Last night the Competitive Enterprise Institute, through its
outside counsel Gibson Dunn, filed its
brief arguing against NASA’s rather scattershot and
contradictory effort to dismiss our lawsuit requesting certain
documents under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)(press release
available
here).
Our suit, CEI vs. NASA (U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia), followed on the heels of ClimateGate, and a December
2009
Notice of Intent to Sue if NASA did not turn over certain
records withheld since CEI sought them in August 2007 and January
2008 requests. That Notice was eleven months ago and, despite NASA
offering some documents and admitting — temporarily — that
certain others relating to the advocacy site used by NASA
scientists, RealClimate.org were “agency records”, NASA then ceased
its brief steps to comply with the transparency statute FOIA.
Despite NASA stonewalling
CEI has already learned, for example, that NASA does
not, contrary to widespread media and
pressure group claims, have an independent temperature data
set. Instead, as NASA told USA Today in an email, despite
its serial, breathless press releases trumpeting some new
temperature high, it actually is just a modeling office, which also
(for unknown reasons, possibly extra attention and importance, or
mere advocacy) cobbles together some US data from the
National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) with that of the Climatic
Research Unit’s temperature history. You may recall how CRU
withdrew its claim to a temperature history data set after
ClimateGate led to an admission it actually lost its data.
Specifically, CEI’s FOIA suit seeks documents and emails
relating to NASA’s temperature record, which NASA was forced to
correct in response to criticism from a leading climate watchdog,
Steve McIntyre. Those corrections destroyed NASA’s stance
that U.S. temperatures have been steadily rising in recent years
and returned 1934, not 1998, to being the warmest year on
record. NASA refuses to give CEI the computer file they used
to make these changes, whose title includes “Steve” and “alternate
cleaning.”
CEI also seeks emails from NASA scientists using Real
Climate.org on official time using official resources, often to
advance what NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (its
climate activist office) has decided is appropriate public
advocacy.
In addition to uncovering the “Steve”/”cleaning” file, a few of
the more interesting pieces of evidence expounded upon in CEI’s
brief include:
* After CEI filed the FOIA seeking RealClimate emails,
administrators at Real Climate deleted all timestamps on all of
their postings, making it impossible to show they were made during
work hours. But we kept color copies of the original
posts.
* NASA admits that it discovered 3,500 emails on Dr. Schmidt’s
NASA computer related to his work on RealClimate but won’t produce
them.
* NASA did not ask Dr. Schmidt to look for responsive records
until 22 months after we sent them the FOIA and threatened to
sue. It is highly likely relevant emails were destroyed
during this period.
* NASA’s delay in responding to CEI’s FOIA requests was
extraordinary, far outside its normal or even most egregious
examples of delay or non-compliance. For instance:
o NASA took more than 900 days to produce documents
pursuant to CEI’s two 2007 requests. The agency took more
than 700 days to produce records in response to CEI’s 2008
request. NASA does not explain these delays. FOIA
requires that an agency produce responsive records within 20
days. Although agencies rarely meet that deadline, even for
“complex” FOIA requests, NASA’s average processing time is under
100 days. In 2008, NASA processed complex requests in 82 days,
on average. In 2009, it processed such requests in 89 days, on
average.
o Prompted by congressional inquiries, the NASA
Inspector General investigated the delay associated with these FOIA
Requests. The Inspector General determined that the delays
were caused by “inadequate direction” as to what documents were
requested; “inadequate communication between NASA personnel; and
“inadequate staffing” at the Goddard FOIA office. In reality,
one of the primary reasons for the delay was that NASA did not
inform GISS officials about one of the requests and inexplicably
held documents for years instead of producing them on a rolling
basis, as requested.
We should argue this within the month. CEI requests the court
allow it to proceed to the discovery stage next, examining records
and deposing relevant witnesses.
PattyMor| 11.4.10 @ 2:21PM
Mybe NASA was to busy going around the world trying to make the Muslims feel better about themselves, than trying to answer the FOIA request.
Eric Cartman| 11.4.10 @ 2:58PM
Yeah! What the??? You mean to tell me NASA has been running around wasting my money on space? SPACE?! No one even lives there! Get back to the Muslim thing where Obama put ya! Jeez, you would think rocket scientists would know better.
Rocketman| 11.4.10 @ 4:07PM
Too bad NASA climate scientists can't be more like SEC civil servants and limit their web browsing to porno sites . . .
Gallopingcamel| 11.4.10 @ 4:57PM
I really hope you get a federal judgment against NASA/GISS as that will freeze their funding from US government research grants.
R.S.Brown| 11.4.10 @ 7:33PM
The suit should be modifed to include e-mails that authorized or discussed authorizing
the withholding of information covered by the
FOI requests.
socold| 11.7.10 @ 9:13PM
The article contains a number of inaccuracies about the science. In fact almost every claim about the science made by the article is false.
I couldn't care less about the blog-at-work and legal-speagle stuff. But given the poor accuracy of the science parts I do wonder about that too.
Lets begin. Contrary to what the article claims, NASA does have an "independent temperature data set". It's called GISTEMP. It doesn't use any data from CRU as is falsely claimed in this article.
The CRU did not "withdraw its claim to a temperature history data set". That's just nuts. CRU has a temperature history data set called HadCRUT3. Google for it if you don't believe me. If the CEI is right it shouldn't exist.
The article claims: "Those corrections destroyed NASA's stance that U.S. temperatures have been steadily rising in recent years and returned 1934, not 1998, to being the warmest year on record"
The corrections were so slight that it couldn't conceivably have an impact on any "stance". US temperatures didn't switch from warming in recent years as a result of the corrections. 1934 was *alread* the warmest year in GISTEMP before the corrections were made, by a hair margin. So even that didn't change.
It's pretty clear to me that either the CEI don't have a clue what they are talking about, or they are engaged in a propaganda operation against GISTEMP.
They are a THINKTANK though aren't they. Should be obvious what game they are playing.