Notes on the faked Heartland document

UPDATE: there’s even more evidence that the document was faked. The Koch Foundation and The Atlantic weighs in in update 3 below.

As a follow up to the post Notes on the Heartland Leak, I’ve prepared some notes on the PDF document “2012 Climate Strategy” that Heartland says in their press release is a fake among the other documents distributed. They say specifically that:

One document, titled “Confidential Memo: 2012 Heartland Climate Strategy,” is a total fake apparently intended to defame and discredit The Heartland Institute. It was not written by anyone associated with The Heartland Institute. It does not express Heartland’s goals, plans, or tactics. It contains several obvious and gross misstatements of fact.

Here is a screencap of the top part of that document, which was printed, and then scanned, unlike any of the other documents which were direct to PDF from word processing programs:

There’s been a lot of scrutiny in comments on various blogs, and I’ve given some scrutiny to the document as well, comparing it with other documents in the set. I’m in agreement that this is a fake, here is why:

1. It is the only document in the set that appears to have been scanned rather than produced by a PDF document publisher such as Adobe Distiller 8.0 or 8.1 which were both in document properties on other documents. For example compare the two document properties side by side. I’ve placed arrows marking distinct differences:

2. The metadata in document properties in the document said to be faked have been sanitized. Why cover tracks? This could possibly be due to the leaker not knowing how to remove other metadata in standard PDF, but knows if he/she scans it on an Epson flatbed scanner and saves it to the scanner’s memory stick/flash drive port, there will be no personally identifiable information.

3. One of the first questions I asked Joe Bast of Heartland when I saw this printed then scanned document was “do you not shred your trash”?  His response was, “there’s no need, all the communications are done electronically by email”. That suggests a paper copy never existed in the Heartland office. The fact that none of the documents contains any personal signatures lends credence to this.

4. It doesn’t read like a strategy document, as it mixes strategy with operational details and commentary.

5. It gets the operational details ( budget) wrong – especially the points about my project, rounding up to $90,000 from a very specific budget number of $88,000. This suggests trying to inflate the number for a purpose. There’s no evidence of rounding budget numbers in any other document in the set.

6. Key sentences are rather clumsily written and some make no sense. This contrasts with purposeful language in the other documents. This one sentence in particular has gotten a lot of attention:

His effort will focus on providing curriculum that shows that the topic of climate change is controversial and uncertain – two key points that are effective at dissuading teachers from teaching science.

I can’t imagine pitching “…dissuading teachers from teaching science.” to a board of directors at a meeting. It is a sure recipe for a public relations nightmare.

7. There are punctuation errors throughout it, suggesting it is not a professional document. There’s an overuse of commas for example. The formatting is different than other documents in the set, with a left justified title. All other Heartland documents have a center justified title. Fonts for titles don’t match either. The “2012 Climate Strategy” document has a different font.

8. The “2012 Climate Strategy” is the purported “smoking gun” that provides commentary and context missing from the other factual documents. Without this framing document, the other documents and what they contain, are rather bland. Without it, there’s not much red meat to dangle in front of people that would tear into it.

9. The document misrepresents the positions of Andrew Revkin and Dr. Judith Curry. This seems to come from a point of speculation, not from a point of certainty.

10. Most of the documents were prepared by Joe Bast, listed as author “jbast” in the PDF document metadata and done around 8AM on Monday, January 16th. One document, “Board Directory 01-18-12_0.pdf” has an author “ZMcElrath” ( a Heartland employee according to the Budget document) and was created on Wednesday January 25th at 1:04PM, within working hours just like all the others.

The document in question the “2012 Climate Strategy” has a timestamp of Monday, Feb 13th, at 12:41PM, just one day before “DeSmog Blog” released the documents on their website. The timeline disparity doesn’t make a lot of sense for documents that were supposedly mailed to a person posing as a board member (according to an alleged email snippet on Keith Kloor’s website) to trick someone at Heartland to email them the package of documents. Here it is:

Dear Friends (15 of you):

In the interest of transparency, I think you should see these files from the Heartland Institute. Look especially at the 2012 fundraising and budget documents, the information about donors, and compare to the 2010 990 tax form. But other things might also interest or intrigue you. This is all I have. And this email account will be removed after I send.

It would have had to have been sent sometime between 12:41PM Chicago time on Monday Feb13th and Tuesday Feb 14th 16:39 (Pacific Time) when the first comment appeared on DeSmog Blogs first post on the issue. According to David Appell’s blog, Keith Kloor says it was sent yesterday (Feb 14th), which is after the creation date for the “2012 Climate Strategy” memo of “2/13/2012 12:41:52 PM. Which means DeSmog blog had the documents only a short time.

Appell also writes: Desmogblog Had Leaked Docs For Only an Hour

I guess I’m behind on this, because this afternoon Politico reported that Desmogblog received the documents yesterday (2/14) and “The blog posted them about an hour later without contacting the Heartland Institute for confirmation.”

http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=5826D160-4705-4D72-A0BB-44C8C2EDA7DC

So they received them after the suspicious memo was scanned (according to its metadata). Which doesn’t prove its not fake, but at least the timeline isn’t inconsistent.

Appell also thinks the document makeup is suspicious and does his own metadata analysis.

Summary:

All the above evidence, plus Heartland’s statement saying it is a fake, taken in total suggest strongly that the “2012 Climate Strategy” document is a fake. From my perspective, it is almost if the person(s) looking at these said “we need more to get attention” and decided to create this document as the “red meat” needed to incite a response.

Indeed, the ploy worked, as there are now  216 instances (as of this writing) of this document title “Confidential Memo: 2012 Heartland Climate Strategy” on Google at various news outlets and websites.

The question to ask then is this: who benefits the most from the existence of such a document? A disgruntled employee? Hardly. Such things often backfire. And, who would know best how to craft such a document for maximum public impact? I think the answers are there, but the question needs to be asked. From what I hear, Heartland is going for criminal prosecution and/or civil liabilities on this one. They certainly have a case.

All of those news outlets and bloggers that regurgitated this document and the claims in it without checking for the veracity of it first are going to have some defending to do to. The Guardian seems particularly vulnerable for their “publish first, ask questions later” tactic.

UPDATE: At Lucia’s Blackboard, commenter Duke C. have been delving into the faked memo. What he has found is quite interesting:

Duke C. (Comment #89877)

February 15th, 2012 at 9:55 pm

Steve McIntyre (Comment #89815)

February 15th, 2012 at 4:31 pm

If you look at the Document Properties of the various Heartland documents, the Confidential Memo has a date of Feb 13, 2012 whereas the other documents date from January. In addition, the agenda source (for example) refers to a p: drive and an origin in a *.wpd document, while the Confidential Memo does not have these features.

The Confidential Strategy Memo and the Form 990 were both scanned, possibly from the same source. There are similarities in the Metadata. Both were created under PDF Version 1.5, with the same Extensible Metadata Platform Core:

xmlns:x=”adobe:ns:meta/” x:xmptk=”Adobe XMP Core 5.2-c001 63.139439, 2010/09/27-13:37:26

The other 6 pdfs show a different core version:

xmlns:x=”adobe:ns:meta/” x:xmptk=”Adobe XMP Core 4.0-c316 44.253921, Sun Oct 01 2006 17:14:39

The Form 990 linked at DeSmog shows August 02, 2011 as the last modified date. The 990 linked at Heartlandinstitute.org shows December 06, 2011. Scanning artifacts indicate that both are identical.

All of this is, of course, circumstantial evidence. but I’m not ready to rule out that the Strategy memo wasn’t scanned at Heartland.

================================================

Duke C. (Comment #89887)

February 15th, 2012 at 11:03 pm

More on the Strategy memo-

EPSON Scan

2012-02-13T12:41:52-08:00

2012-02-13T12:41:52-08:00

2012-02-13T12:41:52-08:00

Hmmm……

That’s Pacific Standard Time, if I’m reading it right.

=================================================

Duke C. (Comment #89888)

February 15th, 2012 at 11:07 pm

Oops. with html tags removed:

rdf:Description rdf:about=””

xmlns:pdf=”http://ns.adobe.com/pdf/1.3/”

pdf:Producer EPSON Scan /pdf:Producer

/rdf:Description

rdf:Description rdf:about=””

xmlns:xmp=”http://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/”

xmp:ModifyDate 2012-02-13T12:41:52-08:00 /xmp:ModifyDate

xmp:CreateDate 2012-02-13T12:41:52-08:00 /xmp:CreateDate

xmp:MetadataDate 2012-02-13T12:41:52-08:00 /xmp:MetadataDate

=================================================

According to the “contact” page at Heartland, they have no west coast offices:

The Heartland Institute

One South Wacker Drive #2740

Chicago, Illinois 60606

312/377-4000

map

Telephone Phone: 312/377-4000

Fax: 312/377-5000

Other offices 1728 Connecticut Avenue NW #2B

Washington, DC 20009

Phone: 202/525-5717

AdministratorP.O. Box 10330

Tallahassee, FL 32302

Christian R. Camara3900 Pearce Road

Austin, TX 78730

Julie DrennerP.O. Box 361195

Columbus, Ohio 43236

Alan Smith

Now who do we know on the West Coast in the Pacific Time Zone? One major player in this mix is in the Pacific Time Zone according to their “contact” page.

In the Heartland budget document “(1-15-2012) 2012 Heartland Budget.pdf ” in section 3, there’s also reference made to an employee that was let go that works out of the west coast home office. These are places to start asking questions.

UPDATE2: It seems Andrew Revkin, one of the first to publicly post about the documents without checking the veracity first, now agrees to the possibility of a fake (h/t A.Scott) :

“looking back, it could well be something that was created as a way to assemble the core points in the batch of related docs.”

Source: http://blog.heartland.org/2012/02/andrew-revkin-finds-journalism-religion-after-posting-fraudulent-document/

UPDATE3: 11:15AM 2/16/12 Megan McArdle at the Atlantic has even more evidence it is a fake. (h/t Bart)

It seems that the Koch Brothers had nothing to do with climate donations to Heartland, but they confirm they did donate for health care campaigns. Koch confirms in a press release that their contribution was for health care, not global warming:

The [Koch] Foundation gave just $25,000 to Heartland in 2011 (the only such donation to that organization in more than 10 years) and that funding was specifically directed to a healthcare research program, and not climate change research, as was erroneously reported.

McArdle writes:

Unless there’s an explanation I’m missing, that seems to clinch it–why would health care donations show up in their climate strategy report?  Unless of course, it was written by someone who doesn’t know anything about facts of the donation, but does know that the Kochs make great copy.

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Mardler
February 16, 2012 4:47 am

Tom Curtis says:
February 16, 2012 at 1:29 am
“On the contrary, there is every reason to believe that it was a paper document that was scanned on the day before it was released by desmog blog.”
———————————————————————————————————————————-
If the blagger requested the email & attachments to be sent to a new email address then there would have been no hard copies. So, a simple question for HI: find the resent email and ask the sender if they also sent hard copies & if so, which.
It also occurs to me that once that email has been found the recipient’s address will give a trail via the domain back to the ISP to the recipient. Also, what about the incoming phone call: surely that, too, can be traced? In the UK this is an illegal act thus the police would have been informed immediately. I hope HI did just that.
As to the money – well done, Anthony!

February 16, 2012 4:58 am

Is this what CBS news and Dan Rather have been up to recently?

Man Bearpigg
February 16, 2012 5:00 am

Blimey Anthonhy, you are now up to 100k accoording to SS
http://www.skepticalscience.com/denialgate-heartland.html Comment 42
You have to consider that their numbers need to have climate-type adjustments applied.

February 16, 2012 5:03 am

The fact that the forged document was scanned by an Epson scanner configured for Pacific Standard Time, and was, by time stamp analysis, in the possession of the smoggers for only one hour is powerful circumstantial evidence that somebody among the smoggers hastily forged the document to provide spin and the cachet of a leaked “Confidential Memo” for the otherwise bland pilfered files.
If there was justification for the way Tallbloke’s computers were treated, there is may times the justification for promptly treating all of DeSmog’s computers that way. I will go so far as to predict that the document forger will be caught. Noble cause corruption never covers its tracks, because they believe they have divine protection.
The race is now on to see who will be the first alarmist to admit that the document in question is forged, but it nonetheless expresses an essential truthiness about the wickedness of climate skeptics.

February 16, 2012 5:04 am

Two things are interesting to me:
1-On the top of the Climate Strategy PDF, a series of pixels appear. A straight line also appears at the bottom. Something seems to have been hidden, especially at the top.
2-Some of the files have (2) and (3) appended. Seems like copies of other files. Might it be possible to associate it with a specific operating system?
Ecotretas

MarkW
February 16, 2012 5:07 am

Stephen says:
February 16, 2012 at 1:57 am
Technically true, but misleading as heck.
1) $88K is not a lot of money for what Anthony is doing.
2) The work that Anthony is doing is neither sceptical or non-sceptical. He is taking existing data, and making it more user friendly. It never ceases to amaze me the reaction warmists have to real data. Reminds me of vampires and sunlight.
3) Heartland institute has received some money from oil companies, but it is only a few percent of their budget. Why do you believe that funding from oil companies is somehow disqualifying? Do you believe that warmists who receive money from people who are making money off the AGW scam is also disqualifying?

Myrrh
February 16, 2012 5:08 am

Jimbo says:
February 16, 2012 at 4:05 am
Sierra Club $26,000,000 (from natural gas interests alone)
The Sierra Club disclosed Thursday that it received over $26 million from natural-gas giant Chesapeake Energy Corp. between 2007 and 2010 to help the group’s campaign against coal-fired power plants.
===========
This is the crux of it – it always was about anti-coal rather than ‘fossil fuels’. Hansen in the 70’s endorsed the meme ‘burning coal will cause a new ice age’ scare, Maggie set up CRU with oil, nuclear to be anti-coal. The greenies began with the ‘global warming due to coal’, pre Keeling era onto which he hitched his funding and finding mythical ‘well mixed background’ rises in carbon dioxide levels from man-made sources, even when these can’t be separated from volcanic, and to boot, a definite ‘trend’ with less than two years data.
This is all about coal, the cheap energy source – all the shrill accusations against ‘fossil fuel funded sceptics’ is well orchestrated deflection from these particular fossil fuels, particularly oil’s, big funding of a whole movement to be anti-coal. Maggie ran with this, fighting the coal industry in Britain at the time her brilliant plan to garner the energy of the enviromentalists against coal – so the IPCC which she helped set up as well as CRU – and for the time being was willing to downplay nuclear to get them, the greenies, on board. She succeeded only too well. She stocked piled coal before taking on the miners.
More, much more, should be made of the oil/nuclear industries support of the greenies – hopefully this would set up such a disjunct in their collective ‘mind’ that it would implode… 🙂

Myrrh
February 16, 2012 5:09 am

and p.s. Anthony, these people are truly despicable, be strong.

rum
February 16, 2012 5:10 am

I ,would, love, to, leave ,a, comment ,on, desmog, but, alas ,i ,am, banned.

MarkW
February 16, 2012 5:11 am

Stephen says:
February 16, 2012 at 1:57 am
Technically accurate, but very misleading.
1) The amount of money Anthony recieved is not a lot for building a web site of the type he is talking about.
2) THe work in question is not sceptical. He is taking real data and making it more user friendly. It never ceases to amaze me the way warmists react to any data that doesn’t support their fantasy world. Sort of like vampires and sunlight.
3) While Heartland has received money from oil companies over the years, it is a very small part of their budget. Regardless, why do you believe that receiving money from oil companies to be disqualifying? Is the fact that the CRU receives substantially more money from oil companies also disqualifying? Is the fact that warmists receive money from people and groups who are profiting from the AGW scam also disqualifying?
Or do you just grasp at any straw you can find in order to ignore those saying what you don’t wan to hear?

MarkW
February 16, 2012 5:12 am

Two posts, both disappearing into the ether? What gives?
[Reply: Have some patience. They were in the spam bin due to the WordPress no-no word “scam”. Both resued & posted now. ~dbs, mod.]

Andy
February 16, 2012 5:15 am

I sense an infamous Dan Rather “Fake but true” defense. Don’t blame the defamer?

February 16, 2012 5:15 am

R. Gates? Your analysis? Don’t have one? My, My.

John Greenfraud
February 16, 2012 5:20 am

Only an alarmist would write:
“…dissuading teachers from teaching science.”
It’s laughable, they are the only ones who label their little warmist cult as “science” or “the science”. To the non-believers of AGW (for lack of a better term), the term science would apply to legitimate areas of study not specifically global warming. FAKE

klem
February 16, 2012 5:25 am

Yea, there’s something wrong with that document. The clincher to me is “two key points that are effective at dissuading teachers from teaching science.”
I can’t imagine anyone actually writing such a strategy down and attempting to sell the idea to the leaders of an organization who reliy so much on science and scientists. That was definitely written by someone who actually believes the myth that conservatives are anti-science. Conservatives may lean toward anti-climate alarmism, but anti-science not a chance.

Garacka
February 16, 2012 5:26 am

Revkin implies all the core points in the fake strategy are supported in the real documents. I’d be willing to bet this is his way to keep alive the propaganda line about dissuading teachers from teaching science.
All the believers need is Revkin’s “authority” to allow them to accept this as a valid takeaway reinforcing this important mainstay from the high level CAGW propaganda plan and mitigating any potential weakening of it.

Frank K.
February 16, 2012 5:32 am

I will take all of this seriously when the CAGW “scientists” give up their addiction to BILLIONS OF DOLLARS in government money. Until then…
PS. Did Anthony get any taxpayer-funded “stimulus” grants in 2010? Didn’t think so… how about our CAGW “scientists”???

Ian Woolley
February 16, 2012 5:40 am

Perhaps analysis of the rejected first draft might help? http://dl.dropbox.com/u/22815239/RejectedDraftHIMemo.pdf

February 16, 2012 5:40 am

6. Key sentences are rather clumsily written and some make no sense.
7. There are punctuation errors throughout it, suggesting it is not a professional document. There’s an overuse of commas for example. The formatting is different than other documents in the set,
===========
I thought the near run on first sentence, written in passive voice (similar to the famous military == “It has been decided that”), followed by an active, 1st person sentence, was what, raised my eyebrows at the start.
Not sure that I used enough commas there 🙂

February 16, 2012 5:41 am

I suggest everyone who has concerns submit a complaint to the BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/
Here is my submission
What is your complaint about:
Other BBC Online Website
URL:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-17048991
Complaint category:
Factual error or inaccuracy
Contacted us before:
No
Complaint title:
Breach of Editorial Guidelines
Complaint description:
Richard Black’s reporting “Openness: A Heartland-warming tale” has failed to comply with the BBC editorial guidelines as below because he was not be rigorous in establishing the truth of the story. He had the contact details of Mr. Anthony Watts but failed to contact him to establish the truth of the story before publishing. This may well have left us license/taxpayers liable to a libel action. This story contrasts with Mr. Black’s reporting of the “climategate” emails and suggests Mr. Black has also breached the guidelines on bias.
. “1.2.6 Serving the Public Interest We seek to report stories of significance to our audiences. We will be rigorous in establishing the truth of the story and well informed when explaining it. Our specialist expertise will bring authority and analysis to the complex world in which we live. We will ask searching questions of those who hold public office and others who are accountable, and provide a comprehensive forum for public debate. “
Your Details
Receive a reply:
Yes

Steve S
February 16, 2012 5:43 am

Once upon a time, old What’s His Name over at Littlegreenfootballs would have been all over an obvious fake like this. Sadly, he’s gone full CO2, and is quoting the forgery as if it were gospel. There will never be another ‘throbbing’ memo from that guy.

M Courtney
February 16, 2012 6:03 am

As a Brit I just submitted a complaint to the BBC about Richard Black’s article. It looks to me that there is another, less remarked upon, flaw in Black’s behaviour. He is a competitor of Antony Watts and therefore appears biased by way of personal interest.. I wrote,
“The article was biased by way of selective reporting.
Richard Black refused to report on Climategate until the story was cold as he was unsure of the providence of the leaked emails. This was quite justifiable.
However, in this story the documents were stolen and at least one was fabricated. Again his established procedure would be proven to be justified. Yet he abandoned that practise.
To avoid bias (and fulfil his duty as a journalist) he should have checked his sources and consulted with DeSmog Blog, Heartland Institute and Watts Up With That. He did not do those things.
Instead he misled his readership in order to disparage a competitor’s website (Watts Up With That). This is a clear bias against the winner of the Science Blog of the Year. As a less lauded science and environment blogger himself the motivation is suspect.

Of course the BBC will wave it away but one has to try.

February 16, 2012 6:05 am

The Alarmists are getting desperate. The whole episode is amusing.

TerryS
February 16, 2012 6:07 am

Curiously, the XMP toolkit used to generate the fake pdf was:
“Adobe XMP Core 5.2-c001 63.139439, 2010/09/27-13:37:26 ”
The XMP toolkit used to create one of the elements of desmog-fracking-the-future.pdf was:
“Adobe XMP Core 5.2-c001 63.139439, 2010/09/27-13:37:26 ”
I am not drawing any conclusions about this, just pointing out the coincidence.

Alex the skeptic
February 16, 2012 6:14 am

All the AGWer-gates exposed by the skeptics have turned out to be real and damning. The only _gate ‘exposed’ by the AGWers in their bid to discredit the climate skeptics turns out to be based on a fake letter. Surely this is another addition to the numerous climate*-gates exposed by the skeptics.
The AGWers cannot even fake a letter, let alone a temperature statistic. They tried but failed miserably on all counts.