Document suggests that a Climate activist shadow organization was behind the #RICO20 allegations

This is in the news today via “Climate NEXUS”, which is a Madison Ave. PR firm:

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced that he is launching a legal probe into Exxon’s climate denial. The inquiry will look into both consumer and investor protection laws, covering the oil giant’s activity dating back to the 1970s. Schneiderman’s investigation could open “a sweeping new legal front in the battle over climate change,” says the New York Times, which broke the story. Two separate reports by InsideClimate News and the Los Angeles Times uncovered that Exxon has known about the dangers of climate change since the 1970s but sowed doubt by funding climate change skeptics to preserve its business. Exxon has been compared extensively to the tobacco industry, which was convicted of racketeering in 2000 for deliberately deceiving the public about the dangers of its products.

It seems all this is part of an orchestrated plan:

RICO-TEERING: HOW CLIMATE ACTIVISTS ‘KNEW’ THEY WERE GOING TO PIN THE BLAME ON EXXON

Guest opinion by Shub Niggurath

Picture this.

You are a scientist. You wake up one morning and go:

“Why don’t I write a letter to the US Attorney General asking her to throw fossil fuel companies in jail under the RICO act?

It would be my civic deed for the day”.

Sounds plausible?

No it doesn’t. Climate scientists have a penchant for signing activist letters. But letters pushing legal advice to an Attorney General recommending prosecution of opponents?

So where do these strange ideas come from?

Step forward ‘Climate Accountability Institute’

The Climate Accountability Institute (CAI) is a small front attempting to marry ‘climate concerns’ to environmentalism and tobacco prohibitionist tactics. But ‘small’ is a relative term in the climate activist world.

In 2012 the CAI held a ‘workshop’ in La Jolla California. It was ‘conceived’ by Naomi Oreskes and others, and called ‘Establishing Accountability for Climate Change Damages: Lessons from Tobacco Control.’ Stanton Glantz, a prominent tobacco control activist scientist was present as were a clutch of lawyers, climate scientists, communication professionals, PR agency heads, bloggers and journalists.

They released a report (pdf):

CAI report

The workshop was an ‘exploratory, open-ended dialogue’ on the use of  ‘lessons from tobacco-related education, laws, and litigation to address climate change.’

The headline conclusion was essentially conspiracy theory. Here it is, verbatim (emphasis mine):

A key breakthrough in the public and legal case for tobacco control came when internal documents came to light showing the tobacco industry had knowingly misled the public.Similar documents may well exist in the vaults of the fossil fuel industry and their trade associations and front groups…

Why do these mythical documents needed to be ‘unearthed’?

While we currently lack a compelling public narrative about climate change in the United States, we may be close to coalescing around one. Furthermore, climate change may loom larger today in the public mind than tobacco did when public health advocates began winning policy victories.

The reader should take a moment to grasp the momentous logic: We know legally ‘incriminating documents’ (their choice of words) ‘may’ exist, because tobacco activists had a breakthrough with such documents. They need to be found in order to make climate change a ‘looming threat’ in the public mind.

Try thinking of a more reverse-engineered form of activism.

The first chapter in the report is ‘Lessons from Tobacco Control’. It is mainly one section called ‘The Importance of Documents in Tobacco Litigation’

importance tobacco

We learn next to nothing about these supposed ‘documents’ from the report. After all, they haven’t been released or even found.

But ‘the documents’ were very valuable:

says ‘one of the most important lessons to emerge from the history of tobacco litigation’ was the ‘value of bringing internal industry documents to light’.

There was little doubt about their existence:

… many participants suggested that incriminating documents may exist that demonstrate collusion among the major fossil fuel companies …

Since they were so sure they exist, careful plotting was needed on companies whose vaults to raid

He [Glantz] stressed the need to think carefully about which companies and which trade groups might have documents that could be especially useful.

Stanton Glantz was a vocal workshop participant:exciting

Glantz was so excited he proposed using the tobacco archives platform at the University of California San Francisco for climate documents (which were yet to be found)

Because the Legacy Collection’s software and infrastructure is already in place, Glantz suggested it could be a possible home for a parallel collection of documents from the fossil fuel industry pertaining to climate change.

In what mode were the documents to be used?

establish

Most importantly, the release of these documents meant that charges of conspiracy or racketeering could become a crucial component of tobacco litigation

Having firmly established that documents convenient to their strategy existed, the delegates moved on to discussing how to obtain them

.strategies

The answer was once again clear: ‘lawsuits’. It was not just lawsuits, it was ‘Congressional hearings’, ‘sympathetic state attorney generals’ and ‘false advertising claims’.

State attorneys general can also subpoena documents, raising the possibility that a single sympathetic state attorney general might have substantial success in bringing key internal documents to light

Oreskes had a bunch of advertisements with her:

Oreskes noted that she has some of the public relations memos from the group and asked whether a false advertising claim could be brought in such a case.

Even libel suits were deemed useful:

Roberta Walburn noted that libel suits can also serve to obtain documents that might shed light on industry tactics.

Once the documents were in the bag, a story needed to be spun. :

In lawsuits targeting carbon producers, lawyers at the workshop agreed, plaintiffs need

to make evidence of a conspiracy a prominent part of their case.

Now you know where the line on how ‘fossil fuel companies ‘knew’ they were doing wrong but yet did it’ comes from. The cries of ‘it’s a conspiracy!’ are planned and pre-meditated, on lawyers’ advice.

This is where RICO came in:

Richard Ayres, an experienced environmental attorney, suggested that the RICO Act, which had been used effectively against the tobacco industry, could similarly be used to bring a lawsuit against carbon producers.

Richard Ayres is no slouch. A prominent environmental lawyer, he is co-founder of the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

Ayres knew starting lawsuits against productive companies wouldn’t look good. They needed to be spun:

It has to be something positive

How? By dressing it up as injury ‘compensation’

Even if your ultimate goal might be to shut down a company, you still might be wise to start out by asking for compensation for injured parties.”

The suggestions appeared to grow outlandish at every turn. Richard Heede, one of CAI’s members, had come up with a system for blaming individual companies:

Heede is working to derive the proportion of the planet’s atmospheric carbon load that is traceable to the fossil fuels produced and marketed by each of these companies

Heede’s bizarre formulas, we learn, were received ‘positively’ by ‘most of the workshop’s participants’. One UCS participant felt that ‘it could potentially be useful as part of a coordinated campaign to identify key climate “wrongdoers.” Another felt it was useful in blaming faceless corporate entities instead of countries thereby bypassing provoking patriotic impulses in international negotiations.

Heede’s work was funded by Greenpeace. Of note, Greenpeace counsel Jasper Teulings was present at the meeting.

An inspired Oreskes then appears to have proposed blaming sea level rise on corporations:

Picking up on this notion, Naomi Oreskes suggested that some portion of sea level rise could be attributed to the emissions caused by a single carbon-producing company

The oil company Exxon made its appearance in her example:

She suggested, “You might be able to say, ‘Here’s Exxon’s contribution to what’s happening to Key West or Venice.’”

This was a strategy Glantz liked:

…Stanton Glantz expressed some enthusiasm about such a strategy, based on his experience with tobacco litigation. As he put it, “I would be surprised if the industry chose to attack the calculation that one foot of flooding in Key West could be attributed to ExxonMobil.

The conspiratorial tide did not recede. Former computer scientist John Mashey claimed collusion between ‘climate change deniers’ and fossil fuel companies:

[Mashey] presented a brief overview of some of his research, which traces funding, personnel, and messaging connections between roughly 600 individuals …

The penultimate section in the report is on how delegates planned to win ‘public opinion’. Even with RICO, some felt it was ‘not easy’ (‘RICO is not easy. It is certainly not a sure win’ – Ayres) and others were wary of drawing the attention of “hostile legislators who might seek to undermine them”.

With public opinion, the delegates were clearly divided. PR mavens, lawyers and activists wanted to cry fraud, paint up villains and create outrage:

To mobilize, people often need to be outraged.

Daniel Yankelovich a ‘public opinion researcher’ involved in ‘citizen education’ appears to have balked at the ‘sue, sue, sue’ chanting. Court cases are useful only after the public had been won over, he said.

daniel

It is not clear he grasped the activists and lawyers aimed for the same with a spectacular legal victory or headlines generated by court cases and bypass the whole issue of ‘citizen education’ .

The workshop ended and there was ‘agreement’. ‘Documents’ needed to be obtained. Legal action was needed both for ‘wresting potentially useful internal documents’ and ‘maintaining pressure on the industry’.

A consensus had emerged

… an emerging consensus on a strategy that incorporates legal action with a narrative that creates public outrage.

The participants, we learn

…made commitments to try to coordinate future efforts, continue discussing strategies for gaining access to internal documents from the fossil fuel industry and its affiliated climate denial network…

group

Photo (c) Brenda Ekwurzel, from the report

Postscript:

Why is the report important? Because climate activists have done everything the delegates said they wanted done, in the report.

Everyone from climate skeptics like Roy Spencer, columnists like Holman Jenkins Jr and even aconsensusist like William Connolley has been left scratching their head. However, from RICO to ‘Exxon knew’ — the twin defibrillator paddles in use to reanimate a moribund climate Frankenstein — thepresent actions of climate activists have been none but the pre-meditated ones presented in the report.

These include the latest letter from US Senators to Exxon, the conspiratorial ‘Exxon Knew’ campaign with the portrayal of old Exxon reports by InsideClimateNews as ‘internal documents’, the RICO letter from scientists and much more. Particularly, with the pathetic ‘journalism’ of InsideClimateNews it is almost as if climate activists have willed these ‘documents’ into existence – just as they were advised.

The CAI are free to plot the downfall of their opponents. But it is somewhat of a surprise to see theentirety of their ideas to be picked up and translated into action by the intellectually bankrupt climate activist movement.

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November 6, 2015 10:14 am

I’m surprised that the animal welfare organisations don’t sue them for inciting people to ‘put a tiger in their tank’ back in the days when those in the know were inciting us that an iceage was about to begin.

Tom Judd
Reply to  son of mulder
November 6, 2015 10:40 am

I actually tried to do that. I was in the hospital for weeks afterwards. The stitches I had to have! Almost lost an arm.

H.R.
Reply to  Tom Judd
November 6, 2015 11:29 am

Tom… you put the tiger in head first, not tail first. Right there is where you went wrong.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Judd
November 6, 2015 11:42 am

All those cars driving around with tiger tails hanging from their gas caps should have been your first clue.

Geoff Sherrington
Reply to  Tom Judd
November 6, 2015 11:50 am

That is why we found it better to think of a female lion on the back seat.

H.R.
Reply to  Tom Judd
November 6, 2015 12:06 pm

That is why we found it better to think of a female lion on the back seat.

Yeah, but some of them just couldn’t bear it, Geoff; too modest in those days.

Editor
Reply to  Tom Judd
November 6, 2015 2:39 pm

These days you need a female cougar in the front seat.

ARW
November 6, 2015 10:17 am

Don’t for a minute think Exxon and their peer companies are going to take this lying down – witness Chevron and the Ecuador debacle. I do find it rather interesting to ponder the fact that the oil companies have been funding the very groups that theoretically could/would eventually try to take them down. Why would they do that? Well perhaps some fossil fuel futurists predicted this with some rather stunning clarity. The only way to truly debunk the frenetic babble the issues from the doom and death AGW cult is to actually get the whole thing in front of a judge. They will never win a Public Relations war. They (AGW’s) will then be forced to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the science supports their contentions. As of today I don’t think they could do that based on science. If they can’t, it does not matter what Exxon or any other company said in their internal correspondence about the potential for fossil fuel derived CO2 to cause temperatures to increase and adversely impact the earths biosphere in any meaningful and more importantly quantifiable way.

imoira
Reply to  ARW
November 6, 2015 1:30 pm

BP for ages was promoting global warming/climate change in full page newspaper ads. What is there to make me think that the likes of the Rockefellers and Buffet who own (or at least did own) hunks of shares in Exxon might not be behind this PR stunt?… and even behind the the whole global warming racket? What will they get out of any treaty in Paris?

Reply to  imoira
November 6, 2015 10:56 pm

Imoira
Let’s see now: The tobacco thing ended up in multibillion fine$ against Liggett & Myers, which were paid for by consumers (smokers) to the benefit of the Govt. taxman; BP went green in the 90s switching from British Petroleum to Beyond Petroleum, had an accident in the Gulf and STILL got hammered to the tune of $40billion to date; VW’s “Sins of Emission” ( NOxes) never mind the fact that Lightning outdoes VW diesels in NOx production by orders of magnitude, is likely to pay their pound of flesh in Kilograms (being metric), again in Billion$…….do I detect a pattern here? Exxon/Mobil it would seem have already been declared sinners, guilty of keeping secrets from us. Imagine how many Billion$ could be milked from that CA$H cow?!
It would seems that Sin, even if not Original is still very popular.

BallBounces
November 6, 2015 10:28 am

A key breakthrough in the public and legal case for tobacco control came when internal documents came to light showing the tobacco industry had knowingly misled the public. Similar documents may well exist in the vaults of the climate change scientists and their journalistic associations and environmentalist front groups…
Goose. Gander.

PaulH
November 6, 2015 10:28 am

A big Thank You! to Anthony for reading through that summary of their “workshop” so I don’t have to. I think my brain would have crashed before I reached page 10.
(A lot of white privilege on display in that photograph.)

nevket240
Reply to  PaulH
November 6, 2015 5:16 pm

Yes and a massive amount of ‘White Guilt”. White guilt is the new business model of the Ponzi Scam Legal industry. They have to keep on inventing new wrongs so they can step in and ‘Right it”. for a fee of course.
regards

Frank K.
November 6, 2015 10:29 am

EVERYONE: PLEASE READ THIS.
https://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2015/11/06/exxon-feeding-the-crocodile/
Basically, in the 1970s scientists thought that global COOLING was causing havoc on the Earth’s climate!
Case closed. Score one for Exxon.
(By the way, is someone going to argue that ALL products produced by the refining of oil and gas were harmful to humans?? REALLY?? Plastics and other synthetic materials, fuel for reliable transportation, electricity. These were all bad?? Really??? )

Robert of Ottawa
Reply to  Frank K.
November 6, 2015 11:04 am
Reply to  Robert of Ottawa
November 7, 2015 4:03 am

I’m a fan of that magazine. I subscribe.

Paul Westhaver
Reply to  Frank K.
November 6, 2015 12:34 pm

Frank,
You are attempting to be logical and use well known facts. This abuse of power by Schneiderman has nothing to do with logic. It is a well coordinated pre-Paris, pre-Clinton-fail, last ditch attack to gets some licks in by the anti-human left. Facts don’t matter. The prosecution will go forward. It is left-wing theater.

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  Frank K.
November 6, 2015 12:41 pm

Fertilizer to feed the world, fuel and lubricants to drive farm vehicles and drugs to fight disease?
If you think that more, healthier and better-fed humans is a bad thing, then I guess, yes.

Aussiebear
Reply to  Frank K.
November 6, 2015 1:22 pm

K. +10 for your last paragraph.

Logoswrench
November 6, 2015 10:36 am

So Exxon et al should have stopped producing oil and sent us into the dark ages several decades ago instead of in the future as these idiotic activists desire. Yeah. Nice. Why does insanity even get a hearing? Western culture has a bigger problem than climate alarmism, it’s the institutionalized insanity that gives a hearing to climate alarmism.

rw
November 6, 2015 10:41 am

Along with RICO maybe we need anti-parasite laws. Trouble is, who in Washington would pass them?

Another Scott
November 6, 2015 10:42 am

“To mobilize, people often need to be outraged.” People on the skeptic side are getting pretty outraged at all this heavy-handed anti-CO2 facism, I know I am….

Resourceguy
November 6, 2015 10:43 am

How many blocks is that from the NY Attorney General’s Office?

dp
November 6, 2015 10:54 am

If the court is honest and impartial then Exxon has nothing to be concerned about. That is, though, a pretty freaking big “If”.

November 6, 2015 10:55 am

This drive to find ‘incriminating documents’ is what motivated Peter Gleick to purloin documents from Heartland Inst . See http://fakegate.org/ .
What the documents showed was what fantastic influence Joe Bast has managed on a well under 10e6$ shoestring budget .
Truth , it turns out , is a lot cheaper to spread than delusion .

dp
November 6, 2015 10:57 am

I wonder what evidence the prosecution will use to prove beyond all reasonable doubt that Exxon was willfully wrong about the climate – modeled output, perhaps? This should be a good read. Invest in popcorn and let the party begin.

JPeden
November 6, 2015 10:58 am

So Exxon already knew that Catastrophic CO2-Climate Change is wrong and didn’t tell us? There’s got to be loads of money for me us in there somewhere!

November 6, 2015 11:22 am

Never stop your enemy when they are making a mistake.
Way too funny.
If Exxon can get these extortionists before a court, they will have the exquisite pleasure of discovery.
Define your terms.
Show your damages.
Show your evidence.
The very things the CCC has refused to do.
This whole scheme is built on half truths,suppositions and manufactured hearsay.
The surest sign of completely gullible people, is that believe their own BS.
What is this Climate Change of which they speak so shrilly?
If the court abides by our laws, the extortion ends right there.

November 6, 2015 11:49 am

What Exxon knew was meticulously spelled out in the articles below. They knew more than anyone of today’s crop about climate right from the 1970s. What is most remarkable is that 100,000 scientists today have advanced this knowledge hardly at all. They also published this stuff in peer reviewed literature along with prominent academics. No secret there. Indeed, it can be said that Exxon created the whole thing before the clisci community of today had been born.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/10/22/exxon-hits-back-on-ridiculous-rico-allegations-when-it-comes-to-climate-change-read-the-documents/
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/10/22/what-did-exxonmobil-know-and-when-did-they-know-it-part-1/
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/10/23/what-did-exxonmobil-know-and-when-did-they-know-it-part-deux-same-as-it-ever-was/

Ben Palmer
November 6, 2015 11:49 am

Initially a mechanical engineer, Stanton Glantz became professor of medicine and was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the UCSF http://tobacco.ucsf.edu/users/sglantz. His main – or sole – activity was advocating against the tobacco industry, He earned quite some money through his involvement in litigation cases in tobacco matters.
.

Caligula Jones
November 6, 2015 11:52 am

It seems that because these activists are basically moochers (in that they never spend their own money), “following the money” of all this astroturfing will eventually lead to someone who has their hands in the “sustainable energy” sector.
Bam. Pow. Instant conflict of interest.
Of course:
1) this means nothing to the public, or at least the loud and vocal minority who give a crap. Its war; and,
2) politically, this will go nowhere because the very politicians who can do anything about it think conflict of interest is for other people

mikewaite
November 6, 2015 12:01 pm

When this topic came up here last month
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/10/22/exxon-hits-back-on-ridiculous-rico-allegations-when-it-comes-to-climate-change-read-the-documents/
ken Cohen provided a link to a 10 page document of peer reviewed articles co authored by Exxon staff , usually with distinguished members of climate science academia.
http://cdn.exxonmobil.com/~/media/global/files/energy-and-environment/climate_peer_reviewed_publications_1980s_forward.pdf
I noticed that one name , a Exxon staffer, was prominent in many of the papers , H S Khesghi, and it turned out that he was actually at one time on one of the IPCC working parties.
This whole business is ridiculous.
Since Exxon , along with BP , have been funding climate academics and Greenpeace very handsomely over the years , they might , in justifiable annoyance , decide to stop all that funding and tell Greenpeace and others to seek their further funding from Oreskes and the Clintons.

cassidy421
November 6, 2015 12:01 pm

It’s odd that Exxon would be concealing global warming around the time that James Hansen was predicting the beginning of an Ice Age.
http://appinsys.com/globalwarming/GW_History.htm
I haven’t found any reference to Exxon scientist James Black, who supposedly published warnings about AGW in the 70’s.

November 6, 2015 12:05 pm

On the other hand, a bit of digging in oil & gas company archives might uncover some discussion of how to manipulate the anti-CO2 arguments to eradicate competition from coal.

Alan Robertson
Reply to  Questing Vole
November 6, 2015 12:15 pm

Were the NYAG to discover such information, do you think they’d be smart enough to suppress it?

Reply to  Questing Vole
November 6, 2015 12:36 pm

Ya think. Exxon is officially in favor of a revenue neutral US carbon tax. Why? 1. Gasoline and diesel are inelastic, so wont matter much to their oil revenues. Hits coal worst and natural gas least, so accelerates the transition from coal to natural gas fired CCGT for electricity. Not for nothing did they spend $32 billion on XTO to get into US shale gas big time.

TA
November 6, 2015 12:06 pm

This is a travesty of justice which will hopefully backfire on the New York Attorney General.
The Attorney General will have to prove that human-caused global warming/climate change actually exists, before he can successfully claim Exxon was obscuring the facts. The facts, as of today, is there is no evidence that humans have caused any climate change. And that is not dependent on what Exxon does, or does not do, now or in the past.
This attack on free speech shouldn’t be taken lightly though. This is the State coming down hard on private individuals for partisan political reasons. Fortunately, not all Attorney Generals are partisan political hacks like the NY Attorney General, so maybe he will be the only one bold enough to press such charges, and when the charges fall flat on their face, maybe that will discourage others from pursuing this course in the future.
TA

Alan Robertson
November 6, 2015 12:09 pm

Which outfit, do you suppose, has the most genuine cut- throat, first- rate lawyers on it’s payroll, NY State AG, or Exxon?
This might be akin to a cock- sure teenager sneaking into a sleeping tiger’s cage for a selfie and then yelling out to his friends for a high- five.

Felflames
November 6, 2015 12:18 pm

I am put in mind of a famous line from a movie.
“Never bring a knife to a gun fight”
I would suspect Exxon is not just bringing a gun, they will carpet bomb these activists into a thin red paste.
If it were me, my first order of business would be a full investigation of the links and financing of the activists .
Followed by letting them know that the RICO laws work both ways.

Reply to  Felflames
November 6, 2015 12:43 pm

At least with respect to near bankrupt LAT and whoever is responsible for the Inside Climate website and its misleading information, they probably have a cause of action for reputational damage plus costs of complying with the resulting NYAG subpoena.

Climate Heretic
Reply to  Felflames
November 6, 2015 1:11 pm

My thoughts exactly, Exxon should do a, ‘Mark Steyn’ on them and sue them for everything under the sun, mentality.
Regards
Climate Heretic

Severian
November 6, 2015 12:29 pm

It’s obvious the extremists in the CAGW movement have found a new Emanuel Goldstein for their 2 Minute Hate. This amounts to nothing more than a propaganda campaign.

PiperPaul
Reply to  Severian
November 6, 2015 9:49 pm

As many have noted before, 1984 is not an instructional book. Some people seem to think it is, though.

November 6, 2015 12:35 pm

“.. the New York Times, which broke the story.”
Jeez, gimme a break. Nobody broke the story. It came from Madison Avenue. It’s who made up the story.
And the NYT was probably in the thick of it from the get go.