
It seems esteemed NASA astronomer turned climatologist turned paid activist Dr. James Hansen of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) has not been reporting some income that he is required by law to do. How long will NASA continue to look the other way? Chris Horner explains. – Anthony
A Summary of James E. Hansen’s NASA Ethics File
By Christopher Horner
NASA records released to resolve litigation filed by the American Tradition Institute reveal that Dr. James E. Hansen, an astronomer, received approximately $1.6 million in outside, direct cash income in the past five years for work related to — and, according to his benefactors, often expressly for — his public service as a global warming activist within NASA.
This does not include six-figure income over that period in travel expenses to fly around the world to receive money from outside interests. As specifically detailed below, Hansen failed to report tens of thousands of dollars in global travel provided to him by outside parties — including to London, Paris, Rome, Oslo, Tokyo, the Austrian Alps, Bilbao, California, Australia and elsewhere, often business or first-class and also often paying for his wife as well — to receive honoraria to speak about the topic of his taxpayer-funded employment, or get cash awards for his activism and even for his past testimony and other work for NASA.
Ethics laws require that such payments or gifts be reported on an SF278 public financial disclosure form. As detailed, below, Hansen nonetheless regularly refused to report this income.
Also, he seems to have inappropriately taken between $10,000 and $26,000 for speeches unlawfully promoting him as a NASA employee. This is despite NASA ordering him to return at least some of the money, with the rest apparently unnoticed by NASA. This raises troubling issues about Hansen’s, and NASA’s, compliance with ethics rules, the general prohibition on not privately benefitting from public service, and even the criminal code prohibition on not having one’s public employment income supplemented. All of this lucrative activity followed Hansen ratcheting up his global warming alarmism and activism to be more political which, now to his possible detriment, he has insisted is part of his job. As he cannot receive outside income for doing his job, he has placed himself in peril, assuming the Department of Justice can find a way to be interested in these revelations.
The following summarizes records produced by the Department of Justice to resolve litigation against the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) for refusing to comply with a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request regarding the required financial disclosures Dr. James Hansen, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
These records are his applications for outside employment or other activity (form 17-60), approvals and accompanying documents, and public financial disclosure (form SF 278).
As detailed in the American Tradition Institute’s lawsuit which yielded these records, Hansen suddenly became the recipient of many, often lucrative offers of outside employment and awards after he escalated his political activism — using his NASA position as a platform, and springboard. This began with a strident “60 Minutes” interview in early 2006, alleging political interference by the Bush administration in climate science.
Hansen acknowledged this timing on his website, noting that first he was offered an award of “a moderate amount of cash– $10,000″ by an outside activist group. He claims to have turned this down because of the nominating process (without elaborating what that meant), and because of the impropriety of appearing to be financially rewarded for his outspokenness (“I was concerned that it may create the appearance that I had spoken out about government censorship [sic] for the sake of the $”).
Given that Hansen makes no bones about his (often outrageous) outspokenness and activism being, in his view, part of his job, this surely is also another way of saying it would look as if he were having his NASA salary supplemented by appreciative activists and others. That would violate the criminal code, 18 U.S.C. 209.
Yet, as the offers soon became larger, Hansen changed his mind.
The records reveal that NASA initially was very direct in warning Hansen of his responsibilities and prohibitions relating to these activities, which covered the subject of his public employment. Later, after Hansen gained much media attention and condemnation of his NASA superiors for (falsely) claiming he had been “muzzled” (the second president named Bush he claimed had muzzled him), certain clear restatements of the law were dropped from the approval letters responding to his applications for outside employment.
NASA oversight of Hansen’s compliance with ethics-related reporting requirements similarly waned. At no point did they seek reconciliation of his serially conflicting attestations detailed here.
Improper Receipt of Outside Income Without Obtaining Advance Permission
Hansen’s 2009 speech at Dartmouth University for a $5,000 honorarium and up to $1,000 in expenses came in violation of the clear rule against promoting his appearances as, or emphasizing his job with, NASA. It also had not been approved. NASA’s Deputy Chief Counsel Laura Giza, after admonishing these violations, demanded he return the improperly obtained money:
“[Y]ou may not accept the offered honorarium and travel expenses. If you’ve already received this money, you need to return it to Dartmouth.
“Also, in the future, if you have not received word that one of your outside activity requests has been approved, or at least that the legal office has concurred in the request, you should contact the Goddard legal office about the request before engaging in that activity. NASA regulations require that you obtain approval for certain outside activities…prior to engaging in that activity. 5 CFR 6901.103(d).”
If there were further correspondence about this demand it would be in NASA’s document production, but there are no such records. The only lawful scenario, therefore, is that Hansen quietly agreed to the demand, but did not inform NASA whether he complied. Otherwise, NASA, Hansen, or both have violated the ethics and/or transparency statutes and regulation.
Yet subsequent financial disclosure forms show Hansen attesting to accepting even more money, between $5,001 and $15,000, for a 2008 speech at Illinois Wesleyan University for which his file, according to NASA, contains no request for permission to engage in this outside employment, or approval to do so (each a condition precedent to lawfully engage in the activity, and to accepting the money).
There is no correspondence about these two glaring discrepancies in his filings reflecting more apparently improperly accepted outside income than most federal employees will ever see in their careers.
In order to continue his employment Hansen would therefore be required to bring himself back in compliance with the ethics rules by returning the money, between somewhere more than $10,000, and $26,000.
Although Hansen reported the income from both honoraria, he did not report receipt of travel expenses for him to get there. This omission is a pattern in his filings, to the tune of surely tens of thousands of dollars for airfare, meals and lodging to locations all around the country and Europe, all required by ethics laws to be reported.
For example, consider these failures to report often elegant air and hotel/resort accommodations received on his SF278 as required by law (the amount of direct cash income received from the party providing him travel, as well, is in parentheses):
- Blue Planet Prize ($500,000), travel for Hansen and his wife to Tokyo, Japan, 2010
- Dan David Prize ($500,000), travel to Paris, 2007
- Sophie Prize ($100,000), Oslo Norway, travel for Hansen and his wife, 2010
- WWF Duke of Edinburgh Award, Travel for Hansen and his wife, London, 2006
- Alpbach, Austria (alpine resort)(“business class”, with wife), 2007
- Shell Oil UK ($10,000), London, 2009
- FORO Cluster de Energia, travel for Hansen and wife (“business class”), Bilbao, Spain, 2008
- ACT Coalition, travel for Hansen and wife to London, 2007
- Progressive Forum ($10,000)(“first class”), to Houston, 2006
- Progressive Forum ($10,000), to Houston, 2009
- UCSB ($10,000), to Santa Barbara, CA
- Nierenberg Prize ($25,000), to San Diego, 2008
- Nevada Medal ($20,000), to Las Vegas, Reno, 2008
- EarthWorks Expos, to Denver, 2006
- California Academy of Science ($1,500), to San Francisco, 2009
- CalTech ($2,000), travel to Pasadena, CA for Hansen and his wife, 2007
The following is an incomplete list of other travel apparently accepted to make paid speeches and/or receive cash awards but not reported on SF278 financial disclosures:
Boston, Washington, DC (twice); Columbus, OH; Omaha, NE; Wilmington, DE; Ithaca, NY (business class); Chapel Hill, NC; Deerfield, IL (Sierra Club “No Coal” campaign); Dartmouth, NH; Alberta, Canada (as consultant to a law firm helping run an anti-oil sands campaign), Stanford; Minneapolis; Missoula, MT
Other travel apparently accepted but not reported, to provide expert testimony including on cases involving federal policy:
California (Central Valley Chrysler-Jeep v. Witherspoon), Vermont (Green Mountain Chrysler Plymouth etc v. Torti)
Failing to Report Gifts
World Wildlife Fund gave Hansen an engraved Montres Rolex watch, which typically run $8,000 and up (2006), but which was not reported by Hansen on his SF 278 under “gifts”, which must be reported if valued at more than $260.
Failure to Report Receipt of Free Legal Services
On his website Hansen said he began accepting free legal services in 2006. These are not reported on his financial disclosures, as they should be.
Also, NASA’s document production shows him attesting to receiving more, separate free legal services in the form of an amicus brief drafted for he and a few others to intervene before the Supreme Court in Massachusetts v. EPA. This was not reported on his SF278, as required.
These lapses on both Hansen’s part and NASA demand scrutiny to determine how laws designed to protect the taxpayer are, or are not, being respected.
###
This story has been updated to correct some small errors and formatting issues@ 8:15AM and 9:50AM PST 11/19/11
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Petermue said
“5 years ago I went from Europe to South America by plane for a 4-week vacation, inclusive board and lodging at a 4-star hotel plus 2 short trips to Argentina and Brazil.
Total costs: 1,800 Euros I wouldn’t have had even the time to expend $500,000 …”
Clearly you are a poor time manager with limited imagination who needs the services of my ‘spendalot’ consultancy. Please urgently send 10000 dollars to the address that Anthony will provide for you and we can spend much more of your money much more quickly…
TonyB (spendalot franchised consultant)
Don’t you guys think it just a little strange that all these accusations and insinuations of criminal conduct by Chris Horner are all based on PUBLIC or DISCLOSED information. I noticed that some of you did notice and you had to come up with some contrived theory that Hansen is stupid, just to rescue your preconceptions. But deep down inside you know it’s lame..
And did you notice that if you read carefully, many of the claims have a degree of rubbery imprecision about them.
So here is a tip. Look once, twice and thrice if someone tells you something you want to believe in.
BTW. J. Hansen has given the result of his model in 1981 in Fig. 5 as a sum formula of ‘CO2 + volcanos + sun’ in comparison to the observation. The observation seems to be as a smoothed dashed curve from the hadcrut3 data (?).
But a simple summing of the solar tide functions of 6 couples of planets from Jupiter outwards to Quaoar fits with the smoothed hadcrut3 data from the Earth:
http://www.volker-doormann.org/images/hansen_verification1.jpg
and maybe better than the ‘tripel’ model from J. Hansen et al.
More.
V.
We were told that global warming costs.
They forgot to tell us that global warming pays…
Oh how it pays!
@ur momisugly Beth, In the meantime……
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/11/18/new-wind-energy-label-gains-deutsche-bank-support/
@ur momisugly Rattus
What you think or what I think are not important. What is important is that these allegations are properly investigated. Whether they will be is another matter.
P.F. says: November 18, 2011 at 11:08 pm
Didn’t Hansen get $250,000 directly and $900,000 in support to “put a scientific explanation for global warming” back in the 1980s? I need to look a little deeper, but I recall the Heinz Foundation (Theresa Heinz-Kerry) was involved.
American Thinker: James Hansen Abusing Public Trust
http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/06/james_hansen_abusing_the_publi.html
@nofreewind nice trolling. I’m from and live in Sweden and I’m not a republican. The issue here is someone using his position, paid by tax money, to generate lots of extra income. Income he would loose if he didn’t offer scare stories. You think this “scientist” will stick to the science when he got millions too loose, not to mention the fame and the rock n roll lifestyle?
John from CA says:
November 18, 2011 at 7:01 pm
“Hansen is harmless, just ignore him or enjoy the antics.”
While I would like to simply ignore him, I can’t let go of his advocacy for extreme positions on such matters as the TransCanada Keystone XL oil pipeline. You see it’s OK for Hansen and sycophants to have a secure six figure government salarie$ + generous benefit$ + thousand$ more in other income$ while at the same time attempting to DESTROY other people’s jobs, such as the dedicated and hard working men and women in the coal, oil and gas industries.
By the way, for our WARMIST visitors (you know who you are), my standard announcement:
PLEASE CEASE ALL USE OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS. RIGHT NOW. TODAY! (You can add any energy derived from coal or natural gas too). Not to do so would make you a hypocrite of the highest order, and you wouldn’t want that, would you? Please seek alternatives, and leave the hard working people in the real world alone. Thank you for your cooperation.
Another tiresome, boring example of “ends justify the means”. It’s amazing what you can get away with in American now, supposedly founded on the rule of law, if your “heart” (not “head”) is in the correct progressive place.
General statement on the progressive movement (could apply to conservatives too in the opposite direction) which certainly can be applied to climate and energy policy: It’s easy to change things but difficult to recognize what not to change.
nofreewind says:
Gosh, I hope so, if what you call a “Republican War on Science” is the exposure of charlatans like Hansen and the rest of our elected officials in Wash, DC that enrich themselves at the taxpayer’s expense.
Take a look at this book that’s causing heads to explode in Sin City USA (and I’m not talking about Las Vegas–no, Washington, D.C. now get’s that dubious honor in spades): http://www.amazon.com/Throw-Them-All-Peter-Schweizer/dp/0547573146/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1321710709&sr=8-1
How dare they use priviledged information for their personal fiscal betterment? If any of us did that, we’d be thrown in jail and the key would be tossed. So it’s time to toss a bunch of these bozos out because they’ll never be self-policing and the way it’s going now, “Insider trading is illegal–except for members of Congress”. Read the Amazon reviews and you’ll recognize some very famous names in the list of perpetrators.
This will likely cause a bunch of ensconsed career politicians to lose their seats for the first time in many elections as the electorate finally realize how slimy these people are. I truly hope so, for these “elected officials” (aka “criminal elite”) have been a big part of the problem rather than any solution.
edrowland says: November 18, 2011 at 9:22 pm
Inquiring minds want to know: how do you power a 12,000 watt projector from a wall plug that only produces 2,000 watts? That part must have been interesting too.
Wrong power source.
Try renewables, straight into the wind turbine? When the wind is blowing & research investment $ have improved the outputs of their programs?
To: (Your Government Representative)
I support a simple ‘Fee & Dividend’ approach to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as outlined by Dr. James Hansen.
In order to retain the highest standard of living possible for our future, I ask that you act immediately on meaningful greenhouse gas emission reduction policy.
http://www.climatelobby.com/
Tasmania (Australia) signed too!
Grinding slowly …
(Fingers crossed)
==========
The moral of this tale is that Hansen likes to cut corners when its convenient and (apparently) to use his position of eminence to keep corner-inspectors “off his case.”
If this overbearing behavior-pattern carries over to his data handling and argumentation–and why wouldn’t it?–then not much prima facie credence can be given to it.
Rattus: The applicable section of title 5, referenced by title 18, section 209, is title 5, section 4111.
(a) To the extent authorized by regulation of the President, contributions and awards incident to training in non-Government facilities, and payment of travel, subsistence, and other expenses incident to attendance at meetings, may be made to and accepted by an employee, without regard to section 209 of title 18, if the contributions, awards, and payments are made by an organization determined by the Secretary of the Treasury to be an organization described by section 501 (c)(3) of title 26 which is exempt from taxation under section 501 (a) of title 26.
(b) When a contribution, award, or payment, in cash or in kind, is made to an employee for travel, subsistence, or other expenses under subsection (a) of this section, an appropriate reduction, under regulations of the President, shall be made from payment by the Government to the employee for travel, subsistence, or other expenses incident to training in a non-Government facility or to attendance at a meeting.
It specifically requires reductions in pay to the employee for any such travel, subsistence, or other expenses. Further, it requires those payments to be from a 501(c)3 organization, exempt from taxation under 501(a) of title 26. All such income must be reported.
Shell Oil UK ($10,000), London, 2009 ~ ANTHONY, he’s got your money!!!!
I also like the free legal services no wonder he sues anyone and everyone at the drop of a hat. GRRRrrrrr
What a miscarriage of justice. How come the OWS crowd is not picketing Hansen’s office….
This is clearly not an accidental oversight by Hansen and his employer should not let it slide.
John from CA says:
November 18, 2011 at 10:48 pm
James Sexton says:
November 18, 2011 at 10:38 pm
========
Amazingly complex comment!
Should Scientists in Civil Service for Federal Agencies be held accountable to the same STANDARDS the Congress is sworn to?
=================================================
I believe the standards they fall under are more confining than Congress, but Congress has changed many of their rules………
And, yes, it wasn’t a very clear comment. There’s just too much to say about all of it.
Here is his Easter Bunny/Kool Aid ramblings…. http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/mailings/2011/20110729_BabyLauren.pdf This is where he describes spending his graft. While I avoided the question of graft, here’s my take on his Easter Bunny rant….. http://suyts.wordpress.com/2011/08/18/hansen-was-right-in-part-for-once/ …….
Wow, in my capacity as an oil industry scientist, if I go to a professional convention I can’t so much as buy a beer for a government scientist or state university professor. If I did, it would be presumed to be corruption.
John@ur momisugly 5.28am.
A relevant comment in the wind energy article you posted. ‘They’re not doing it to BE green, theyr’e doing it FOR the green.’ 🙂
I hope he has all that money invested in a firm run by a fellow global warming true believer like say Corzine.
These allegations of ethics violations on such a grand scale immediately call into questions his ethics regarding the work he did at NASA. It would be amazing indeed if his ethics switch was turned on during his research, and only turned off when money was dangled in front of him.
How did he get any work done? He spent all his time traveling.
A couple of earlier comments and in the American Thinker article refer to Hansen’s charge that he was muzzled by the Bush White House. This appears to be a political ploy to scare away anyone who dared to investigate his actions. It was the type of charge the mainstream media of the time, which was in full anti-Bush mode, quickly parroted. His boss at NASA, John Theon, who I have spoken with, rejected Hansen’s claim.
http://my.telegraph.co.uk/discpad/brakeshoe/8232594/Former_Boss_Says_Hansen_Embarrassed_NASA/
It appears Hansen believes that the end justifies the means.
JBY, Rat and LazyT, If you want links, run your own FOIA. No reason Horner has to give you a thing. If you don’t like what he says, spend your own money and do your own research. Law works for you too. (and LT – wikipedia is not your best source for things legal, even in Canada. – take it from someone who actually does Cdn law enforcement…;)
Lazy says: “So here is a tip. Look once, twice and thrice if someone tells you something you want to believe in.”
Nah. We will have congress look into it once, twice and if we are lucky, thrice. I would think you of all people, Lazy, could appreciate that approach.
For someone who happily equated coal trains to those during the Holocaust he has surprisingly little self-awareness in flying first class. If Hansen can’t politely refuse flights to Europe to collect cash gifts for the sake of the planet, you would think he would at least refuse the whopping carbon footprint at the front of the plane.
And what’s with an $8000 Rolex from the WWF? Can you imagine a climate skeptic receiving such a gift from an oil company and the hue and cry from the media?