Fakegate: why the perps should be prosecuted

 

Guest post by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Yesterday I had the pleasure of chairing a packed meeting in the Palace of Westminster (don’t tell the Clerk of the Parliaments), at which Professor Richard Lindzen of MIT spoke even more brilliantly than usual on “global warming”, and engagingly answered many questions from Parliamentarians and the public.

Afterwards, Dick went to brief a Cabinet Minister (who shall be nameless, but he is a good egg, and privately regards catastrophic manmade “global warming” as nonsense). The Minister indicated – in effect, and with scarcely-concealed regret – that the party line set by David Cameron in response to various opinion polls, focus groups and other such artifices for identifying and following a consensus rather than setting a lead, and not the objective scientific and economic truth, was likely to remain the basis of UK climate policy.

In reality, orders issued to our elected nominal “government” by the hated, unelected Kommissars of the EU, our true government, who have exclusive competence to decide and dictate the UK’s environment and climate policies, are and will remain the basis of UK climate policy, regardless of what (or whether) Cameron and his vapid focus groups think (if “think” is the right word). Government of the people, by the people, for the people has perished from this once-free, formerly-democratic corner of the Earth. We have all the trappings of democracy and none of the reality.

Over tea and scones at the National Liberal Club while Dick was with the Minister, several of us discussed what we call Fakegate – the frauds recently perpetrated to the detriment of the blameless Heartland Institute. Among some there was a feeling, often expressed by the nicer but more woolly-headed and ineffectual sort of skeptic, that somehow scientists who commit frauds ought not to be prosecuted for them, for otherwise academic research would become impossible.

I hear this unsoundly-founded point so often that it is hard to keep an even temper. A fraud is a fraud is a fraud, whether perpetrated by a scientist or by anyone else. The mistreatment to which the Heartland Institute has been subjected by a fraudster and counterfeiter constitutes several serious, imprisonable offenses, known in US law as felonies. The perps, whoever they be, should be investigated, brought for trial, prosecuted, and fined or – better still – imprisoned. Punishment for specific, manifest scientific frauds in no way prejudices, compromises, or trammels the freedom and purity of academic research. It protects and enhances them.

Three frauds are evident in Fakegate. First, wire fraud by whoever used electronic means to obtain internal documents that were the property of the Heartland Institute by what the ineffable Richard Black of the unspeakable BBC calls “subterfuge” and what the criminal law bluntly calls “deception”. Secondly, circulation of a counterfeit document purporting to be a true Heartland document. Thirdly, reporting of the affair with reckless disregard for whether the counterfeit document was genuine on the part of the loony-left BBC, the Pooterish Scotsman, Britain’s Marxist daily The Guardian, and various blogs, notably the relentlessly malevolent and consequently uninfluential Desmogblog.

Title 18 (Crimes and Criminal Procedure), Part I (Crimes), Chapter 63 (Mail Fraud and other Fraud Offenses) of the US Codex Iuris deals with “Mail Fraud and other Fraud Offenses”. Paragraph 1341 defines “fraud” simpliciter:

“Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property” [or, by Paragraph 1346, “the intangible right of honest services”] “by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, or to … procure for unlawful use any …  article, or anything represented to be or intimated or held out to be such counterfeit or spurious article, for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice or attempting so to do, … or deposits or causes to be deposited any matter or thing whatever to be sent or delivered by any private or commercial interstate carrier, or takes or receives therefrom, any such matter or thing, or knowingly causes to be delivered by … such carrier according to the direction thereon, … shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both. …”

In general, whoever knowingly perpetrates across state boundaries or recklessly perpetuates a deception calculated to cause financial or pecuniary advantage in goods or services to some or suchlike loss to others commits the Federal criminal offense of fraud.

If the deception be furthered by electronic means, it is wire fraud. If it be furthered by the use of counterfeit documents, it is a distinct count of fraud. If it be furthered by reckless and detrimental publication and repetition of the contents of counterfeit documents as though they were the real thing, when no steps before publication had been taken to verify that the documents relied upon were true, it is also fraud.

Let us begin with the wire fraud. The relevant US statutory offense seems to me to be 18 USC 1343 (Wire Fraud) of the US Codex Iuris, which opens with these words:

“Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property” [or, by Paragraph 1346, “the intangible right of honest services”] “by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire, radio, or television communication in interstate or foreign commerce, any writings, signs, signals, pictures, or sounds for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.”

I am unfamiliar with US law, and cannot confirm that these provisions still stand part of the US code, or that they have not been amended, or that there is no case law or rule of interpretation preventing their application in the present case. On the face of it, though, the obtaining of documents that were the property of the Heartland Institute by a scheme or artifice whereby the fraudster misrepresented himself as a Board member of the Heartland Institute was achieved by electronic means across state boundaries between the Pacific and the Great Lakes.

The term “interstate commerce” is interpreted latae sententiae in US law, since it is widely defined in the US Constitution itself. Therefore, the fraudster would not be able to escape a wire-fraud charge by asserting that his deception of the Institute was not “in interstate commerce”. Even if the court were to find that the deception was not “in interstate commerce”, the deception would still constitute fraud simpliciter under paragraph 1341 of the Code, though not wire fraud under paragraph 1343.

Next, the fraud arising from the creation and circulation of the counterfeit document. Whether or not the fraudster who deceived the Institute also uttered the bogus document, he certainly circulated it. Consequently, even if he thought but did not know it was genuine, his reckless circulation of it without having verified that it was genuine, and in the company of other documents obtained by fraud, would constitute a distinct but connected fraud charge – and, given the malicious content of the counterfeit document and the very grave harm that it was calculated to do to the Institute, a very serious charge at that. The court would also take account of the fact that the perp had obtained all documents but the counterfeit document from the Institute and was, in the circumstances, under a particular duty to verify the genuineness of the document before circulating it with the others.

Finally, there is the fraud perpetrated by the various news and in

ternet media, especially in the UK (where Marxism is many journalists’ creed) in perpetuating the Fakegate fraud by rushing to publication or broadcast without having verified the genuineness of the document that turned out to be counterfeit. Here, the well-established legal doctrine of mens rea applies. To commit a crime, one must know that one is committing a crime, or one must act in a manner calculated to cause harm to another while being reckless as to whether the harm that one’s actions are calculated to cause constitutes a criminal offense.

Fraud charges against the guilty news media and blogs would not be likely unless and until the Fakegate fraudster had first been brought to justice before a Federal court.

The dripping malevolence of the commentaries by the various news media and blogs on what the counterfeit document purported to reveal about the Heartland Institute’s supposed attitude to the teaching of science in schools would count very much against them in court. The intent to cause harm to the Heartland, and to cause collateral damage to Anthony Watts and others, is very clear. On the other hand, those who at least acted promptly by publishing Heartland’s announcement that the document was counterfeit will have mitigated their crime to some extent. Those blogs that continue to publish the counterfeit document rather than removing it, and one blog that pretended to “confirm” the document as genuine, will face long prison sentences.

Or will they? Much of the scientific criminality surrounding the “global warming” scam only happens because the fraudsters in white lab-coats reckon that they are untouchable. They have the protection of governments, who are themselves profiting mightily by the scam; they are fawned upon by the news media, much as Al Capone was in Chicago; they are lionized by their academic institutions for the massive government grants they attract to investigate what, day by day, becomes more visibly a teacup tempest rebranded as Apocalypse; and, worst of all, the skeptics who ought to report the frauds – and without whose reports the authorities are unlikely to act ex proprio motu – are a bunch of wee, cowering, timorous beasties.

Since fraud across state boundaries is a Federal offense, any citizen of the United States, whether or not he is in any way connected with any of the parties to the frauds, has the right – and the duty – to go to his nearest police station and make a complaint that frauds have been committed to the detriment of the Heartland Institute. The complainant does not need to have any connection with the Institute, nor any permission from it. He just has to be as outraged as I am.

All he has to do is to go in and ask the police to investigate the frauds that have occurred. The facts are plain enough, and so is the law. The police will be bound to investigate and to pass a report of their investigation to the District Attorney, who, in matters of interstate fraud, would be likely to consult the State’s Attorney General. On the facts as I now have them, prosecution would certainly result, and conviction would be very likely.

But will anyone act? Around the fragrant tea-table overlooking the silent Thames, there was a marked reluctance to do anything other than talk about it. One said, “I couldn’t possibly make a complaint. Just think of all the unwelcome publicity.” In fact, there would be no publicity, since any complainant not connected with the Heartland Institute will play no further role in the case once he has undertaken the simple duty of reporting the fraud to his friendly, local police station.

Another said, “We really mustn’t interfere with academic freedom in this way.” Yet the action of the fraudster was not an exercise of academic freedom, still less a triumph for it. It was an abuse of it. It was a fraud. It was an offense. It was a serious offense. Read the Code.

The law, said Cicero in a beautiful passage in his De Legibus, is founded upon and rooted in love.  And what is a sin? In Christian theology it is a failure of love. A sin is a sin because its fake-etrator is knowingly or recklessly doing harm and, to the extent of the harm done, is failing to love the victims of his wrongdoing. It is precisely because of the harm done to the Heartland Institute and to Anthony Watts and others that the sin – in law the offense – is grave. And it is precisely to prevent such harm from being done that the law provides punishment for fraudsters – as long as someone, anyone, has the guts to go into a police station and start the ball rolling by making a complaint.

If just one or two of the numerous scientific frauds that are being reported to me were instead reported to the police, and if prosecutions and convictions were to ensue in just one or two cases, the “global warming” scam would come sharply to an end. Those scientists working in climate and related fields who have acted or published fraudulently (there are just a few of them, and they know who they are) would once again be reminded that they are not an untouchable, priestly caste at liberty to ignore the laws that the rest of us must follow. As the late Lord Denning used to say, in that gentle Hampshire accent of his, “Be you never so high, the law is above you.”

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Snotrocket
February 23, 2012 12:32 pm

@Barry Woods: You say: “Unlike some I take no pleasure in the ‘downfall’ of any particular scientist.”
I’m really interested Barry, would you say/think the same if an unknown blogger with a high IQ had done the same and committed wire fraud – against you, say? Is it one law for ‘scientists’, another for we proles? (And please, they’re not trick questions. I really would like to know)

Rob Crawford
February 23, 2012 1:21 pm

“Unlike some I take no pleasure in the ‘downfall’ of any particular scientist.”
Gleick is a “scientist”? I thought he worked at a PR firm.

Rob Crawford
February 23, 2012 1:22 pm

“Two fingers to freedom based culture … that’s political hyperbole …. usually right wing trash hyperbole.”
Because freedom is “right wing trash”?

February 23, 2012 1:33 pm

Dr Monckton:
In regard to fraud, I feel there are two key issues which would be difficult to defend …
(1) The AGW proponents have avoided mention of the fact that carbon dioxide absorbs some of the incident infra-red radiation that makes up about half the energy in solar insolation. It is just as likely to send some of this as backradiation to space, thus having a cooling effect. Anyone would be hard pressed to prove that any warming effect resulting from much lower energy radiation sent back to the surface would exceed the cooling effect of backradiation to space. At least one scientist (from the Slayers) has calculated the alleged warming effect is only 13% of the cooling effect.
(2) Over half (maybe 70%) of thermal energy transfer between the surface and the atmosphere is by way of evaporation, conduction, chemical processes and diffusion (molecular collision) followed by convection. This leaves far less to radiate, so S-B calculations must be very inaccurate. But, more importantly, how could “backradiation” have any effect on these processes? It could only do so if it first added thermal energy, which it cannot because that would clearly violate the Second Law of Thermodynamics
There are other issues with backradiation which I have explained cannot even effect cooling by radiation, let alone the above processes. See: http://climate-change-theory.com/RadiationAbsorption.html

Lars P.
February 23, 2012 1:38 pm

Aphysicist says:….
You are trying to distract from the facts which were clearly enumerated in the post:
“Three frauds are evident in Fakegate. First, wire fraud by whoever used electronic means to obtain internal documents that were the property of the Heartland Institute by what the ineffable Richard Black of the unspeakable BBC calls “subterfuge” and what the criminal law bluntly calls “deception”. Secondly, circulation of a counterfeit document purporting to be a true Heartland document. Thirdly, reporting of the affair with reckless disregard for whether the counterfeit document was genuine …”
This is no demagogy but a list of facts. 1,2,3.
You know and we know the story will not end here. The person who committed the fraud – circulating the counterfeit document has not been identified yet.
It will take some time, but I trust this can be also clarified.
You have nothing to comments to the facts so you try to hide behind ad hominem attack. Well, why am I not surprised.

John Whitman
February 23, 2012 1:47 pm

Scottish Sceptic says:
February 23, 2012 at 12:31 pm

John Whitman says: “Independent thinkers (aka skeptics) will lose if those fundamental ideas of freedom based culture are not the main focus.”

Two fingers to freedom based culture … that’s political hyperbole …. usually right wing trash hyperbole.
The last thing we need is more hyperbole in climate science. What we need is decent science we can trust. Science which is not polluted by political hyperbole, science where no activists, neither warmist nor sceptic has a place.
[ … ]
– – – – – –
Scottish Sceptic,
As a matter of principle, I do not respond to racist laden remarks.
For the hyperbole part of your comment, I extol the virtues of freedom based cultures and oppose authoritarian based cultures that impugn it. What part makes it distasteful political hyperbole to you? It is the values within freedom loving cultures that I speak, not the political product of cultures.
My thrust was that broader ideas in freedom loving cultures will inform the integrity/honor of science as well the nature of the political system deployed.
John

Myrrh
February 23, 2012 1:47 pm

http://climateaudit.org/2012/02/22/gleick-and-the-ncse/#comment-325602
AFPhys puts together some posts which lead to the conclusion that the forged document was created to a specific agenda..

February 23, 2012 1:53 pm

snotrocket:
a very well known climate scientist made publically unsubstantiated claims about me on the internet, will that do?
reputation is everything……..
three weeks ago, a certain climate scientist named Peter Gleick, VERY publically tweeted to all his followers that I had been ‘incredibly offensive’ to him. Recognise the scientist?
our mutual followers include Revkin, (NYT) Leo Hickman (Guardian) and very many other climate scientists and journalists..
I was very cross about this, Peter was publically challenged to substantiate this ‘claim’ , or to apologise and withdraw it.(by anumber of people including Prof Richard Betts(IPCC) Peter Gleick then restated that he had reviewed my tweets and comments, and that I was ‘incredily offensive’…
So he is not exactly on my Christmas Cardd list, at the momemen, nor in mine.
Eventually when THREE climate scientist wrote to him, including a certain Dr Katie Hayhoe, he eventually backed down…
Peter also made it very clear his opinion of me and sceptics in general (WUWT, Bishop Hill)in some emails. A UK climate scientist made it vey clear her opinion of his attempts to ‘communicate climate science, I know he was a little annoyed by this, maybe he did something silly a day or 2 laters?
————————————————————–
Dr Edwards to Peter Gleick:
“I would personally be infuriated if I was dismissed on account of the behaviour of a group of people I talk with. Every single person I talk with has a different viewpoint, and I learn a lot about how better to communicate climate science by listening to them. If we dismiss swathes of people by association then our attempts at communication become futile: we end up only ‘preaching to the converted from an ‘ivory tower’, as it were”.
Of course, if communication of climate science is not your aim, then it is your choice if you prefer to communicate with nobody! –
——————————————————————
If you are vaguely interested in all this, it is documented here (including all emails (with permission)
http://www.realclimategate.org/2012/02/clarifications-and-how-better-to-communicate-science/

Martin457
February 23, 2012 1:56 pm

I think this needs to be handled by the Postmaster Generals office.
I might be wrong but, somebody needs to file a complaint with the post office.

Scarface
February 23, 2012 2:21 pm

“In reality, orders issued to our elected nominal “government” by the hated, unelected Kommissars of the EU, our true government, who have exclusive competence to decide and dictate the UK’s environment and climate policies, are and will remain the basis of UK climate policy, regardless of what (or whether) Cameron and his vapid focus groups think (if “think” is the right word).”
This is exactly what makes these times we live in so grim. Europe is on the road to oblivion and there seems no way to stop the march into the dead end that the EUSSR is pushing us into.
Please, Lord Monckton, keep on using all your powers, means and contacts to help stopping this nightmare. We are much obliged already, since you are fighting the good fight for a long time, but the forces we’re against seem to have not given in a bit yet. However, one day we will prevail, with the help and effort of people like you. V for Victory!

Shevva
February 23, 2012 2:29 pm

But, but, but it’s for a noble cause?
/sarc
I live in Hampshire, but have a cockney accent.
That post was the bollo*

Mr Bliss
February 23, 2012 2:29 pm

ferd berple:
Imagine if an ordinary citizen had done this to Coca-Cola or General Electric. How long would it take before the FBI was knocking down their door?
——
Looks like the FBI are already involved:
http://washingtonexaminer.com/politics/washington-secrets/2012/02/fbi-called-over-climate-change-mole/305161

Jabba the Cat
February 23, 2012 2:31 pm

@Barry Woods
“That was a party political broadcast by Lord Monckton…”
Spot on Barry.

Anthony Thompson
February 23, 2012 2:33 pm

“Afterwards, Dick went to brief a Cabinet Minister (who shall be nameless, but he is a good egg, and privately regards catastrophic manmade “global warming” as nonsense).”
My money’s on Owen Paterson

Joe
February 23, 2012 3:29 pm

Three cheers for the Vicount.
He can be the public prosecutor after he memorized Cicero’s 4th oration against Catiline.

Tim Minchin
February 23, 2012 3:37 pm

I always thought the term was ‘con artist’ my self

Dave Wendt
February 23, 2012 3:44 pm

A physicist says:
February 23, 2012 at 10:15 am
“And it is evident (IMHO) that the uncertainties presently associated to are sufficiently great, that no rational person (whether skeptic or scientist) can confidently assert that this probability is less than ~20% or greater than 80%.”
In the comment thread to this recent post
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/02/09/ipccs-pachauris-voodo-science-claim-comes-full-circle/
you endlessly repeated this same inanity. Commentor Kadaka responded with several posts illuminating how your omniscient mentor had just as repeatedly violated your test of rationality, culminating in this post
kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:
February 11, 2012 at 1:55 pm
From A physicist on February 11, 2012 at 3:38 am:
Kadaka, most of your quotes were *not* direct quotes of Hansen. And your sole quote of Hansen, did *not* say “CAGW is a certainty.”
Perhaps you might like to try again? Direct quotes of Hansen’s own writings. From verifiable sources. Asserting “CAGW is a certainty.”
Storms of My Grandchildren is searchable on Google Books:
pg 72-73:
“If we continue burning fossil fuels at current rates, ice sheet collapse and sea level rise of at least several meters is a dead certainty.”
Such a rise would be catastrophic, and brought about by AGW per Hansen.
pg 172:
“A SIMPLE, CLEAR, URGENT CONCLUSION leaped out from our research on the appropriate target level of atmospheric carbon dioxide: Coal emissions must be phased out as rapidly as possible or global climate disasters will be a dead certainty.”
Coal emissions (CO₂) -> AGW -> global climate disasters (catastrophes)
pg 269:
“THE ABOVE SCENARIO-with a devastated, sweltering Earth purged of life-may read like far-fetched science fiction. Yet its central hypothesis is a tragic certainty-continued unfettered burning of all fossil fuels will cause the climate system to pass tipping points, such that we hand our children and grandchildren a dynamic situation that is out of their control.”
As I said before, so will I say again … perhaps the plain fact of the matter is simply this: Dr. Hansen’s writings have been more circumspect than his reputation here on WUWT would suggest?
At this point you’re sounding like a defense attorney: “But did my client specifically swear that he would certainly kill the victim, with a shotgun, on that Tuesday, using buckshot, that was nickel-plated lead of #4 size, and specified the gun was 12 gauge and made by Remington? Well then, which did he specifically swear that it certainly would be, a top-break double, pump, or auto-feeding semi-automatic? Wait, he didn’t swear with certainty which type he would use? Well then, members of the jury, clearly my client is innocent!”
You, as usual, responded in a totally nonresponsive manner
A physicist says:
February 11, 2012 at 3:32 pm
Kadaka, your posts (and many WUWT folks’ posts) continue to dodge the main question: What is a rationally skeptical assessment of the probability that the Hansen-style physics of GHG GHE AGW is correct?
For a climatological system as complex as our planet, the answer ZERO percent is not rationally skeptical, eh?
Moreover, whatever one’s assessment of , in the event that Hansen’s Seven Key Predictions of Warmism come true in coming decades, that estimate of will have to be adjusted soberingly upward.
That’s no more than rational common sense, eh?
I offered the following after which you chose to withdraw to greener pastures. I reproduce it here in the vain hope your response will be similar.
Dave Wendt says:
February 11, 2012 at 7:03 pm
A physicist says:
February 11, 2012 at 3:32 pm
Kadaka, your posts (and many WUWT folks’ posts) continue to dodge the main question: What is a rationally skeptical assessment of the probability that the Hansen-style physics of GHG GHE AGW is correct?
Since in his recent comments Kadaka has, by the very criteria which you yourself established, proven that your hero and mentor Mr. Hansen is a batshit crazy lunatic, any “rational” assessment of the probability of the correctness of his predictions, skeptical or otherwise, would have to fall somewhere on the low side between slim and none. And, since in nearly every comment you have posted in recent days you have wrapped yourself in Mr. Hansen’s predictions, it suggests to me, again based on your own criteria, that you are not a candidate for sharing a “rational” dialogue. but are instead the perfect potential roommate for Mr. Hansen, in whatever rubber room he ends up in. At least if there is any justice left in the world.

theduke
February 23, 2012 4:12 pm

Gleick also broke a new California law, the online impersonation law:
http://sfappeal.com/news/2010/12/online-impersonation-law-goes-into-effect-jan-1.php

Karl Koehler
February 23, 2012 4:13 pm

It’s a cowardly anonymous stance you take there A physicist. In my neck of the woods it would be called Gallus gallus domesticus excrement.
Lord Monckton’s essay is spot on! Thanks are due to him for his articulated outrage and targeted denunciation of this shameful spectacle.
As for Peter Gleick and his ilk, it appears the AGW community’s chickens…
have come home to roost!

A physicist
February 23, 2012 4:21 pm

A physicist asks: What is a rationally skeptical assessment of the probability P_{\text{CAGW}} that the Hansen-style physics of GHG \Leftrightarrow GHE \Leftrightarrow AGW \Leftrightarrow is correct?

Dave Wendt says: [You are] the perfect potential roommate for Mr. Hansen, in whatever rubber room he ends up in. At least if there is any justice left in the world.

Dave, I will just note for the record that prominent in the Characteristics of Demagoguery is polarization:

Polarization  This is one of the two most important qualities of demagoguery. To polarize is to divide a diverse range of things into two poles. Thus, a demagogue breaks everything into two camps: the one s/he represents (what people call the in-group), and evil (the out-group). This kind of polarization recurs throughout demagoguery—there are only two options, there are only two policies, there are only two groups.

In particular, insistence that P_{\text{CAGW}} is near-zero (ultra-skeptical), or alternatively that P_{\text{CAGW}} is near-unity (ultra-warmist) … accompanied by demonization of all who disagree … is in either case a polarizing tactic that is characteristic of demagoguery.
That’s just common sense, eh?

1DandyTroll
February 23, 2012 4:27 pm

A physicist says:
February 11, 2012 at 3:32 pm
“Kadaka, your posts (and many WUWT folks’ posts) continue to dodge the main question: What is a rationally skeptical assessment of the probability that the Hansen-style physics of GHG GHE AGW is correct?”
Actually, that’s not the question at all but a mere demagogue’s way of averting the topic. But even in the context of your question, the rationally skeptical assessment of the probability, all statistically correct, the answer is: it is not, which has, incidentally, been stated in absurdum ad nauseum on this here blog of Mr Watts, even by the good Lord hi’self.
Which begs the question, in correctness of all your logical fallacies, how come you haven’t read it?

mkurbo
February 23, 2012 4:27 pm

This AGW false science and “Green” alarmism movements has cost the world literally trillions of dollars. There are so many that should be prosecuted, where do you start ?

philincalifornia
February 23, 2012 4:40 pm

Monckton of Brenchley says:
February 23, 2012 at 8:37 am
and:
Skiphil says:
February 23, 2012 at 11:43 am
re: venues for legal/criminal complaints
I’m no lawyer, but within the USA I think one can state with confidence that local police departments will not even consider an investigation into possible violations of federal law, especially where the actions alleged/admitted in the case occurred in other jurisdictions.
=====================================
With respect Lord Monckton, Skiphil is correct. I’ve been involved as an expert witness, corporate representative, etc. in cases where there were clear grounds for criminal prosecution but it never happened. I also live in Oakland, so I know the terrain in more ways than one. If I went downtown and reported this, I’m afraid I wouldn’t be given the time of day. In fact, I think the police department personnel would look at me like I was lunatic, and get back to their stolen cars, drug dealing and vandalism routines.
If HI file suit, and it’s difficult to imagine that they wouldn’t win given the confession, the Judge could refer it for criminal prosecution but, with a good attorney defending him, and lots of remorse, I wouldn’t give that a high percentage chance of happening. If the U.S. Attorney, and/or the FBI thinks this rises to a high enough level, they may take it on.
Also, as far as I can tell, no one went to jail in the HP pretexting case although a lower level scapegoat was convicted:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hewlett-Packard_spying_scandal
http://www.dailyfinance.com/2011/08/30/feds-delay-sentencing-in-hp-pretexting-case-due-to-related-matt/
This guy too was convicted of pretexting, but didn’t do any time:
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/01/first-pretextin/
Whatever, it’s not a good place to be in right about now.

February 23, 2012 4:45 pm

Persons wishing to follow up Monckton’s advice are unlikely to get anywhere at the local or state police levels, a more likely venue would be Fraud Section of the Dept of justice,

Correspondence to the Fraud Section may be sent to:
U.S. Department of Justice
Criminal Division
Fraud Section
Bond Building, 4th Floor
10th and Constitution Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001
By Phone
Fraud Main Switchboard – 202-514-7023
By Fax
Facsimile – 202-514-7021

John Kettlewell
February 23, 2012 5:09 pm

Perhaps Mr. Gleick can call Ann Maest as a character witness
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/12/13/national-academy-of-sciences-appointee-caught-making-up-stuff-to-win-lawsuit-rico-lawsuit-follows/
if there is a 3rd, does that make a trend?