After demanding a retraction and an apology that were not forthcoming, Mann sued for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The decisions last Thursday by Irving set the stage for a possible courtroom showdown on Mann’s seminal work, the iconic “hockey stick” graph of global temperature rise. But only the bloggers—not their publications—would face legal jeopardy. In March, Superior Court Judge Jennifer Anderson granted National Review’s motion to be dismissed from Mann’s case on essentially the same grounds Irving cited in granting a summary judgement for the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), that the authors were not employees of CEI or the National Review. Both Irving and Anderson are appointees of President George W. Bush.
Mann’s attorney, John Williams of Washington, D.C., said that the climate scientist is determined to pursue the nine-year-old case: “We’re pleased with the decision with respect to Steyn and Simberg, and look forward to trial.” Mann’s legal team already has filed a motion for the court to reconsider its decision dismissing the case against National Review, and is considering whether to appeal the CEI ruling.
CEI expressed confidence that Mann would not prevail. “The ruling is a testament to a robust public sphere where ideas are contested through evidence, speech, and debate,” said CEI President Kent Lassman in a statement posted online. “We expect that the remaining defendants will be vindicated in time.”
The Staying Power of Doubts
Mann’s “hockey stick” graph uses tree rings, boreholes, glacier retreat and other proxies to show the global temperature record of the past 2,000 years, with a dramatic rise during the last half of the 20th century, giving the figure the look of a hockey stick laying on its side.
The judge declined a novel bid by Mann for a ruling on the validity of his science, refusing the scientist’s request that the bloggers be barred from using the defense that their critique of his science was “substantially true.” The ruling opens the door for them to bring into the trial contrarian science, as well as email exchanges between Mann and other climate scientists that were hacked from a university server in England and posted on the internet in 2009 in an incident that became known as “Climategate.”
“There remain a great number of genuine disputes of material fact as to the methods that Plaintiff used to develop his hockey stick graph, the conclusions to be drawn from the Climategate emails, and Plaintiff’s actions while under investigation,” wrote Irving. “A reasonable jury could find, from this evidence, in favor of either Plaintiff or the CEI Defendants.”
In one sense, Irving’s ruling demonstrates the staying power of the doubts raised by foes of climate action. Critiques leveled soon after Mann published his 23-year-old “hockey stick” research persist, even though 19 of the warmest years on record have occurred since then, and the scientific consensus on anthropogenic global warming has grown substantially stronger.
The ruling also speaks to the high burden of proof for public figures like Mann in defamation cases under First Amendment law. Such a plaintiff must show that the defendants acted with “actual malice,” which means either knowing what was published was false or exhibiting reckless disregard for the truth, a standard established by the Supreme Court in rulings on libel suits against the news media, starting with New York Times v. Sullivan in 1964.
Irving spent much of his 34-page opinion sifting through which, if any, CEI officials bore responsibility for Simberg’s posting and whether there was any evidence they had personal bias against Mann. He concluded that the sole CEI employee responsible for the posting of Simberg’s blog was a policy fellow just three years out of college, who “ran his eyes” over the article, checking for formatting errors and typos, paying no attention to the assertions the blog made. Irving said he saw no evidence that the fellow had great knowledge of the subject matter or an animus towards Mann.
The judge added, however, that it was clear that “many writers and employees at CEI held a deep bias” against Mann and sought to tarnish his work, but they were not responsible for the Simberg blog.
Irving seemed to put equal weight on conspiracy theories that surrounded Climategate and the eight investigations by U.S. and U.K. government agencies and institutions concluded that there had been no wrongdoing by Mann or the other scientists. In 2016, a Washington, D.C. Court of Appeals looked at this same evidence, and concluded that Mann’s lawsuit had a likelihood of success on the merits.
Irving said his conclusion would have been different if CEI employees with demonstrated enmity toward Mann had any hand in publishing the Simberg blog, which the judge concluded clearly sought to convey that Mann “had engaged in fraud or the like.”
“It is likely that, had the CEI employees with deep bias against Plaintiff had a hand in publishing the Simberg Article, the Court of Appeals’ reasoning would stand today, as the investigatory reports exonerating Plaintiff are extensive, numerous, and reliable,” wrote Irving.
The judge’s ruling, if it stands and the case proceeds to trial, means that the bloggers will have to defend the accusation that they recklessly ignored those reports. But for now, the publishers who gave the bloggers a platform have succeeded in their bid to avoid liability, by virtue of the arm’s length relationship they maintained with the authors who wrote under their banner.
veryGood! (27)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- The next generation of Buffetts is poised to become one of the biggest forces in philanthropy
- Apple is launching new AI features. What do they mean for your privacy?
- Control of the Murdoch media empire could be at stake in a closed-door hearing in Nevada
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Votes for Cornel West and Claudia De la Cruz will count in Georgia for now
- All the songs Charli XCX and Troye Sivan sing on the Sweat tour: Setlist
- Kate Spade's Top 100 Under $100: $259 Bag for Just $49 Today Only, Plus Extra 20% Off Select Styles
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- After mass shooting, bill would require Army to use state crisis laws to remove weapons
Ranking
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- An 8-year-old Ohio girl drove an SUV on a solo Target run
- You need to start paying your student debt. No, really.
- Caitlin Clark breaks WNBA rookie scoring record, Fever star now at 761 points
- Small twin
- Florida sheriff's deputy airlifted after rollover crash with alleged drunk driver
- Wisconsin’s voter-approved cash bail measures will stand under judge’s ruling
- Keep Up with Good American’s Friends & Family Sale—Save 30% off Khloé Kardashian’s Jeans, Tops & More
Recommendation
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Powerball winning numbers for September 14: Jackpot climbs to $152 million
Firefighters make progress in battling Southern California wildfires amid cooler weather
Judge rules Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s name will stay on Wisconsin ballot
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Colleges in Springfield, Ohio, move to online instruction after threats targeting Haitians
Why do election experts oppose hand-counting ballots?
Ohio town cancels cultural festival after furor over Haitians