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.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

216 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
March 12, 2011 12:30 pm

Do aims justify means? Invariable that is what terrorists and revolutionaries claim. In the early twentieth century, before the wars and revolutions got started, Stalin pulled a bank heist in Tblisi and sent the proceeds from it to Lenin abroad. Lenin is said to have remarked that people like that were the ones he liked as part of his movement. We know what those kinds of people did when they got to power.

March 12, 2011 12:34 pm

johanna,
Technical quibble, aka-nit pick;
There is no such thing as UK Law.
In Gt. Britain, English Law operates in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
In Scotland, Scots Law operates.
They are VERY different.
Doesn’t detract from the main idea of the post from Willis, though.
See my post above.

March 12, 2011 12:44 pm

Willis Eschenbach,
The premise that proof of motive is not allowed in a court, nor presented to a jury, is simply wrong. As you are not an attorney (at least to my knowledge), you are not expected to know this.
Motive and intent are both types of evidence allowed in a criminal trial under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b), and in many states, for purposes other than showing the accused’s criminal disposition. The rule is known popularly as the MIMIC rule, for motive, intent, absence of mistake, identity, or common scheme or plan.
http://topics.law.cornell.edu/wex/mimic_rule

tallbloke
March 12, 2011 12:47 pm

Willis Eschenbach says:
March 12, 2011 at 12:00 pm
Somehow, to date you’ve neglected to mention exactly what it was that the judge did that marked him as “narrow minded and lacking a sense of proportion”. This makes it difficult to respond to your claims.

Well, OK Willis, I retract the comment until sentencing.

Andrew Parker
March 12, 2011 12:59 pm

One of DeChristopher’s friends, a bus driver for the Salt Lake City School District, decided to detour (hijack) a bus load of elementary school kids and take them to the protests outside the Federal Court to show them what real democracy was. He was fired. In an interview, he acknowledged that he knew that there were risks associated with his action but that he felt it was worth it. When asked if it was fair that he was fired, he said, “No.” What a whining, self-righteous poseur — like his friend. He is lucky that he was only fired.

Douglas
March 12, 2011 1:01 pm

In this case the perpetrators of the deed were acquitted. OK to break into a government security base if you believe that god is with you it seems!
So the PM of NZ considers changing the law?
http://www.google.co.nz/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=5&ved=0CDEQFjAE&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.3news.co.nz%2FKey-surprised-by-Waihopai-trial-law-change-possible-%2Ftabid%2F419%2FarticleID%2F147459%2FDefault.aspx&ei=Zth7TYu2FobkrAH4u6X3BQ&usg=AFQjCNGsmbdbXsg3hgpuMbFXasGmUbB0hA

Andrew Parker
March 12, 2011 1:04 pm

Sorry, I meant to type “knew” not “new”. Blasted spell checker.
[Had already been fixed.☺ ~dbs]

R. Gates
March 12, 2011 1:12 pm

rbateman says:
March 12, 2011 at 12:26 pm
“The computer models couldn’t keep me dry, but my man-made 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.”
____
I think this nicely displays the paranoia amongst some in the skeptical community that Big Brother wants to take the niceties and comforts of your modern life under the pretext of saving the planet. This gets to the heart of a deeper paranoia (as aptly expressed by Willis is demonizing and criminalizing certain scientists) that has infected much of the American psyche, and it crosses all paths in the political spectrum. Currently this paranoia only exists at the margins of the body politic, as (to my early post) the average person could really care less about global warming and is more concerned with the price of gas and what’s on sale this week at their favorite big-box stores. For a nice analysis of this paranoia and its larger context, I highly suggest:
http://www.timwise.org/2011/01/paranoia-as-prelude-conspiracism-and-the-cost-of-political-rage/
Bottom line rbateman– no one wants to take your roof or heater away. Take a deep breath my friend…

Ian L. McQueen
March 12, 2011 1:29 pm

In at least partial defence of the scientists who said nothing after the many revelations of fraud, etc., I suggest the following from the March 5 edition of The Economist. In an article on Pakistan, in a section dealing with the murder of the prominent politician Salman Taseer for opposing Pakistan’s harsh blasphemy law, no one from the University of Punjab would speak up publicly against fundamentalist control of the campus. “If sombody as big as Salman Taseer can be killed,” someone said, “how can we be safe?”

Steve Reynolds
March 12, 2011 1:32 pm

Willis: “Intentional scientific misconduct? I didn’t say anything about that.”
You said “This noble cause corruption, amply personified by…”
I interpreted that to mean their science had been corrupted. If you are just saying that they have shown themselves to be potentially susceptible to noble cause corruption, then I agree.

TimM
March 12, 2011 2:13 pm

Regarding the question of motive in deciding guilt, we had a case in NZ last year where three men successfully used a defense of “Claim of Right” after they had been arrested for vandalizing the Waihopai spy-base.
A spokesman for three said “They did it because Waihopai operates, in all but name, as an outpost of US intelligence on NZ soil…”
A jury found them not guilty after they had stated they believed their actions to be for the “greater good”.
http://www.3news.co.nz/Waihopai-trial-no-precedent-from-acquittal—law-expert/tabid/423/articleID/146924/Default.aspx
I doubt this case can be used as a precedent outside of NZ, but it was significant news here when it happened because of the success of this line of defense.

March 12, 2011 2:28 pm

Incredible thread. I just want to say that I was in Stovepipe Wells in Death Valley
one Christmas in the 1990’s and saw this big fat scorpion in the TV/rec room. I
told the person at the desk and she sent a ranger to collect it because it was
endangered! Wow, there were many of them in the barn in my childhood. I’ve
heard something about ‘blacklights’ makes them visible and they’ve been decimated.
But, back on track, this is one great thread.

johanna
March 12, 2011 2:44 pm

oldseadog says:
March 12, 2011 at 12:34 pm
johanna,
Technical quibble, aka-nit pick;
There is no such thing as UK Law.
In Gt. Britain, English Law operates in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
In Scotland, Scots Law operates.
They are VERY different.
———————————————————
Apologies for sloppy terminology, but I was aware of Scots Law and that it is different in many ways (and superior, IMO!) However, in terms of the use of self defence argument in court, there are no substantive differences (and with Australian law).
As far as I am aware, self defence only applies to crimes against the person, so is not relevant to eg a property crime.
My point was that motive is relevant in some circumstances in legal systems based on English (and Scottish) law. Willis’ blanket statement was incorrect, including in relation to US law, as Roger Sowell has confirmed.
Willis’ point, I infer, is that some activists are trying to stretch the concept in ways that are totally inappropriate. Amen to that. This is happening all over the Western world, and needs to be firmly resisted. The rule of law should not be subject to populist fluctuations. If people are unhappy with the law, change the law, or protest and cop the consequences.

Cynthia Lauren Thorpe
March 12, 2011 3:00 pm

Dear Willis – Thank you for your thoughts. I couldn’t agree with you more.
Again, tragically – we see that it’s not Science that failed us, just the mere mortals that study it – Thank God that He loves and forgives us with all our weaknesses considered.
Throughout the ages, it seems, it’s been ‘fear and silence’ that have ruled the day – with only brief glimpses of original thought based on Truth. ‘What ‘is’ Truth’ Someone long ago asked – and if ‘It’ CAN set an individual free – why is it not exemplified more often? (I’ve asked myself.)
My conclusion is this. By not incorporating the first part of that verse ‘…and the Truth will set you free.’ we get ‘mucked up’. For, anyone can ‘see’ that when Truth (or Observation, as it is in Science) is ‘up for grabs’ in someone’s mind – ‘Truth’ can be perverted. It can simply be made to be ‘anything’. Therefore, we get: “What IS Truth?”
I still say there is no human ability to twist Truth when one reads the full verse out of the Bible. “IF you are my disciples and FOLLOW ME,…then you shall know the Truth and the Truth WILL set you free.” The epitome of the ‘IF, THEN’ statement, I daresay.
So, unless a Man – Scientist or ‘whatever’ calling he chooses – a garbage collector, would be a lofty position, even – no matter what he chooses – unless he learns to FOLLOW the Truth – he will be victimized and in turn, victimize others in this corrupt world system. Whether he knows it or not – he becomes a tool in evil’s twisted hands. (Hence, my ‘rant’ weeks ago about the charades ‘Scientists’ have ‘allowed to go on’ which have completely indoctrinated ‘the public’ with garbage rather than observable Truth.) And, now I believe we are only seeing the beginning of the harvest that they have sown into ‘Man’ by suggesting that he is a mere animal.
So, please enjoy the banquet table that is currently being set – ‘if’ you’re able to stomach it. For, I choose to eat from an entirely different feast set for an entirely different Lord and Master, and I have found JOY in His Truth.
Lastly – for those who choose to loathe my ‘streams of consciousness’ – I suggest that
choosing it is better than opting for an eventual tsunami of pro-pagan-‘duh’ which inevitably ensues once we abandon the Path of our Maker. A drink from the former ‘may’ give you a head or heart ache – but, the other assuredly KILLS.
Be Blessed.
Cynthia Lauren Thorpe

u.k.(us)
March 12, 2011 3:01 pm

R. Gates says:
March 12, 2011 at 1:12 pm
============
Call it paranoia, or call it history.
A few names that come to mind: Stalin, Hitler, Mao.
Depending on who’s numbers you believe, those three “leaders” are responsible for 100 million deaths.
There are many more such “leaders” waiting in the wings, if given their chance.
You say “take a deep breath”.
I’ll take this advice:
“Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.” — Wendell Phillips, (1811-1884),

simpleseekeraftertruth
March 12, 2011 3:29 pm

Willis
An excellent post.
In comments you quote; “It was the only possible action given the gravity and urgency of the situation.”
Which I understand is the basis of Post-Normal Science. That, together with claims to the moral high-ground is precisely what changes AGW fraud into AGW scam.
Strong choice of words? I wait to be proved wrong on both.

Theo Goodwin
March 12, 2011 4:03 pm

R. Gates says:
March 12, 2011 at 1:12 pm
rbateman says:
March 12, 2011 at 12:26 pm
“The computer models couldn’t keep me dry, but my man-made 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.”
____
“I think this nicely displays the paranoia amongst some in the skeptical community that Big Brother wants to take the niceties and comforts of your modern life under the pretext of saving the planet.”
Does a gas-guzzling SUV count as a nicety or comfort of modern life? How about several gas-guzzling SUVs? How about several houses heated and cooled by fossil fuels? How about an indoor swimming pool that is climate controlled?
Everyone who favors some government policy based on a carbon tax or regulations achieving the same thing must realize that they will drive up the cost of all of our niceties and comforts. By driving up the cost, they are causing people to stop using those niceties or comforts. In practical terms, they are taking them away. There are very good rational reasons for believing that greenies want to take them away.
So, why is it paranoid to think that the greenies want to take away our niceties and comforts?

TimM
March 12, 2011 5:04 pm

In a way you could consider what he did a hate crime. Self hate and hate of humanity. I too think the judge ruled correctly and that one’s personal beliefs do not justify illegal actions nor should they be considered motives.
I for one feel a great deal of sorrow for these types of people who are used by the AWG cult (as Dr Corbyn so rightly names them) and then discarded once they have generated the headlies for them. Hopefully he can spend some of his time in prison reading up on the subject.
The hard thing for anyone to admit, but even more so for a true believer, is to admit that you’ve been had. Even when they know it to be the truth most will still live in denial rather than take corrective action against those who lied to them.
At least he didn’t go to the extremely sad ends that the couple in Argentina did. Knock on wood.

johanna
March 12, 2011 5:56 pm

TimM says:
March 12, 2011 at 2:13 pm
Regarding the question of motive in deciding guilt, we had a case in NZ last year where three men successfully used a defense of “Claim of Right” after they had been arrested for vandalizing the Waihopai spy-base.
A spokesman for three said “They did it because Waihopai operates, in all but name, as an outpost of US intelligence on NZ soil…”
A jury found them not guilty after they had stated they believed their actions to be for the “greater good”.
http://www.3news.co.nz/Waihopai-trial-no-precedent-from-acquittal—law-expert/tabid/423/articleID/146924/Default.aspx
I doubt this case can be used as a precedent outside of NZ, but it was significant news here when it happened because of the success of this line of defense.
——————————————————————–
Yes, this is an example of jury nullification, which has been previously discussed in this thread. If the person had been before a judge alone, he/she would have been convicted. It is a feature of legal systems based on English law everywhere.
The good news is, such decisions do not constitute any sort of precedent. The law itself is completely unaffected by them, including in NZ.

rbateman
March 12, 2011 6:37 pm

Theo Goodwin says:
March 12, 2011 at 4:03 pm
In today’s world, a car happens to be a necessity. See any horses around to get to the market? And the produce grown often comes from places you could not get to, nor could the goods be delivered in time, without the aid of fossil fuels. To turn that world upside down in the name of saving the planet is a veritable death sentence.
Witness what happens in a modern disaster when transportation is suddenly removed.
Heck, all you have to do is to watch the current natural disaster.
There is a dream out there that if we suddenly turn the technological clock back 200 years to 1811, all will be bliss.
Daylight saving time is bad enough. No need for Planet saving time.

1 3 4 5 6 7 9