Background on Fakegate from The Heartland Institute
1. What is Fakegate?

On February 14, 2012, an environmental activist named Peter Gleick sent to liberal activists and sympathetic journalists several documents he stole from The Heartland Institute, along with a fake memo he claimed was also from Heartland. On February 20, Gleick confessed to stealing the documents but claimed to have received the fake memo “in the mail” from an anonymous source.
The fake memo, titled “January 2012 Confidential Memo: 2012 Heartland Climate Strategy,” is a mixture of text copied and pasted from the stolen documents and original commentary by the forger. By distorting and misrepresenting the plans set forth in the stolen documents, the fake memo paints a false and disturbing picture of Heartland’s motives and tactics.
2. What did the stolen documents reveal?
The budget document revealed that Heartland has a broad base of support – about 1,800 donors – and expects to raise about $7.7 million in 2012. It presents confidential personnel information including reasons for termination of former employees and salaries. It also lists scientists we work with to produce Climate Change Reconsidered, a series of reports presenting an alternative perspective to the United Nations’ IPCC reports.
The fundraising plan identifies some of the donors to The Heartland Institute during the past two years and our estimate of how much they would contribute in 2012. It also describes a series of new programs, including four on climate change, that we plan to fundraise for. Are all well within our charitable mission of “discovering, developing, and promoting free-market solutions to social and economic problems.”
Another stolen document reveals contact information for members of Heartland’s Board of Directors, including home addresses for some Directors.
Three things the stolen documents do not reveal are substantial funding from the fossil fuel industry for our work on climate change, substantial funding from David or Charles Koch or Koch Industries, and anything other than a sincere and professional effort to advance the organization’s tax-exempt mission.
3. How do you know the “climate strategy” memo is fake?
We know the memo is a forgery for four reasons:
- The memo contains numerous errors of fact and interpretation that no one at Heartland would have made. Significantly, every error in the fake memo has the effect of casting Heartland’s fundraising and education efforts in a negative light.
- Juola & Associates, the country’s leading provider of expert analysis and testimony in the field of text and authorship, studied the document and concluded Gleick is the most likely author. So have many other independent scholars.
- A thorough forensic analysis of Heartland’s computers (and those owned by Heartland’s president and his spouse) by Protek International concludes “the Memo was not created on Heartland’s computer systems and never existed there, or within Heartland’s email systems, prior to its posting online on February 14, 2012.”
- The memo references only the documents that were stolen by Gleick. Except for Board members, no one except Gleick had access to all of the documents cited in the memo.
4. What does the fake “climate strategy” memo say?
The memo contains several false statements about The Heartland Institute’s work on climate change. Following is our refutation of some of the most damaging claims:
- The Charles G. Koch Foundation does not fund our climate change efforts and did not contribute $200,000 to us in 2011. The foundation has issued a statement confirming that its 2011 gift of $25,000 – its first to Heartland in ten years – was earmarked for our work on health care reform, not climate.
- “[D]issuading teachers from teaching science” is not and never has been our goal. As the “Fundraising Plan” clearly states, we are working with a highly qualified and respected expert to create educational material on global warming suitable for K_12 students that isn’t alarmist or overtly political. We don’t believe this should be controversial.
- We do not seek to “undermine the official United Nation’s [sic] IPCC reports.” We have openly and repeatedly shown that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s reports are not peer reviewed in any meaningful sense, exaggerate the certainty of scientific understanding and forecasting abilities, and are written and promoted to serve political rather than scientific objectives. We have produced two highly regarded volumes of scientific research, part of a series titled Climate Change Reconsidered, showing how peer_reviewed science rebuts many of the IPCC’s claims.
- We do not pay scientists or their organizations to “counter” anyone else in the international debate over climate change. We pay them to help write the Climate Change Reconsidered reports, in the same way as any other “think tank” or scientific organization pays the authors of its publications.
- We do not try to “keep opposing voices out” of forums, such as Forbes.com, where climate policy has been debated. The truth is just the opposite: We send Heartland spokespersons to debate other experts at fora all across the country and invite persons who disagree with us to speak at our own events. In fact, we invited Peter Gleick to debate a Heartland expert on climate change at our upcoming annual benefit dinner and he turned us down.
5. How does Fakegate compare with Climategate?
Fakegate invites comparison with Climategate, the unauthorized release of emails from the University of East Anglia in 2009 and again in 2011. Both scandals reveal how desperate and delusional the leading figures in the global warming movement are. If you are confident that you are right, you don’t steal documents and try to undermine other organizations.
Groups on the left claim The Heartland Institute, which reported frequently on the Climategate story, is being hypocritical now when it denounces the theft of its documents and calls on journalists to stop assuming the fake memo is authentic. But the “hypocrisy” charge is easily answered:
- The Climategate documents show a pattern of misbehavior – trying to suppress debate, destroying data, fudging research findings – while the documents stolen from Heartland actually vindicate the organization from claims that it is a “front group” for the fossil fuel industry.
- None of the Climategate documents was fake. One of the Fakegate documents was.
- The documents in the Climategate scandal were leaked, not stolen: apparently no crime was committed. Our documents were clearly stolen, and the culprit, Peter Gleick, has confessed.
- The Climategate documents were apparently being stored to respond to FOIA requests that the University of East Anglia had been stonewalling. The university is a government agency and subject to FOIA; The Heartland Institute is a private nonprofit organization, and is not.
So where Climategate and Fakegate are similar, they reveal the dishonesty and basic moral corruption of the global warming movement. Where they differ, they justify The Heartland Institute taking legal action against Peter Gleick and his co-conspirators.
6. Where does Fakegate stand today?
Environmental groups are using false statements contained in the fake memo and the list of donors in the stolen fundraising document to demand that our corporate donors stop funding us. Since many of our donors give to support our work on topics other than climate change – school reform, health care policy, insurance regulation, and others – they should not be exposed to this kind of harassment.
Similarly, Greenpeace is using the fake memo and the list of scientists in the stolen budget document to demand that universities discipline or fire the climate scientists who work with Heartland. This is an outrageous attack on free and open debate, yet it is being cheered on by many reporters and other environmental activists.
Environmental groups and their allies in the mainstream media still refuse to remove the stolen and fake documents from their Web sites or to issue retractions of editorials and news stories that assumed the authenticity of the fake memo, despite our repeated requests that they do so. This is a clear violation of journalistic ethics.
The Heartland Institute has assembled a top-notch legal team and is asking the government to pursue criminal charges against Peter Gleick and his accomplices, as well as preparing to file civil suits against Gleick and his accomplices on behalf of Heartland and the scientists who have come under attack because of his actions.
7. What is The Heartland Institute?
The Heartland Institute is a national, nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization with offices in Chicago and Washington, DC. The Heartland Institute was founded in 1984. Its mission is to discover, develop, and promote free-market solutions to social and economic problems.
Three things make Heartland unique among free-market think tanks:
- State and local elected officials nationwide are our primary audiences. We are in frequent contact with some 7,300 state elected officials and more than 8,400 county and local officials.
- We produce publications that actually get read by elected officials. Six monthly public policy newspapers – Budget & Tax News, Environment & Climate News, FIRE Policy News, Health Care News, InfoTech & Telecom News, and School Reform News – present free-market ideas as news rather than research or opinion.
- We promote the best work of other free-market think tanks on our Web sites, in our newspapers, at our events, and through our extensive government relations and media relations efforts.
Expertise: Approximately 140 academics and professional economists participate in Heartland’s peer review process as policy advisors and 213 elected officials serve on its Legislative Forum. Fourteen senior fellows are available to write, speak, or comment in depth on a wide range of policy issues.
Media Relations: We send out a constant stream of op-eds, news releases, letters to the editor, podcasts, and much more. In 2011, we contacted journalists more than 410,484 times and appeared in print and on television or radio 1,093 times.
Online: We are leaders in online communication and grassroots organizing, generating nearly 2 million page views and 1.3 million visitors on 16 Web sites and blogs in 2011. Our Facebook page has more than 52,000 fans, and registers approximately 75,000 impressions every week.
Credibility and Influence: Our 28 years producing solid research and educational materials and repeated communications with state legislators have made Heartland a credible, independent, “go-to” source for thousands of elected officials and other opinion leaders. A 2011 survey by Victory Enterprises of 500 randomly selected public officials found 79 percent of state legislators and 66 percent of local elected officials read at least one of our publications, and almost half of state legislators say a Heartland publication changed their mind or led to a change in public policy.
Bipartisan: The Heartland Institute’s influence is not limited to a single political party. The Victory Enterprises survey showed strong across-the-aisle appeal as well. Approximately 73 percent of state Democratic legislators said they read at least one Heartland publication sometimes or always, 64 percent of these legislators said they consider one or more publications a useful source of information, and 38 percent said a Heartland publication influenced their opinions or led to a change in public policy.
Besides its monthly public policy newspapers, Heartland publishes books, policy studies, booklets, and other publications and produces videos, podcasts, and other online features.
Heartland’s 13_member Board of Directors is chaired by Dr. Herbert Walberg, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and research professor emeritus of psychology and education at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Heartland’s 2012 annual budget is $7.0 million. It has a full-time staff of 41. Funds come from approximately 1,800 individuals, corporations, and foundations. No corporate donor contributes more than 5 percent of Heartland’s annual budget. Contributions are tax-deductible under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
8. What is Heartland’s position on climate change?
Heartland’s researchers acknowledge, as do most scientists, that the Earth experienced a rise in temperatures during the second half of the twentieth century, that human activities may have played a role in that increase, and that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas.
Heartland disagrees with three claims made by many environmental groups: That most of the warming of the twentieth century can be attributed to anthropogenic causes, that computer models are sufficiently reliable to forecast future climate conditions, and that a continued moderate warming would be harmful to humanity or the natural world.
Heartland’s position is supported by many of the world’s leading climate scientists, and many (possibly most) scientists in the United States. We are not “on the fringe” or “anti-climate science.” We are expressing a perspective that is very mainstream, even if it is not what liberal environmentalists and reporters believe.
9. What is Heartland doing on climate change?
We produce more research and commentary on climate change than any other free-market think tank in the world. We have distributed millions of books, booklets, videos, and other educational products to opinion leaders in the U.S., Canada, Australia, Britain, and other parts of the world.
We report on the climate change debate every month in Environment & Climate News, a publication sent to every national, state, and most local elected officials in the U.S. We fund the writing and publication of the reports of the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC), including two volumes in a series titled Climate Change Reconsidered totaling more than 1,200 pages and citing thousands of peer-reviewed scientific articles.
We have hosted six International Conferences on Climate Change (ICCC), attracting nearly 3,000 scientists, policy experts, and policymakers from around the world. We plan at least one and possibly two ICCCs in 2012.
During 2012, we plan to undertake nearly a dozen projects specifically addressing climate change. An updated proposal is available to donors and potential donors.
# # #
For more information about Fakegate, please visit www.fakegate.org or call Jim Lakely, communications director, at 312/377-4000. For more information about The Heartland Institute, please visit www.heartland.org or call Gwen Carver, membership manager, or Rachel Rivest Dunbar, corporate relations manager, at 312/377-4000.
Contributions to The Heartland Institute are tax exempt under Section 501(c)(3) of the IRC. Please send your gift to The Heartland Institute, One South Wacker Drive #2740, Chicago, IL 60606.
Full report in PDF form here: Background on Fakegate
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“We do not pay scientists or their organizations to “counter” anyone else in the international debate over climate change.”
“Greenpeace is using the fake memo and the list of scientists in the stolen budget document to demand that universities discipline or fire the climate scientists who work with Heartland.”
And Greenpeace is a paid off hooligan who does nothing unless it pays and only to counter others. The EU commission pays Greenpeace to do their propaganda-magic and violence aka “civil disobedience” as counter action. Greenpeace went hand in hand with BP’s own NGO for BP’s interests even.
“They” will do anything to try and counter, and that’s their demize, by treating people like morons. Maybe people where morons in the late 1930’s in central Europe but people today are, if not educated, well informed and nobody’s fool.
Rules for Radicals. Need I say more.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rules_for_Radicals
Re: A civil suit against Gleich
When someone runs over you with their car, you have medical bills and lost wages – i.e., easily documentable losses you have suffered as a direct result of the driver’s negligence.
When someone defames you and causes you to lose your job, you have future lost earnings to present as damages.
Damages in this case are going to be a great deal harder to prove up. If a donor decides to stop giving you money, that amount might be provable, but you would need to show that the decision was a direct result of the defamation. If GM will testify that it was Gleich’s documents that caused the corporate decision to end donations, that would likely work, but is that going to happen? I’d guess not.
So, a civil suit is going to be a tough row to hoe.
Let me explain: stealing something mean depriving the rightful owner, it is a criminal offence in most countries. It does not mean making an unauthorised copy of a document…
Actually, it does. Courts have determined that data can be stolen; that even though the original data (or document) remains available to the owner, he has been deprived of his private use of it, and that the loss thereof is a “theft.” The distinction between a theft (Glieck) and a leak (Climategate) would seem to be in the relationship of the owner of the subject information and the person who releases it (outsider versus insider), and the means used to obtain it.
Heartland’s researchers acknowledge, as do most scientists, that the Earth experienced a rise in temperatures during the second half of the twentieth century, that human activities may have played a role in that increase, and that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas.
————-
Well that must upset a few of Anthony’s readers. Especially the ones that claim there is no such thing as greenhouse gas and that there has been no warming. And that scientists are frauds for suggesting these things
Here’s hoping the filthy little sewer rat Gliek is taken to the cleaners and ends-up sharing a cell with a psychopathic ex-coal miner (who gets uncontrollably aroused at the sight of gawky-geeky looking creatures with a hint of man). Now that would be proper justice…
I for one thought the piece above was very well written and the case solidly made. Whatever the legal situation the HI will need to put a lot of effort in getting the facts out there. And this was a good read.
Someone above raised the possibility of suing for fraud. I’m not a lawyer but doesn’t the crime of fraud require a financial gain (or attempted gain) by the fraudster?
Finally, I If ound one typo (which is a bit rich coming from me) but here it is:
“Are all well within our charitable mission…”
should read:
All are well within our charitable mission…
Gleick has unequivocally stated that the document, which is fake, was sent to him and he then stole an identity in order to steal further information from Heartland. The crux of this aspect is which came first, the fake or the stolen documents. Given the evidence it seems obvious what an impartial court, whether civil or criminal, will conclude.
Gleick’s tiny place in history will be as a disgrace to science and an abhorrent and immoral man.
Let us get him under oath one way or another. Win/win for us realists.
Excellent news! I’m so glad Heartland is pushing forward. They really do have to take it all the way.
I know everyone wants instant results, but it takes time for the wheels to turn.
■The memo references only the documents that were stolen by Gleick. Except for Board members, no one except Gleick had access to all of the documents cited in the memo.
Columbo would nail it right there!
LazyTeenager, no one is claiming there is no such thing as greenhouse gas or that the climate changes. The argument has never been about that. Do a bit of background study and learn where we’re coming from.
Can Protek International determine if the document was created on Gleik’s computer?
Colour me non-lawyer, but the general view seems to be this will be a civil, not criminal, proceeding.
If someone got access to several of my personal documents by false pretenses, released them on the internet, and added a fake one allegedly written by me, I’d feel somewhat let down if the cops left it alone and recommended civil action.
Just hoping for a snapshot of Gleick in handcuffs being led to the gallows, I guess.
“LazyTeenager says:
April 3, 2012 at 3:56 pm
Well that must upset a few of Anthony’s readers. Especially the ones that claim there is no such thing as greenhouse gas and that there has been no warming. And that scientists are frauds for suggesting these things”
=========================================
Well you definitely are lazy if you think that the majority of Anthony’s readers hold that view. The reality is that the vast majority of skeptics are perfectly fine with their being warming since the 1850’s, that greenhouse gases exist, and even that some portion of that warming might be attributed to man.
Where skeptics differ is that they don’t believe in the supposed mechanism of runaway warming to do feedbacks of the greenhouse gases, They also have sever doubts that the downsides of warming are all that bad and instead believe that the catastrophic claims are unrealistic, and they also believe that man hasn’t been responsible for the majority of the warming in the last 160 years or so.
Heartland disagrees with three claims made by many environmental groups: That most of the warming of the twentieth century can be attributed to anthropogenic causes, that computer models are sufficiently reliable to forecast future climate conditions, and that a continued moderate warming would be harmful to humanity or the natural world.
Pretty much sums up my position.
“The Heartland Institute has assembled a top-notch legal team and is asking the government to pursue criminal charges against Peter Gleick and his accomplices, as well as preparing to file civil suits against Gleick and his accomplices on behalf of Heartland and the scientists who have come under attack because of his actions.”
So they ask the nanny state to help them.
REPLY: oh please, your house get’s broken into and things are stolen. Who are you going to call? The Orkin Man or the Police? – Anthony
mfo,
Gleick will be known in history as an Anti-Galileo.
AllyE,
He calls himself, or herself, Lazyteenager for a reason.
Do not feed the trolls. Perhaps this lazy teenager is a senior NASA or NOAA employee.
REPLY: No, he’s just some malcontent in Australia that runs a Mac software service for dental things – Anthony
So Greenpeace et al are going after the Heartland donors named in the pilfered docs? Can’t they be stopped and penalized since it should be clear that these efforts are based on the release of phished information?
I do not have high hopes that the current US justice department will allow its prosecutors to side with Heartland.
O/T but related to my end point, President Obama voiced some controversial opinions yesterday on the role of the Supreme Court vis a vis his signature legislation (Health Care). Surprisingly a judge of the 5th Circuit Court (for those outside the US the circuit courts are the next highest court just below the Supreme Court) came right back today (hearing another challenge to the HC law) demanding a 3 page, single spaced letter from the Attorney General of the US to the 5th Court explaining what the administration believed to be the authority the judiciary had over the other two branches. This puts the administration on the spot to clearly and legally justify clearly political comments.
My point is that the skeptical position is fact based, and would benefit from the scrutiny of a civil legal process (assuming that we can get past the silly roadblocks being thrown in the way of the Virginia Attorney General keeping him from going to court).
The challenge is how to get the questions into the judiciary.
Yes.
Only this morning I heard a report on NPR about how the habitat of the Polar Bear is “disintegrating” (that’s a direct quote) because of “global warming” (another direct quote), putting the Polar Bear on the endangered species list.
Technically, the Polar Bear is on the endangered species list. It is listed as “Threatened”. From the official Fish and Wildlife Service document (http://www.fws.gov/endangered/esa-library/pdf/polar_bear.pdf), it states:
Meaning that, without the supposed threat of “climate change” the Polar Bear would otherwise not be qualified to be included on this list. From that same document:
With an arduous 60 second search I found:
So in order to “save the Polar Bear” all that is necessary is that we do what we have already done, stop shooting them.
Note that, the Bald Eagle has been removed from the endangered species list because of population recovery. As of 2006 there were 9,867 mated pairs – x2, that is still less than half the estimated population of Polar Bears (http://www.fws.gov/midwest/eagle/population/chtofprs.html).
I leave it to you to locate the numerous links on this site, and others, that refute the claim of a “disintegrating” arctic.
So, yes. Even though the “facts” being used are false, even though the source is tainted, all that matters is that they can continue to spout their mantra – over and over and over again. Say it enough times and it becomes “common knowlege” and thus irrefutable.
LazyTeenager says:
April 3, 2012 at 3:56 pm
Well that must upset a few of Anthony’s readers. Especially the ones that claim there is no such thing as greenhouse gas and that there has been no warming. And that scientists are frauds for suggesting these things
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Ha ha ha ha.
Glieck is [ was IMO ] a scientist – said those things – AND is a self confessed fraud.
Robert of Ottawa says:
April 3, 2012 at 4:40 pm
AllyE,
He calls himself, or herself, Lazyteenager for a reason.
Do not feed the trolls. Perhaps this lazy teenager is a senior NASA or NOAA employee.
REPLY: No, he’s just some malcontent in Australia that runs a Mac software service for dental things – Anthony
*
Thanks Robert, and Anthony. I will remember that in future. 🙂
TomB says:
April 3, 2012 at 4:47 pm
“…So, yes. Even though the “facts” being used are false, even though the source is tainted, all that matters is that they can continue to spout their mantra – over and over and over again. Say it enough times and it becomes “common knowlege” and thus irrefutable.”
*
So the only way this is going to end is when people stop listening, the governments of the world stop listening and their funds run out. Bloody hell, that’s depressing.
So Lazyteenager, you do acknowledge that Heartland are a trusted source of scientific opinion?