As Chris Horner
blogged yesterday, the Environmental Law Center at American Tradition
Institute (where I am executive director) has
requested under the state’s Freedom of Information Act that the
University of Virginia turn over documents and emails related to
public grants sought by “hockey
stick” scientist Michael Mann, who moved over to Penn State
University a few years ago. UVA has been resisting (spending about
$500,000 on outside lawyers for the effort) a similar, previous
request by Attorney General Kenneth Cuccinelli, who is
investigating Mann under the Fraud Against Taxpayers Act.
One of the Washington Post’s Virginia Politics bloggers
posted a report about our FOIA yesterday, and obtained a
response from Mann:
[ATI]’s senior director of litigation, Christopher Horner, has
written two books on why he believes global warming is a hoax and
gives frequently speeches on the subject. He is also a senior
fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
In a statement, Mann noted that the think tank receives funding
from ExxonMobile (sic) and other corporate groups.
“Industry-funded lobbyists like Horner have been using precisely
the same tactics for decades to intimidate scientists whose
scientific findings proved inconvenient to the vested interests
they represent such as the tobacco, pharmaceutical, and chemical
industries,” he said.
“There is substantial case law defending scientists and
academics against such thinly-veiled attempts to suppress
scientific inquiry by harassing individual scientists. I suspect
that U.Va, as other great universities have in the past, will
respect that tradition and stand up against these transparent
attempts not just to bully me, but to thwart the progress of
science,” Mann said.
You might remember we
learned after Climategate that Mann
showed himself to be a believer in the preservation of public
institution emails:
Penn State global warming scientist Michael E. Mann regrets he
did not instantly object when a fellow climatologist asked him in
2008 to delete e-mails subject to Freedom of Information
requests.
“I wish in retrospect I had told him, ‘Hey, you shouldn’t even
be thinking about this,’” Mann told The Morning Call in
his first interview since the university last month launched an
investigation into his conduct. “I didn’t think it was an
appropriate request.”
And recall that when there was a post-Climategate investigation
of Mann by Penn State, he
said:
“I would be disappointed if the university wasn’t doing all [it]
can to get as much information as possible” about the controversy,
Mann tells the Daily Collegian.
So what has changed for Mr. Transparency? We are now asking for
different emails, from when he devised the hockey stick, which
makes us all-the-more curious about what’s in them.