It's Time For The Person Who Leaked the CRU Emails To Step Forward

Guest post by Dr. Tim Ball

It is important for the person who leaked the emails from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) in November 2009 and 2010 to reveal themselves and release the remaining 200,000 emails. The public are increasingly aware of the inaccurate science and failed projections of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Those promoting the false science are pushing even harder as they lose ground, but a final disclosure would expose the full extent of the deceptions. This would force leaders to abandon policies already causing serious social and economic harm and develop policies based on proper science.

The IPCC failures are no surprise and inevitable because of the political rather than scientific agenda exposed in the first 6000 emails. Evidence from leaked information from AR5, the next IPCC Report, indicate they have not changed. Equally important, the people involved at the CRU and the IPCC think they’ve escaped responsibility with the release of the Norfolk Police Report. It was the engineered response they wanted and in its own way is deceptive.

On July 18, 2012 the Norfolk Police closed their investigation because of the “Realistic prospect of identifying the offender or offenders and launching criminal proceedings within the time constraints imposed by law”. They also concluded the attack was carried out “remotely via the Internet”, which is not surprising and does not eliminate a whistleblower.

They further deflected the whistleblower claim saying there is “no evidence to suggest that anyone working at or associated with the University of East Anglia was involved in the crime”. It is very unlikely that a whistleblower would work from within the University and run the risk of easy exposure. Most people working at CRU would likely have external access, so they could continue work at home, or when traveling to the numerous worldwide IPCC climate conferences.

Canadian network engineer Lance Levsen after detailed analysis showed, convincingly, the source was someone within the university. He concluded, “For the hacker to have collected all of this information s/he would have required extraordinary capabilities…to crack an Administrative file server to get to the emails and crack numerous workstations, desktops, and servers to get the documents.” Access to the files is a major hurdle, but once inside there is a bigger challenge. Which files do you select? Whoever released the files knew which ones were significant. This required considerable knowledge of climate science as well as the politics and machinations of the people involved.

A comment posted on Anthony Watt’s web site encapsulates the problem. “It would take a hacker massive amounts of work to parse through decades of emails and files.” The commenter suggested a different scenario that involved hacking a single file. Such a file would exist because of “an ongoing process of internally collating this information for an FOI response is entirely consistent with what we find in the file.” The problem with this argument is that the emails appeared in November 2009, at which time both the CRU and the University of East Anglia were rejecting all FOI requests. In January 2005 Phil Jones states that he will be using IPR (Intellectual Property Rights) to shelter the data from Freedom of Information requests.” In an email on August 20th 2008, Prof. Jones says “The FOI line we’re all using is this. IPCC is exempt from any countries FOI – the skeptics have been told this. Even though we (MOHC, CRU/UEA) possibly hold relevant info the IPCC is not part our remit (mission statement, aims etc) therefore we don’t have an obligation to pass it on.” It is unlikely anyone did much work preparing files to answer FOI requests. Even if they did, files for an FOI request are different from those required to expose corruption and still required selection.

Levsen reached a solid and logical conclusion “the simplest explanation or strategy tends to be the best one”. “The simplest explanation in this case is that someone at UEA found it and released it to the wild and the release of FOIA2009.zip wasn’t because of some hacker, but because of a leak from UEA by a person with scruples.”

How did the CRU people and others exposed in the emails essentially avoid any accountability? Part was likely due to groupthink defined by Irving Janis. “Groups affected by groupthink ignore alternatives and tend to take irrational actions that dehumanize other groups.  A group is especially vulnerable to groupthink when its members are similar in background, when the group is insulated from outside opinions, and when there are no clear rules for decision-making.” In his Report for a combined Congressional investigative committees on the “hockey stick” Professor Wegman identifies the insulation. “It is important to note the isolation of the paleoclimate community.” Phil Jones said the banter was typical, which is a disturbing and instructive comment in itself.

Every time a serious problem occurred for IPCC official climate science or those promoting it, they hired professional spin doctors. Why do ‘official’ climate scientists need spin doctors? Answer, because they practice politics not science. Climategate, like it’s namesake Watergate, became exposed by the cover up, in this case disgraceful, atypical behavior disclosed in the emails.

After the November 2009 leak the University of East Anglia hired Neil Wallis of Outside Organization to handle the fall out. University spokesperson Trevor Davies said it was a “reputation management” problem, which he claimed they don’t handle well. Apparently they didn’t consider telling the truth. The leaked emails triggered a shock wave that required a top political spin-doctor. Wallis, a former editor at the News of The World, was later arrested in connection with the phone hacking scandals that led to the resignation of London Metropolitan Police Commissioner and Deputy Commissioner, as well as Andy Coulson, Prime Minister Cameron’s press secretary.

CRU Director Phil Jones immediately called in the police, which established the event potentially as a criminal act. This raises the question of what he had to hide. If there was nothing in the files of consequence, then loss of the information had no currency. The British House of Commons’ Science and Technology Committee perpetuated the criminal idea by referring to emails as “stolen” in their whitewash investigation of Jones’ behavior. They didn’t even take testimony from scientists qualified to address the problems with the science, yet still concluded the science was solid.

Terminology used is apparently important and possibly done on advice. Involving the police froze further disclosure of information and created the idea it was a crime. Calling it a theft or a hacking reinforced this with an implication for future legal action. Reportedly, hacked material or stolen information is not admissible in court, unlike information disclosed by a whistleblower.

A special police unit achieved the desired result of letting the investigation drag out past the statute of limitations and then concluded there was no evidence of an inside leak. It is critical to remember the implications went beyond the CRU because its members dominated and controlled the principle portions of the IPCC Reports. The person who released the information apparently knew this because it was timed to derail the Conference of The Parties (COP) 15 scheduled for Copenhagen in December 2009.

The first 1000 emails included some selected to expose behavior unacceptable even without knowledge of climatology. Others show how the anthropogenic global warming (AGW) science was conjured. Exposure of CRU members was necessary because they dominated and controlled the vital portions of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Reports. The leaks achieved their objective of derailing the political program of COP 15. The COP was in a bind because their starting point and assumption is the validity of IPCC science.

COP 15 scheduled for December 2009 in Copenhagen Denmark offered the ideal opportunity for exposing the corrupted science. “The main contentious issues in Copenhagen where whether or not to abandon the Kyoto Protocol, which binds almost 40 industrialized nations to cut greenhouse gas emissions. At the heart of the dispute, developing nations wanted to extend the 1997 Kyoto Protocol and work out a separate new deal. But most developed nations wanted to merge Kyoto into a single new accord obliging all nations to fight global warming.” It was a critical meeting because failure probably meant the end of Kyoto and any attempt at replacement or modification. The leak was effective because Kyoto expired on December 31, 2012, despite further attempts at resuscitation at COP 16 in Durban.

Who, on the inside, had “scruples” about what was going on. Some of the clues lie in how the person attempted to release the information without personal exposure. The ‘leaker’ was determined to have the material out before the Copenhagen Conference. He sent it out through a Russian IP that reportedly prevented a trace.

George Monbiot of the Guardian actively sold the scientific material produced by the IPCC, which makes his reaction more telling. Reportedly shocked by the emails he said “why was CRU’s response to this issue such a total car crash.” George, the answer is because they were deceiving you, the politicians and the public. Meanwhile, you attacked scientists who knew what was going on and dared to speak out. I can attest that you were told.

The spin-doctors pursued the coverup by putting in place two investigation panels that separated out the science and limited their investigation with terms of reference. I know how this is done because I have refused to participate in such political deceptions. The trick is to pretend to remove the politics by establishing arms-length from governemnt committees to investigate and report. These committees are identified by their Chairs, Muir Russell and Lord Oxburgh. Conflicts and questions immediately arose about the integrity and independence of the committees, which the parties tried to address. The emails and their content were already arousing suspicions.

The University of East Anglia (UEA) and Muir Russell both said the Lord Oxburgh inquiry would examine the science. At a press conference on February 11, 2010 Muir Russell said, “Our job is to investigate scientific rigor, the honesty, the openness and the due process of CRU’s approach as well as the other things in the remit and compliance with rules. It’s not our job to audit CRU’s scientific conclusions. That would require a different set of skills and resources.” The Lord Oxburgh investigation was doomed from the start. “A member of the House of Lords appointed to investigate the veracity of climate science has close links to businesses that stand to make billions of pounds from low-carbon technology.”

The cover-up was easily detectable. Clive Crook, Senior editor of The Atlantic wrote a searing indictment of the whitewash. “I had hoped, not very confidently, that the various Climategate inquiries would be severe. This would have been a first step towards restoring confidence in the scientific consensus. But no, the reports make things worse. At best they are mealy-mouthed apologies; at worst they are patently incompetent and even wilfully wrong. The climate-science establishment, of which these inquiries have chosen to make themselves a part, seems entirely incapable of understanding, let alone repairing, the harm it has done to its own cause.”

Worse, they concluded that what went on was within normal patterns of interchanges and activities between a group of scientists. It’s inconceivable that any reasonable person reading the emails, especially the second 5000, can reach such a conclusion. Meanwhile, we still don’t know who leaked the material.

It is helpful to study the details and consider the people involved. The final police report concluded it was not a whistleblower, but that challenges the evidence. However, it was a valuable conclusion for the coverup. Phil Jones, former Director of the CRU, knew the potential damage and legal implications of the file contents. Ironically, in order to claim the files stolen and a crime committed Jones admitted the files belonged to CRU. What would have happened if he denied they were files from the CRU?

Internal Candidate

There are several internal candidates, but I think the strongest is Keith Briffa. The person was apparently disaffected by the conflicts within the CRU, but also the implications of false data as the basis for world policy. Emails illustrate Briffa’s conflicts within the group. On October 5th 2009 Wigley wrote to Jones “It is distressing to read that American Stinker item. But Keith does seem to have got himself into a mess. As I pointed out in emails, Yamal is insignificant…….I presume they went thru papers to see if Yamal was cited, a pretty foolproof method if you ask me. Perhaps these things can be explained clearly and concisely — but I am not sure Keith is able to do this as he is too close to the issue and probably quite pissed of (sic). I think Keith needs to be very, very careful in how he handles this. I’d be willing to check over anything he puts together.” It appears Wigley is aware of the danger of Briffa doing something rash, like releasing documents. Jones forwarded the email to Briffa, which would likely only irritate him more.

Briffa’s dislike of Mann had a long history. On 22 September 1999, almost ten years before the leaks, Briffa confronted Mann in a long email that included the comment, “I believe that the recent warmth was probably matched about 1000 years ago.” Treasonous words for Mann’s hockey stick paper that claimed no medieval warm period existed. Mann appeared to back off. He wrote, “Walked into this hornet’s nest this morning! Keith and Phil have both raised some very good points.” In reality, he puts Briffa down again. “SO(sic) I think we’re in the position to say/resolve somewhat more than, frankly, than Keith does, about the temperature history of the past millennium. And the issues I’ve spelled out all have to be dealt with in the chapter.” One cynical comment from Mann says, “And I certainly don’t want to abuse my lead authorship by advocating my own work.” It’s an interesting comment in light of his role in the IPCC 2001 Science Report and Summary for Policy Makers. It is also a concern the Wegman Report identified in Recommendation 1; “Especially when massive amounts of public monies and human lives are at stake, academic work should have a more intense level of scrutiny and review. It is especially the case that authors of policy-related documents like the IPCC report, Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis, should not be the same people as those that constructed the academic papers.”

On 17th June 2002 Briffa wrote to Dr Edward Cook about a letter involving Esper and Michael Mann, “I have just read this letter – and I think it is crap. I am sick to death of Mann stating his reconstruction represents the tropical area just because it contains a few (poorly temperature representative) tropical series. He is just as capable of regressing these data against any other “target” series, such as the increasing trend of self-opinionated verbage (sic) he has produced over the last few years, and … (better say no more)”Cook responds; “We both know the probable flaws in Mike’s recon (reconstruction), particularly as it relates to the tropical stuff…. It is puzzling to me that a guy as bright as Mike would be so unwilling to evaluate his own work a bit more objectively.”

Wigley didn’t help. Here is the first part of a belittling email from Wigley to Briffa on 10 January 2006. Thanx for this. Interesting. However, I do not think your response is very good. Further, there are grammatical and text errors, and (shocking!!) you have spelled McKitrick wrong. This is a sure way to piss them off. It appears to typify Wigley’s patronizing way of talking to wayward CRU members, especially those who undermined the elimination of the Medieval Warm Period.

Conflict continued as Briffa expressed his concern. Mann made some overtures, but on April 29th 2007 Briffa responded, “I found myself questioning the whole process and being often frustrated at the formulaic way things had to be done – often wasting time and going down dead ends. I really thank you for taking the time to say these kind words. I tried hard to balance the needs of the science and the IPCC, which were not always the same. I worried that you might think I gave the impression of not supporting you well enough while trying to report on the issues and uncertainties.What damning commentary about what the CRU and the IPCC were doing?

Briffa may have worked with the Information Officer at the University who was under pressure for Freedom of Information (FOI) requests. In March 2009, we learned Briffa was ill and he and his wife were cancelling meetings with people at the CRU. Did this give him time to think about what was happening? Maybe, but his treatment by Mann and the sinking ship was likely an impetus. Whatever the answer, any reading of the emails show they were anything but normal correspondence between colleagues. It became more than a scientific disagreement.

Because of Jones’ actions the Norfolk police, a regional force, involved the national government through the National Domestic Extremism Unit, which was surely another measure of the seriousness of what was involved in the files. This led to the University of East Anglia turning over all the files related to skeptics and their requests through Freedom of Information (FOI). Apparently, the police and subsequent investigations accepted the CRU claims that requests for information were politically driven and caused hardship that diverted them from their work. When police interrogated skeptics, they asked about political affiliations. Why?

The idea of politics as the only motive developed because the CRU and the IPCC made global warming a purely political issue. Besides, why has motive got anything to do with the requests for scientific data and methods, especially when funded by taxes and used to create potentially devastating policies?

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Steve Oregon
February 27, 2013 7:19 pm

Pool some money together and offer some compensation? Or rather a reward?

mojomojo
February 27, 2013 7:24 pm

Was Rupert Murdachs news organization hacking private voicemails during the period of the climategate release?

February 27, 2013 7:43 pm

mojomojo says:
February 27, 2013 at 7:24 pm
“Was Rupert Murdachs news organization hacking private voicemails during the period of the climategate release?”
There was no hacking evolved, the reporters actually had access to default settings, there is a difference between being intelligent and being opportunistic.

dp
February 27, 2013 7:48 pm

If Anthony is shooting for the Bloggie trophy for Climate Tabloids this is the article that should push him over the top. It being over the top, itself. Certainly Briffa doesn’t need this speculation visited upon him and it is a travesty that it has.
[Reply: Anyone can be a critic. But note that this is an opinion piece, by an author other than Anthony. You are, of course, free to submit your own article. — mod.]

dp
February 27, 2013 8:04 pm

Which of us is speaking for Anthony? I presume he retains editorial control and the buck stops in Chico and so is finally owns the responsibility publishing for all content including these comments.

George McFly
February 27, 2013 8:15 pm

I suggest the person who leaked the material should be called Deep Drive…..

D.B. Stealey
February 27, 2013 8:24 pm

dp,
As suggested why don’t you write an article? I doubt that you would be told what to write, so you’re off base about editorial control.
Then you can find out what it’s like when people like you take pot shots. Go ahead, give it a try.
I double dog dare ya.

Gary
February 27, 2013 8:35 pm

Seems to me FOIA took considerable care to release mostly just e-mails related to certain key words and to try to avoid broad personal information release. Leaking the entire rest of the file would NOT follow the same pattern.
The Climategate E-mails have been a saving grace and infinitely useful. It showed everyone there was something there to look for. It helped in court to fight for the release of thousands of other Emails that were not exempt from FOI act requests. However, simply releasing the rest of the Climategate archive would undo the effort that FOIA went thru to release the information in as honorable a fashion as possible.
If there is anything out there it that there should be legal access to the courts have been fighting it out for years now and already released huge amounts. I don’t think FOIA should do a wide open leak of everything trying to get to the remaining infinitesimal bits the courts haven’t decided whether we have the right to yet.
I think that would do only a little good and undo a lot of what FOIA has accomplished.

Sad-But-True-Its-You
February 27, 2013 8:37 pm

Oh Dear,
From way way up;
“t is puzzling to me that a guy as bright as Mike would be so unwilling to evaluate his own work a bit more objectively.”
Me thinks that IS an, i.e. one of the major issues. MEM sees himself as God and impure to any law, physical, ethical, moral, Federal, State, Local, or even International Like the UN Laws regarding Prisoners of War. Sad note that the USA does in fact NOT recognize this law nor even the Court of The Hague.
Snicker snicker the ICE, on Napolitano order released ‘detainees’ because on ongoing complaints of torture, unlawful detention, grand theft, extortion, murder. You do NOT want to find yourself in … ICE County … no no no.
Ergo.
If Obama and his ‘favorites’ were serious about the sequester, he would forfeit his own salary plus healthcare plus social security plus retirement plus life time security detail plus Presidential Library plus dental plus perks plus clothing PLUS PLUS budget for Michel plus ‘The Kids’ pay and benefits and retirement and healthcare as well as ALL staff and departments of the ‘White House’.
Were he, just he, to do this … the savings could be 100 billion dollars in 20 years hence.
But NOOOOOOOOOOO ! And that is a gargantuan and awfully smelly BUTT.
For this pay, seems Obama would have knowledge of toilet paper and its huge benefits.
XD

Anon
February 27, 2013 8:47 pm

We have Climategate 1 in 2009, and Climategate 2 in 2011, respectively, that on a large scale exposed violation of the Scientific Method amongst the involving Climate Scientists, especially Mike Mann, Phil Jones, et cetera, turning Climate Science, in short: Science into Pseudo-Science at BEST, and/or Junk Science at WORST, distortion of the “peer review” process, and deceit in general. (My remark: A mafia behavior.)
But, BEFORE, any Climategate scandal, whether 1, 2, or a future 3, we ALREADY had a looming TEMPERAUREGATE that was already hidden at least indirectly in the inscription of IPCC in 1988, due to these facts in “Surface Temperature Records: Policy-Driven Deception?,” SPPI Original Paper, Updated: Aug. 27, 2010, by Joseph D´Aleo and Anthony Watts, via http://rps3.com/Pages/Burt_Rutan_on_Climate_Change.htm :
“Around 1990,NOAA lost more than three-quarters of the climate measuring stations around the world. It can be shown that country by country, they lost stations with a bias towards higher-latitude, higher-altitude and rural locations, all of which had a tendency to be cooler.” (Ibid, page 9.), and;
“All these issues with the underlying data ensure that the mean global surface temperature for each month and year would show a false-positive temperature anomaly.” (Ibid, page 10.)

Steve McIntyre
February 27, 2013 8:48 pm

DB Stealey

Mosher told me he knows who it is. Even told me the name. But being somewhat intoxicated at the event, I can’t recall who he said it was.

He doesn’t “know” who it is – Mosher and I have talked at great length about this topic and I guarantee you that he doesn’t “know”. He has speculated on the identity of RC/FOIA. His speculations are not ridiculous ones, like the one in this post, but they are nothing more than speculations. Moreover, there are plausible arguments against his candidate – who seems implausible to me.

John Francis
February 27, 2013 8:53 pm

I think the whistleblower’s life would be in great danger if his or her identity were revealed. Not from climate scientists but from the many powerful and ruthless interests who benefit from the AGW swindle.
However I do agree with Dr. Ball that now would be a great time to release the rest of the emails. King O. Is determined to plunge the US into carbon taxes and cap and trade; anything that might help slow or stop it would be of great benefit to the entire world.

D.B. Stealey
February 27, 2013 8:54 pm

Steve McIntyre,
You’re probably right. But the way it happened, we were discussing Steven’s great guess on the Gleick affair, and it occurred to me to ask him who he thought FOIA was. Steven promptly answered, “It was _____.” [As I said, I don’t remember the name, which wasn’t familiar to me.]
So he may have been speculating, but he made it sound like he knew. And the Gleick thing gave him some credibility.

pottereaton
February 27, 2013 9:03 pm

Tim Ball has been on the frontline of the climate wars for a long time and has sacrificed a lot for what he believes. He’s fighting the good fight against Mann in Canada. If Anthony wants to publish his opinion, I’m fine with that. We are all free to disagree with the opinions expressed here, which is not the case at RealClimate where Mann holds court.
It might be that another release of climategate material could measurably help Tim Ball in his lawsuit. If that is the case, can you blame him for advocating the release of the remaining material? That said, Ball goes overboard in demanding FOIA reveal his identity. That would be a life-altering and possibly dangerous thing to do. I’ve always felt that the theory that Briffa was the whistleblower was far-fetched, but we simply do not know and everyone should be free to speculate.
Having been snipped numerous times by Steve McIntyre on his blog– and justifiably so in most cases– I will turn the tables on him and say that the tone of his post here was needlessly harsh and not in character for him. What happened to the good-humored, lampooning Steve?

D.B. Stealey
February 27, 2013 9:04 pm

Harry_read_me file [from Climategate]:
Here, the expected 1990 – 2003 period is missing – so the correlations aren’t so hot! Yet the WMO codes and station names / locations are identical (or close). What the hell is supposed to happen here?
Oh yeah – there is no ‘supposed’, I can make it up. So I have

[source]

john robertson
February 27, 2013 9:26 pm

The “man of mystery” does greater good for his or her self and all of us, by remaining unknown.
Keeps the team in doubt, keeps the focus on this abuse of civilization and spares his/her family all the vitriol and hatred our opponents seem to bring to every discussion.
Sure I would love to see the encrypted stuff, but the most good has already been done.
Prior to November 2009, I was concerned about the abuses of process my government agencies were indulging in with respect to global warming and following some of the trials and tribulations of Steve McIntyre as he tried to access the data, that supposedly proved CAGW.
The cause smelt a little wonky, but hard to pin down any specifics.
Seemed we would be saddled with dues, imposed for our own good, at Copenhagen and the relentless fees and restrictions would sweep our freedoms away.
By early 2010 doubt was, turned to disgust and rage.
3 years later, the zombie is dead, its supporters are reduced to weak imitators of Monty Pythons dead parrot comedy.
The term, “Denier” has come back to haunt its source, the major scam artists are cashing out, the useful idiots are left fighting as a rearguard cover.
The IPCC has conceded a pause in warming, CO2 emissions continue to grow.
History is back, yes the past periods were planetary and warmer than today.
Such a climb down by government agents, in such a short time is unprecedented.
Check the 7 rules of bureaucracy.Delay delay delay never had a chance.
Climategate and the end of the warm part of this weather cycle have destroyed the cause.
The past vitriol and arrogance of the believers will make it very hard for them to gracefully retreat, serves them right, the means justifies the waste and stupidity?
Sorry some one has to pay.
The internet will be attacked next as this excess of history must be erased to protect the “cause”.

February 27, 2013 9:27 pm

the whistleblower has no need to reveal themselves. Although I reckon it is about time the pass phrase was revealed. Waiting for an IPCC event or similar undertaking would run the risk of its disappearing in a sea of spin. Let it out when its quiet and there is no spin cloaking material to hand… serve it cold, ice cold..

Jeff Alberts
February 27, 2013 9:28 pm

Caleb says:
February 27, 2013 at 3:01 pm
It would restore my faith in climate science, to a degree, if it turned out someone like Briffa simply got disgusted at the antics of his peers.

Briffa’s antics are right up there with Mann’s. The Most Influential Tree In The World is testament to that. If he were to publicly own up to it being a mistake, I might, might, consider giving him a break. But when McIntyre exposed Yamal for what it was, garbage, Briffa fought back.
These guys will never learn that having McIntyre on their side would have helped their careers, not destroyed them.

dp
February 27, 2013 9:33 pm

D.B. – do you understand the difference between editorial control and writing an article? I have done both as it happens, but my writing an article is not what this is about. I agree with MacIntyre that this article needed not to have been published. It is a thinly veiled accusation against Briffa and which cannot be proved by Ball nor denied by Briffa. That is the clue that it is bad writing and worse editorial policy. It is reckless speculation bordering on being actionable.
I had not seen Steve’s comments prior to adding my own and now I’m surprised (not!) to see a mod challenge me while not holding Steve to the same standard. Was he/she cautiously telegraphing a broader message? It looks bad from here, I can tell you.
My previouos paragraph is intended so show how that speculation crap works.

u.k.(us)
February 27, 2013 9:42 pm

dp says:
February 27, 2013 at 8:04 pm
Which of us is speaking for Anthony? I presume he retains editorial control and the buck stops in Chico and so is finally owns the responsibility publishing for all content including these comments
===========
In finality, who isn’t speaking for someone.
No matter the content.

davidmhoffer
February 27, 2013 9:44 pm

D. B. Stealey;
So he may have been speculating, but he made it sound like he knew.
>>>>>>>>>>>
Yeah, well he makes it sound like he knows physics too…
Dr. Ball
I share Steve McIntyre’s view, though perhaps not for the same reasons. For those of us in the IT business, the evidence that climategate was the work of a whistle blower is compelling. Compelling, but circumstantial. As for evidence that Briffa is FOIA, there is none. I myself have speculated aloud that Briffa may be trying to “come in from the cold” but the evidence you present establishes nothing more than motive. If being disgruntled with colleagues or bosses is sufficient, then everyone from the janitor to the receptionist to co-op students to Jones himself in a fit of conscience has motive. Motive and access. The only difference between countless other employees and Briffa is that we know about Briffa’s frustrations and concerns. Unless the CRU is some workplace nirvana that doesn’t exist anywhere else in reality, there were plenty of others with as much or perhaps more motive than Briffa, we just don’t know their personal stories.

JDN
February 27, 2013 9:56 pm

No, it’s not time.

half tide rock
February 27, 2013 10:55 pm

The source of the leaks has done the world a great service and the ramifications to that person could be significant. The demonstrated duplicity shown is outside the bounds of reasonable behavior and I judge treasonous considering the harm to our quality of life the false narrative has encouraged. Unless this community has a plan to protect the source of the e-mails then I seriously hope that the source remains unidentified. Those who have so much to be thankful for should respect the courage and attempt to create an environment where additional brave individuals taking the lesson from this incident might consider similar actions. This post should have stopped at the plea and concentrated on the gratitude and protection that would be afforded. It is now unfortunate.

richard verney
February 27, 2013 10:55 pm

There is an assumption being made that the further 200,000 emails are damning. They might not be. Although it would be time consuming to read 200,000 email, lawyers frequently read vast quantities of documents in days.
One reason why the further emails have not been released may be that they have been scan read and considered to be of little importance.
However, the threat of disclosure places pressure on those involved since it is likely that they are not fully aware of what further material might be contained in the unreleased file. It is conceivable that the whistle blower considers that the threat of a further release is the best use of a whole load of trivial emails which if released would in practice inflict little further harm..
I am not saying that this is the case, but it is one possibility. Until such time as one sees the further emails, it is all a matter of conjecture as to what may or may not be contained in them.

richard verney
February 27, 2013 11:16 pm

Richard M says:
February 27, 2013 at 4:35 pm
I’m with those who would prefer to keep it as it is now. The MSM will ignore it completely and so would the politicians. It would be labelled as old news. Yes, it would make for nice discussions among skeptics but that really does little to change the current state of affairs.
The current “pause” is much better ammo because it allows skeptics to claim the “believers” are in denial. That gets them very upset. Powerful stuff.
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
Subject to the unreleased emails containing something really explosive, I share that view.
Mother nature and the present economic difficulties of the developed world are proving the case against cAGW.
If there is no return to warming before the end of this decade and if the economic problems have not been resolved by then (and most economists are suggesting that it will take a generation to sort out – and due to the ever increasing expense of an aging population, the economic position, by the end of the decade, could in fact be worse not better), it is difficult to see how this scam can survive. It is presently on its deathbed and on life support. There only needs to be some power cuts (due to mad energy policies being employed by most western governments) during a cold harsh winter to cut that life support off.