It Was The Worst of The Times

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I did jail time in the Sixties for a peaceful sit-in against the Vietnam War. So (as with many things) my understanding of the issues involved in what may be termed “civil disobedience” is eminently practical as well as theoretical. I was very disturbed by a recent column in the New York Times by Kirk Johnson entitled “Do Motives Matter?” It discussed the DeChristopher case. I reproduce it in its entirety and discuss it below.

Do Motives Matter? The DeChristopher Verdict

Tim DeChristopher hugged supporters as he left a courthouse in Salt Lake City after his conviction. Associated Press Photo

The American legal system tends to pay obsessive attention to a person’s motives and mental state. A hate crime, for example, only becomes a hate crime at all with motive. Premeditated offenses often get harsher treatment than impulsive acts of rage or passion. The capacity to understand right and wrong is a fundamental threshold of competency in a courtroom.

OK, let’s stop right there. Part of that is simply untrue. In addition, he is conflating motive, premeditation, mental competence, and intent.

The American legal system pays almost no attention to motive. The only crime I can think of in which a person’s motives make a difference is a “hate crime”. This is a recent addition to the law. But if you murder someone, or steal their wallet, your motive is meaningless. You might have stolen to impress your girlfriend. You might need the money to feed your kids. Doesn’t matter, the jury will never hear about your motive. The only question the jury ever considers is “did you do it”, not “why did you do it”.

While premeditation and mental competence and intent are certainly issues to which the law pays “obsessive attention”, they have nothing to do with motive. All they are doing in his essay is confusing the issue. In general the person’s motive for doing something whether a person had noble reasons for committing a crime is legally immaterial to the jury. If motive enters into the record at all, it is only and solely in the sentencing phase, after the person has been found guilty and the jury sent home. Thus the judge acted correctly in doing what Kirk Johnson describes in mildly accusatory accusatory undertones as:

But in the federal trial of Tim DeChristopher, who was convicted on Thursday in Salt Lake City on two felony charges for trying to derail an auction oil and gas leases in southern Utah in late 2008, discussion of motive – at least so far as the jury got to hear – was almost entirely stripped away.

Judge Dee Benson told the lawyers that the case would not be about why Mr. DeChristopher did what he did, but only whether he did it. Federal energy policies and concern about climate change, which were in fact the core drivers of Mr. DeChristopher’s actions, as he has said in many interviews, would not be put on trial, Judge Benson ruled.

And he properly ruled so. DeChristopher’s motives are not relevant to the jury’s deliberations.

Does it matter? In covering the case for The New York Times, I found myself pondering a pretty deep question: In assessing offenses driven by environmental concerns, is an understanding of the “why” crucial to the truth? Or is it a huge distraction because of the politics and complexity and controversy that swirl around the subject?

Is his motive “crucial to the truth” or a “huge distraction”? I would say neither. I would say that an understanding of his motive in the context of what is called “noble cause corruption” is useful in understanding the current sorry state of climate science. In either case his motive does not matter to the law, nor should it.

Would the jury have assessed things differently if the defendant’s deeper psychological portrait had emerged – specifically his belief that risks to the planet and the future are so dire and urgent that rules must be broken?

Or is the “rule of law,” as an assistant United States attorney, John W. Huber, put in it his closing argument, crucial to civil society — the linchpin of protecting everything we have, including and perhaps especially the environment?

I have no sympathy with this argument at all. Why on earth should I care about Mr. DeChristopher’s “deeper psychological portrait”? I don’t generally turn over rocks if I fear that there are strange things under them … I’m not interested in what lies under Mr. DeChristopher’s actions. I have enough problems with the creatures that live under my own skullcap, I have no interest in the unknown denizens of Mr. DeChristopher’s cranium.

Certainly, Mr. DeChristopher, a 29-year-old economics graduate, is no eco-terrorist. This was not an Earth Liberation Front firebombing; the closest he got to violence was raising his bidding paddle at the auction to buy land leases with money he didn’t have. But there was also little doubt, as he had also conceded in interviews, that he broke the law by signing federal forms while posing as a legitimate energy buyer, and then by bidding successfully for upward of $1.8 million in leases from the federal Bureau of Land Management.

Again, I’m not clear what the relevance of this is. He is not an eco-terrorist. He is also not a kidnapper or a child molester … so what? What does that have to do with his case? Is he saying we should have sympathy for him because he is a “white collar criminal”? Because I generally have less sympathy for that breed of crook, not more. I’ll take an honest bank robber over a bank accountant who steals the same amount of money, any time.

In a statement after the verdict, the United States attorney for Utah, Carlie Christensen, addressed part of this debate, one that will no doubt continue in Mr. DeChristopher’s probable appeal. “Whether the B.L.M. was correct in its decision to offer these parcels for oil and gas lease sales was not the question which this jury was asked to resolve,” Ms. Christensen said.

Nor should they be asked to resolve it. It is not a question for the jury.

Look, I have no problem with Mr. DeChristopher’s actions. As I mentioned, I did the same myself, and I did time for it. As we said then, if you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime. However, I never heard the New York Times opining that the judge should have considered my motives in deciding my guilt or innocence. It didn’t matter. I was guilty. As is DeChristopher.

What I have a problem with is when this kind of thinking slops over into the scientific arena. You see, if a scientist thinks it is ethical to break the laws of civil society in the name of saving the planet, I have absolutely no confidence that the same man will not break the laws of honest, transparent, ethical science in the name of saving the planet. As we have seen, sadly, this more than a thoretical threat.

When this occurs in science, it is called “noble cause corruption”. It occurs when a scientist thinks that their cause (saving the world from Thermageddon) is so important and so noble that it transcends plebeian concerns. Their cause is much more critical and vital and important than, you know, mundane boring things like transparency, and scientific integrity, and archiving data that may not agree with your hypothesis, and revealing adverse results. For scientists like that, those are petty scientific concerns, things that only apply to people who are not engaged on a mission from Gaia.

This noble cause corruption, amply personified by Michael Mann, Phil Jones, Gene Wahl, Caspar Amman, Gavin Schmidt, James Hansen, Stephen Schneider, Lonnie Thompson, and far too many other leading lights of AGW orthodoxy, has been the root cause of the mistrust of the public in climate science.

And reasonably so. When the public sees top-notch, world-renowned climate scientists lying and cheating and breaking the rules and stuffing the peer-review panels and subverting the IPCC, what do you think will happen to the reputation of the field?

Judith Curry and others keep presenting this as a communications problem. It is not. The AGW folks think the problem is that they’re not getting the word out. So they’ve formed some kind of Guerrilla AGW Killer Rapid Response Ninja Suicide Death Commando Team to answer questions, at least I think that’s the name … guys, lack of AGW scientific opinion is not a problem as far as I can see, quite the opposite. We’ve heard your scientific claims of upcoming catastrophe proclaimed at full volume over and over. And over. And over. The problem is not that your message is not getting across. We hear it. It’s crystal clear, no problem with either the medium or the message. RST is five by five, as the ham radio operators have it.

But most folks simply don’t believe anything you say. You’ve lied to everyone before, you conned us in the past, people are determined it won’t happen again.

The problem is that a large number of the top names in the field have been shown to be, well, liars, cheats, and thieves. They were working hard, in secret, using deplorable, unethical, and likely illegal tactics to advance their noble cause and to protect their secrets and their data and methods.

Now, if that were all, it would be bad. But it is worse than that. If, when all that was revealed, the rest of the honest, decent climate scientists had stood up and pointed and said “For Shame!”, the breach in trust could have been repaired. If the miscreants were identified and disowned by the majority of climate scientists, there would have been problems, but not huge problems.

But that’s not what happened. When the Climategate rock was rolled over, and the UEA nest of scorpions was revealed and they started running from the sunlight, with few and notable exceptions the good, decent, honest climate scientists suddenly found something else really fascinating to talk about. About how it was just boys being boys. About how it was just scientists talking trash about each other in private. About how Climategate meant nothing. About how the use of “hacked” emails was unethical. The overwhelming majority of the good honest decent AGW supporters talked volubly about everything under the sun … everything except the putrid scientific rot Climategate revealed within the top ranks. Nor did they say a peep about a succession of ludicrous whitewash investigations apparently led by Inspector Clouseau of “Pink Panther” fame … silence and closing the ranks was the order of the day.

So as a result much of the general public in the US at least believes that all climate scientists are crooks. They’re not. They’re mostly just reasonable, curious scientists who tragically were unwilling to speak up for scientific honesty and integrity when history called on them to do so. And as the saying goes, for scorpions to succeed, all that is necessary is for good climate scientists to do nothing.

After all of that, anyone who thinks that what we have is a communications problem, or that it can be solved by better scientific explanations, or that it can be fixed by reframing the discussion, is seriously deluding themselves. Someday, good science will eventually win out. Not communication. Not reframing. Good science.

But until then, I can assure you that if a climate scientist says it’s raining outside, any reasonable person will surreptitiously glance out the window …

w.

[Update] There is an outstanding comment below:

Turn this around when thinking about the “profit motive” such that the “profit motive” were a valid legal defense. A really scary thought, that one is.

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R. Gates
March 12, 2011 11:14 am

Smokey says (to R. Gates):
March 12, 2011 at 10:34 am
“Instead you want to impoverish the U.S., based on zero evidence that CO2 causes damage to the planet.”
__
Smokey, you seem to indicate that I’ve taken a stand or been a proponent of some environmental law or regulation that would, as you put it, “impoverish the U.S.”. I challenge you to give one example or show one time that I’ve taken a stand on any such environmental law or regulation. If you can’t give such an example (which I know you can’t), you are simply proving why you’re called Smokey…as in Blowing Smoke.
In regards to the issue of the impoverishment of the U.S., our current absurd spending ways will do that. We’ve got bloated entitlement programs, bloated Military Spending with its bloated international empire that are keeping us spending far more than we can afford. Our dollar is a joke, and soon, very soon, the world will realize the Emperor has no clothes and take action to do something about it, the dollar will tumble from the seat of being the world’s currency, and the citizens of the U.S. will suffer the fate of all collapsing empires by seeing a lower standing of living.

Slabadang
March 12, 2011 11:17 am

Willis!
Just for you.This is a lecture by Yuri Bezmenov a defector from KGB before the wall came down.Its entertaining and frightening at the same time.The lecture is about the KGB tactics of subversion by demoralisation to create destabilisation and chaos.
Its a military thing with spyes and blowing up things? No not at all its about how to confuse us of whats right wrong normal or not.Its not about inflicting kommunism.
Its a lecture on how societies cultures collaps and why.
I love articles maby Im wrong but I think this lecture will be one of your favorites.For me its trange how Bezmenow has been forgotten.His lecture is timeless but for me it gave structure to why our western civilization is so out of the rails.
Enjoy! 🙂
Lecture:

Intervju personal backround and life story

R. Gates
March 12, 2011 11:18 am

rbateman says:
March 12, 2011 at 10:47 am
“AGW is no more than a suspicion, being indistinguishable from natural causes.”
___
If this is what you truly believe, then there is no hope at all for an you to get an accurate education on the issue. You are too deeply rooted in the skeptics worldview.

bucko36
March 12, 2011 11:26 am

Willis, once again an excellent article!!!!

J. Felton
March 12, 2011 11:28 am

Excellent post Willis.
We had a similar case here in Canada. An eco-terrorist named Tre Arrow was captured and tried for several crimes, including arson which resulted in serious injuries to several firefighters involved. His defense involved claiming that he was protecting the environment.
The problem with these people thinking they are taking the moral high ground is that, unfortunately, their morals are about as skewed as can be. They believe they are looking at ” the big picture” and, as such, if there is damage or pain inflicted along the way, it is acceptable, because it is trivial in relation to the pursuit of the end goal.
This is exactly what the climate scientists are thinking. That lying, cheating and fraud are acceptable, and ” the ends justify the means.” They think they are saving the world, when in fact, they are bankrupting it.

March 12, 2011 11:31 am

“The American legal system pays almost no attention to motive. The only crime I can think of in which a person’s motives make a difference is a “hate crime”.”
You need to spend more time in a courtroom, Willis.

J. Felton
March 12, 2011 11:32 am

Mods
I think my post may have been filtered. The filters must not like me much, maybe it’s my new hairstyle 🙂
Thanks!
[Rescued & posted. ~dbs]

chemman
March 12, 2011 11:38 am

I take issue with only one thing if they have to resort to lies, hiding data and all sorts of nefarious plots to get their point across then they are not top notch scientists. They are more akin to Dr. Fiddlediddle’s traveling medicine show. Truly nothing more than over educated con artists.

Rhoda R
March 12, 2011 11:43 am

David Springer: “Noble” cause corruption ie. ‘ends justify the means’ is a dangerous path to follow. Remember that jerk that killed the abortion doctor? His motive was even more noble – to protect unborn infants from murder. Just about anything can be translated into a “Noble” cause. What value the law then? Or is it only causes the YOU believe in that are noble? They have a word for that type of thinking.

March 12, 2011 11:44 am

Gates, I can easily give examples, if I want to waste the time doing a search. The demonization of CO2 runs throughout your posts. For example, you commented that CO2 is the cause of Arctic ice decline. There is no evidence for such a conjecture, only True Belief.
From there your post goes far off topic, into military spending, entitlement programs, the dollar, etc.

March 12, 2011 11:44 am

The law is the law. If you break it, you get penalized. Good to see justice was done in this case.
For those of you who think motive matters, think about if the motive wasn’t consistent with your world-view – just as EFS_Junior does above. This is precisely why motive can never be considered – whether a motive is justified is purely a subjective judgement & the rule of law must be objective, not subjective.

T Stone
March 12, 2011 11:50 am

The proper role of government is to protect the inalienable rights of individuals (life, liberty, property and the pursuit of happiness). What objective laws should do is prohibit the use of force against individuals, either directly (violence for example) or indirectly (fraud). Objective laws are concerned with the “what”, not the “why”. The ends will never justify the means if laws are properly objective. This is what I believe the founding fathers meant when they referred to a government of laws and not men.
What Mr. DeChristopher did was use force (indirectly, through fraud) in protesting (and preventing) the lawful auctioning of those oil and gas leases. What he did was against the law, and he was properly punished for his crime, as that is exactly what it was.
As for his motive, personally I think he has demonstrated a great deal of irrationality, though it seems both he and Mr. Johnson are very good at rationalization.
Thank you for this post. By the way, I don’t care who tells me it’s raining outside, I always look for myself.

March 12, 2011 11:54 am

rbateman says:
“AGW is no more than a suspicion, being indistinguishable from natural causes.”
R Gates didn’t like that statement, but it is 100% accurate. There is no measurable, testable, empirical evidence for AGW. None. It may be true, but there is no evidence for it, only computer models. And we know that climate models can’t predict their way out of a wet paper bag.

tallbloke
March 12, 2011 11:57 am

Willis Eschenbach says:
March 12, 2011 at 10:52 am you don’t like the ruling, so you’d like folks to think that the only possible way for DeChristopher to actually change things was civil disobedience. Plus put in a dig at the Judge in the process, who seems to have ruled correctly throughout.

I frequently find petty officials to be narrow minded and lacking a sense of proportion. Judge Christensen seems to be one of them.

stupidboy
March 12, 2011 11:58 am

“You see, if a scientist thinks it is ethical to break the laws of civil society in the name of saving the planet, I have absolutely no confidence that the same man will not break the laws of honest, transparent, ethical science in the name of saving the planet. As we have seen, sadly, this more than a thoretical threat.”
Craig Mariconti writes about why people do not believe what they are being told to believe about AGW:
http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/publications/observer/2009/february-09/understanding-the-disconnect-on-global-warming.html
“The majority of Americans still do not believe global warming is something they need to personally worry about, even if they believe that global warming is occurring or will occur soon. This is where psychology comes in — psychology researchers are working to understand this disconnect and develop ways to counteract it.”
Understanding the Disconnect on Global Warming
by Craig Mariconti
So psychologists are working on ways to make us believe what reason tells us is either untrue or unproven.
“By the skillful and sustained use of propaganda, one can make a people see even heaven as hell or an extremely wretched life as paradise…Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it.”
The actions of the man who said these things led to the deaths of 60 million people.
This may be an extreme example, but his motives were, as every decent person would agree, irrelevant.
In 2008 Professor James Hanson gave evidence for the defence in a prosecution of Greenpeace activists who caused £35,000 worth of damage to Kingsnorth power station in Kent, UK. The Jury found the activists not-guilty on the basis that they had a “lawful excuse” because, according to Professor Hanson, the earth was in “imminent peril” due to CO2 from power stations such as Kingsnorth.
After the case one of the activists said: “The jury heard from the most distinguished climate scientist in the world. How could they ignore his warnings and reject his leading scientific arguments?”
We are supposed to accept Professor Hanson’s evidence simply because he is said to be ” the most distinguished climate scientist in the world” and whose “leading scientific arguments” provide a “lawful excuse” for criminal damage.
Fortunately at a later trial another jury rejected the “lawful excuse” defence. Hansen once again gave evidence in defence of environmental activists who had conspired to shut down a powerstation at Ratcliffe, UK. They were rightly found guilty.
Perhaps Dr Hansen should forget about self-righteous motives and give thought to the words of Superintendent Adrian Pearson, who led the investigation. He said, “these individuals were determined to commit offences that would result in them… damaging property and potentially endangering the lives of others…”

R. Gates
March 12, 2011 12:06 pm

Smokey says:
March 12, 2011 at 11:44 am
Gates, I can easily give examples, if I want to waste the time doing a search. The demonization of CO2 runs throughout your posts. For example, you commented that CO2 is the cause of Arctic ice decline. There is no evidence for such a conjecture, only True Belief.
From there your post goes far off topic, into military spending, entitlement programs, the dollar, etc.
___
Once more Smokey…you’ve proven worthy of the name.

rbateman
March 12, 2011 12:08 pm

R. Gates says:
March 12, 2011 at 11:18 am
There is no hope in AGW for me, nor for anyone I care for. It’s a death sentence for humanity, an open license to practice unnatural selection which will lead to genocide, and that’s why I give it no room to fester.
i.e. – I’m not tired of living.
I do have hope that the Alarmists will be thwarted in throwing out civilization to save the planet. These people leap from unproven cause to rash proposals in the blink of an eye.
If you have knowledge of AGW Science that is distinguishable from natural causes/cycles, please feel free to put your finger on it.

R. Gates
March 12, 2011 12:11 pm

In the real world, motive is important for deciding the actual charges and for sentencing purposes, but not for findings of guilt. Someone, based on motive, for example might be charged with 1st Degree or 2nd Degree murder, or even Manslaughter, based on their motives and circumstances. Once tried and convicted, once more, their motives come strongly into play, and even expressions of remorse, can sway the Judge.

Fred from Canuckistan
March 12, 2011 12:11 pm

Every mass murdering whack job dictator in history believed he had “Noble Cause” on his side.
That’s what makes them do what they do . . .

Steve Reynolds
March 12, 2011 12:17 pm

Willis: “I put each of those men in the list deliberately, with great care, and for good reason.”
I understand James Hansen has shown his willingness to break the law and made some very questionable scientific judgments, but is there any evidence of intentional scientific misconduct from him? He has made the GISS temperature and model code available.
Great post, BTW.

rbateman
March 12, 2011 12:26 pm

Smokey says:
March 12, 2011 at 11:54 am
Ah, Smokey, you have hit the nail on the head once again.
The computer models said there would be no rain today, only faint drizzle for NW. Ca.
So, I set about doing yardwork.
I was driven indoors by showers which turned to rain.
The computer models couldn’t keep me dry, but my manmade roof was up to the task.
Neither can computer models thousands of miles away warm my house, but the suspicion of AGW wants to take away my roof and my heater to save the planet.