Mark Steyn and the Reversal of Fortune

Rael Jean Isaac,

What a difference a year makes.

A year ago Michael Mann was riding high after winning his 12 year old lawsuit against journalist/pundit Mark Steyn and Rand Simberg over comments sharply critical of Mann’s famed “hockey stick” graph. That graph purported to demonstrate a sharp rise in global temperature following industrialization, supposedly caused by man-made greenhouse gas emissions. The offending comments were by Steyn in a National Review blog and by Simberg in a Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) blog.

Mann brought suit against all four, but in 2021 National Review and CEI won “summary judgment” (a peculiar term after nine years of litigation) on the grounds that Steyn and Simberg were “independent contractors,” not employees, and they bore no responsibility for the content of the posts.)

In February 2024, a District of Columbia jury ordered Steyn to pay one million dollars in punitive damages to Mann. (Although Steyn’s offense was chiefly to have quoted Simberg, the jury only assessed the latter $1,000 ).

If Mann was joyous, Steyn was depressed and enraged. He had spent twelve years in what he described as the “dank, fetid, clogged septic tank of DC justice.” The case had ruined his finances and as he often stated, his life. And at the end, when it finally came to trial, far from being vindicated, he had been slammed with a huge penalty with the potential to destroy the rest of his life, already precarious in the wake of one massive and several lesser heart attacks. An appeal would entail more years and huge additional legal costs.

Buoyed by the verdict, Mann promised to bring National Review and CEI (as institutions, presumably with deeper pockets) back into the case. He said he believed the summary judgment had been “wrongly decided.” Mann announced, “They’re next.”

One year later the tables had turned upside down. To understand what happened, it is necessary to know something of the legal underpinnings of the case.

Mann’s case against Steyn centered on his 270-word blog post on the Corner section of National Review’s web site. In it he quoted Simberg, who had taken a swipe at the administration of Pennsylvania State University for what he saw as its “cover-up and whitewash” of investigations into both Jerry Sandusky, (their eventually convicted football coach) and Professor Mann. Mann, Simberg wrote, “could be said to be the Jerry Sandusky of climate change except that instead of molesting children, he has molested and tortured data in the service of politicized science.” Steyn’s focus was also on Penn State. He distanced himself from the analogy to Sandusky but said Simberg had a point: “Michael Mann was the man behind the fraudulent climate-change ‘hockey-stick’ graph” and “whether or not he’s ‘the Jerry Sandusky of climate change,’ he remains the Michael Mann of climate change, in part because his ‘investigation’ by a deeply corrupt administration was a joke.”

Mann’s defamation suit (after National Review and CEI were gone) sought compensatory and punitive damages from both Steyn and Simberg. To win compensatory damages the plaintiff must prove he suffered real losses, either financially or to his reputation. For punitive damages, D.C. Superior Court Judge Alfred Irving told the jury, the plaintiff must show “by clear and convincing evidence” that the defendants published their words “either knowing that the statement was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not” and also “showed maliciousness, spite, ill will, vengeance, or deliberate intent to harm the plaintiff.” The judge left the size of possible punitive damages to the jury’s “good judgment.”

Mann’s proof that he suffered actual damages was “a mean look” he endured at his local Wegman’s supermarket and a claimed dramatic loss in grant funding. Mann had no evidence the “mean-looker” had read either of the offending blogs or even knew that Mann was anything other than a fellow cart-pusher. As for the loss in grant funding, Simberg’s attorney pointed out that the numbers Mann and his counsel presented had been shown to be multi-millions too high in the discovery phase of the proceedings. Indeed, the defendants were able to show that after the blogs Mann’s career had shot up, as Steyn put it, “like his hockey stick.”
The judge told the jury that if they found “no proven damages resulting or that the damages are only speculative, then you may award nominal damages” such as $1 – which is precisely the amount the jury awarded Mann from each defendant. That left punitive damages and here the jury, as we have seen, came to a very different conclusion.

The jury’s verdict posed obvious questions. Why the million dollars in punitive damages against Steyn when the jury found Mann deserved a mere dollar in compensatory damages? Courts have typically ruled that punitive should be no more than nine times compensatory damages, although the ratio may be substantially greater. But a million to one? That’s unheard of. Although Judge Irving had warned them this was a defamation case, not a trial of climate science, one can only assume that the jury was following the injunction of Mann’s lawyers that it was up to them to “send a message” that “these attacks on climate scientists have to stop.”

During “voir dire” (the questioning of prospective jurors about their biases before being chosen), it was revealed that all of them believed that man-made climate change was a serious problem.

But that still does not explain the vast discrepancy between the thousand dollars assessed Simberg and the million assessed Steyn. Steyn offers an explanation. The Mann legal team portrayed him as part of a wealthy elite and elicited from him on the stand that he had been a long-time substitute host for Rush Limbaugh. Steyn believes this was a red flag to the solidly Democratic jury (the vote in D.C. is 95% Democratic). Mann had venue-shopped the case to the notoriously progressive D.C. courts although neither Mann nor the defendants were D.C. based.

Steyn may be leaving out another factor. To avoid bleeding even more money, Steyn represented himself at the trial. Steyn is brilliant (his IQ must be off the charts) and does not suffer fools gladly. While his bravura performance delighted his many admirers who followed the trial in person or online, the size of the award suggests it alienated the jurors.

Even before the case closed, Steyn’s attorneys (despite defending himself, Steyn had lawyers on board) filed motions for a new trial.

More than a year later Judge Irving responded. He did not order a new trial, but given how expensive and time-consuming that would be, arguably did something more useful. He ordered the punitive damages against Steyn, which he called “grossly excessive,” reduced to a mere five thousand dollars, the “maximum” sum Steyn’s attorney had suggested was reasonable.
But there was more good news to come. A week later, Judge Irving responded to Steyn’s motion that Mann pay legal fees. While only partially granting the motion, Judge Irving’s rhetoric was scathing.

What especially infuriated him was the Mann team’s false claims of a huge loss in grant money– which Judge Irving called “an affront to the Court’s authority.” The team had offered “plainly false evidence” and were guilty of “bad faith misconduct “… “extraordinary in its scope, extent, and intent.” Judge Irving said he would issue sanctions to cover the costs the defendants had in countering these “outright misrepresentations.” Steyn and Simberg have been told to submit their costs by the end of March and it is highly probable they will exceed the $5,000 Steyn owes in punitive damages. Simberg is already ahead when it comes to his punitive damages, since the court in January affirmed a sanctions award to him and CEI of $9,000 for other Mann team misbehavior during discovery.

The reversal of fortune is even more striking. For years National Review had been attempting in vain to use D.C. Anti-Slapp (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) laws against Mann. These are laws to discourage litigants from using the legal system to silence their critics by awarding legal fees to some who won their cases. In January 2025 National Review (having exited the case via summary judgment in 2021) finally won $530,820 (less than half of what it had asked) for legal fees associated with part of Mann’s case against it. (National Review had libel insurance –which also covered Steyn–but such insurance typically only pays a fraction of the costs.) The Competitive Enterprise Institute would almost surely now file a similar suit for a similar sum.

From being poised to gain over a million dollars, Mann, within a month, stood potentially liable for that very same substantial sum.

While all this may seem a resounding victory for free speech, there is no happy ending. Steyn has said repeatedly that the process is the punishment. As the case remorselessly dragged on (Judge Irving is the sixth judge and the case is now in its thirteenth year) participants, at least those who, unlike Mann, have no sugar daddy to pick up their bills (Mann’s financial backer is still unidentified) , have lived under constant emotional stress, fearful that even death cannot wipe out their debts.

And the case is not over. As he promised, Mann has appealed the court’s decision to remove National Review and CEI. He has also argued for a stay on enforcement of the half million anti-SLAPP award to National Review while he appeals it. Although he personally has had no legal fees to pay, he is also seeking six figure court costs from both Steyn and Simberg.

In Bleak House, Jarndyce and Jarndyce continues for many generations, even after the inheritance under dispute had vanished under the weight of legal fees. Mercifully, Mann’s case will not grind on as long as the one in Dickens’ novel, but Steyn estimates appeals could keep it going another ten years. The limiting factor may well be the willingness of Mann’s donor (or donors) to continue pouring money into the case now that serious payments to the defendants loom.

As a test of free speech protections, the case illustrates their vulnerability when issues arousing popular passions (notably progressive passions like “climate change”) are involved. Early on, a host of organizations from the ACLU to the New York Times on down filed amicus briefs on behalf of National Review and CEI. But recently there has been little support from any of them as the adverse decisions against Steyn and Simberg rolled in.

Above all the case illustrates the failure of the American system of justice. A trivial case that should have been disposed of in a few months has been allowed to fester for over a decade at a ridiculous (and, for the defendants, cruel) cost—with no end in sight. Major structural reforms are needed to address this problem.

Authors Credit: Rael Jean Isaac is the author most recently of Roosters of the Apocalypse: How the Junk Science of Global Warming is Bankrupting the Western World

This article originally ran in American Thinker

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Michael Flynn
April 3, 2025 6:22 pm

I used to think that Michael Mann was a balding, bearded, bumbling buffoon, as well as a faker, fraud, scofflaw and deadbeat.

He seems to have lost the beard.

Scissor
Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 3, 2025 6:46 pm

I always thought of that as pubic hair.

Coach Springer
Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 4, 2025 6:30 am

There’s something malicious about him that you seem to have left out of your adjectives.

Doug S
Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 4, 2025 7:24 am

Well done, I see what you did there.

joe-Dallas
Reply to  Michael Flynn
April 4, 2025 3:03 pm

Yesterday’s order denying Mann motion to stay payment of NR fees of $530k again points to the exteeme dishonesty of Mann and his legal team.

One of the basis to stay the assessment of the legal fees was the the DC court of appeals was hearing en banc a case where the entire DC slapp provisions were going to be held invalid. The judge stated that only one unrelated provision of the DC slapp statute was at issue, not the entire statute.

The point is that after getting caught lying to the court with the lost grants, they intentionally misrepresent other court cases.

Tom Halla
April 3, 2025 6:39 pm

I believe the jury was punishing Rush Limbaugh in absentia. The odds of a Republican activist getting a fair trial in DC is like the odds of a Black guy getting a fair trial in 1930’s Alabama.

Reply to  Tom Halla
April 4, 2025 1:00 am

Congress could abolish the District court in DC. The cases would end up in other courts, a consummation devoutly to be wished. If only Congress could get as serious about draining the DC swamp as Trump is.

Reply to  stinkerp
April 4, 2025 3:44 am

I think if Republicans can get a filibuster-proof majority in the U.S. Senate after the 2026 elections, there will be some very serious reforms done to the Judicial Branch.

You let this issue fester, John Roberts, instead of knocking these District Federal Judges down by telling them they don’t have the authority to tell the President of the United States how to run the Executive Branch of government.

Now, you have the Republican Congress aroused over this Lawfare crap, and you and the Judiciary may reap the whirlwind when it’s all over.

You don’t want to get involved? You are involved. You should resign for refusing to hear the Texas and 24 other States complaints about voter fraud in Blue States in the 2020 election. The Supreme Court is the only entity that can adjudicate issues between States, yet you refused to do your job and allowed a dangerous fool like Joe Biden to be elected president because you didn’t want to be involved.

John Roberts, you have covered yourself in shame. You will not be highly regarded by history. You certainly are not highly regarded by me. You are the weak link in the governing of this Republic.

paul courtney
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2025 5:59 am

Mr. Abbott: Roberts is also the only source of restraint on district court judges, short of impeachment. Roberts thinks he’s protecting something, he’s the one failing to preserve it by refusing to rein in lower courts.

Reply to  paul courtney
April 4, 2025 5:36 pm

I agree completely.

Roberts supposedly loves the Supreme Court. If he does, he is being his own worst enemy, with the way he has conducted himself.

He will have to make a decision soon. He can’t run away from it.

He better make the right decision, and call off the dogs, or all freedom-loving people in the U.S. are in trouble.

Then Civil War talk will rear its ugly head.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2025 6:48 am

Why elected any Republicans? What laws have they passed to support the Trump agenda? The House was shutdown over a rule change to allow remote voting and (unconstitutional) proxy voting.

Reply to  More Soylent Green!
April 4, 2025 5:47 pm

When you have such a slim majority in the House of Representatives like the Republicans have, all it takes is a couple of uncooperative Republicans to screw up the works.

If we had 20 more Republicans in the House, then a couple of selfish representatives, focused on their own personal issue, rather than the BIG PICTURE (preventing Democrats stealing the nation) won’t make any difference.

I think the Republican Congresswoman who stirred up this stuff is having second thoughts. Maybe Trump gave her a call.

I think Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, is doing a fantastic job, especially considering what he has to work with. He’s pretty good at herding cats. Of course, he has a lot of help from Trump, who is even better at herding Republican cats.

Yeah, we need about 250 Republican representatives in the House and 60+ Republican Senators in the U.S. Senate after the midterm elections in 2026, and then the Republicans can write laws without interference from the Democrats and get this nation back on track.

DonRT
Reply to  Tom Halla
April 6, 2025 10:16 am

Or of Trump getting a fair trial in NYC.

Abbas Syed
April 3, 2025 6:46 pm

Personal attacks should not form the basis of any argument

Except when it comes to this grubby little shit

0perator
April 3, 2025 7:00 pm

Mann, like most of the leftists found his status and wealth coming from fealty to the party, not from any actual merit or labor. His lies are laid bare. Anyone defending him is an even bigger loser and liar.

April 3, 2025 7:28 pm

This graphic pretty well illustrates how quickly fortunes can reverse, with Mann being the individual trying to prank the unsuspecting Steyn with a shovel rather than a hockey stick.

Failed-Attempted-Prank-with-Shovel
April 4, 2025 12:06 am

Science is self purifying. Good hypotheses get support, bad ones don’t. So, the whole affair should have been left to science. The success of an hypothesis is dependent on testing ad the gathering of further evidence, not on debates..The combative legal system is expensive and avery poor way of settling disputes, nor on authority.
Shame on you Michael.

April 4, 2025 12:08 am

Jarndyce and Jarndyce could be based on several actual cases. A good candidate is Jennens v Jennens commenced in 1798 and was abandoned in 1915, 117 years later, when the legal fees had exhausted the Jennens estate of funds. It had been ongoing for 55 years when Bleak House was published. (Wikipedia)

Coach Springer
Reply to  Ben Vorlich
April 4, 2025 6:32 am

The lawyers and courts always win.

KevinM
Reply to  Ben Vorlich
April 4, 2025 9:52 am

And the case is not over. As he promised, Mann has appealed the court’s decision to remove National Review and CEI. …. Although he personally has had no legal fees to pay, he is also seeking six figure court costs from both Steyn and Simberg.

Medium of exchange vs store of value.

Coeur de Lion
April 4, 2025 12:25 am

The trial transcript shows what a nasty little man he is with, for example, a sneer implying sexual relations between Steyn and Judith Curry, As a Brit I’m deeply ashamed that our Royal Society (Chartered in 1660) has made him a member

Reply to  Coeur de Lion
April 4, 2025 2:09 am

It’s not at all surpising. As far as I remember the RS are all in with the global warming scam. “Nullius in verba”. What a joke.

April 4, 2025 12:26 am

Very good article but wouldn’t it be better to use inverted commas for “progressive”?

observa
April 4, 2025 1:07 am

Yeah yeah the dumb slobs can’t appreciate the road to Utopia so we have to lie like pigs in manure and a healthy dose of elder abuse never goes astray-
Democrats continue to ‘cast blame’ for election loss

You did great Joe! Kamala not so much.

Reply to  observa
April 4, 2025 4:03 am

The only thing Democrats can run on is demonizing Republicans, because they don’t have any viable policies to offer the public. Wide-open borders, and supporting illegal alien Crime waves, and raising taxes, and forcing girls to have to play sports with boys, and supporting Hamas and Iranian terrorists, and hating Israel, are not popular positions in the United States. So to distract the public, the Democrats demonize Republicans.

The Democrats’ pitch is: Trust us, Republicans are bad!!!

observa
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2025 4:58 am

Compare and contrast what Steyn copped and there’s a top WH official openly stating they covered up elder abuse and lied to the public about it on the taxpayer dime and meh! What’s more the mainstream media backed it in all the way and you still have adults in complete denial about that fraud and abuse of office.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2025 7:27 am

Some of them literally said that.

Burt Bosma
April 4, 2025 2:57 am

Worst of all, the evidence presented in the case made it clear that the hockey stick was unscientific nonsense, with cherry picked data used to reach a predetermined conclusion. Yet the jury, climate alarmists all, clearly put their fingers in their ears when the evidence was presented.

Reply to  Burt Bosma
April 4, 2025 4:14 am

Well, like the judge said, the case is not abut science, it is about defamation.

The jury did not consider the science.

I don’t think I would want that jury considering the science, since they all appear to be True Believers in Human-caused Climate Change.

Picking jurors was probably pretty interesting in this case. I wonder what Steyn thought when he ended up with all Climate Alarmists on his jury. Couldn’t get any skeptics on the jury? Maybe there aren’t any in DC.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2025 7:28 am

Maybe there aren’t any in DC.

At most 5%.

joe-Dallas
Reply to  Burt Bosma
April 4, 2025 5:11 am

Burt – While I agree Mann’s HS is crap science, the only thing of scientific value that came out in the trial was that the error bars were far too narrow with too high of a confidence level

Coach Springer
Reply to  Burt Bosma
April 4, 2025 6:35 am

For that jury, the defamation was calling a fraud a fraud. And then proving it in court.

feral_nerd
April 4, 2025 5:11 am

I imagine that Mann holds Steyn in special esteem because of his authorship of “A Disgrace to the Profession,” in which a hundred-plus of Mann’s fellow scientists say what they really think of him, on the record.” It’s scathing, and remarkable.

But Mann is a hero to the idiot Left, so it didn’t even leave a mark.

joe-Dallas
April 4, 2025 5:13 am

mann demonstrated he is a serial liar in his pleadings, exhibits, interogatories, and testimony.
Why would anyone trust his professional ethics and professional work when he demonstrates zero ethics in his personal life.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  joe-Dallas
April 4, 2025 7:29 am

Because he is “the Mann!”

April 4, 2025 5:55 am

As Steyn had said at the trial, if this case had been tried under the British Legal system his defence would have been “no case to answer”.
The US justice system would make a North Korean military court martial blush.

Rational Keith
April 4, 2025 6:14 am

The trigger for Mann’s anger was an article that drew a comparison between a university’s denial of sexual assault of young male athletes with its handling of complaints about Mann. Steyn referred to that article.

Mann is aggressive, also sued:

the National Post (PostMedia) newspaper in Canada, and won at first, I don’t know status of appearlsTim Ball of the Victoria BC area, Mann stonewalled providing documents for ‘examination for discovery’ until a court rejected his complaint for not complying with court procedures. That hurt aging Tim, who is gone.
Tim Ball – Wikipedia, but has inaccuracies typical of climate pages in Wikipedia. Tim Ball was studying climate when the subject was under Geography, he dug into Hudson’s Bay Company fur trading records. (HBC depots kept records to try to detect patterns of climate/weather to predict fur trading volume in each area.)

paul courtney
April 4, 2025 6:38 am

As we await finding out if Mann has any defenders left, the last couple articles on Mann v. Steyn brought out AlanJ, a staunch Mann fan. His comments reminded me of non-stick cookware, “teflon” generically speaking. Some here probably cook, and notice how the non-stick is temporary. After use (sometimes very brief use!), the food doesn’t slide off anymore, then it builds up, then you need to soak-and-scrub just to get it clean. If I complained that the crud sticks to the teflon, some commenter might reply by insisting it WAS non-stick, his argument would focus on the label. “It’s teflon, it can’t stick!” he would insist. Posting charts, studies, authority, a long string of comments flow telling you the crud you scrub cannot be stuck, that’s his opinion. That commenter would be AlanJ.
Oh, and the crud stuck to the pan is Mann.
Hope this gets a laugh.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  paul courtney
April 4, 2025 7:34 pm

That was a long way to go.

paul courtney
Reply to  Jeff Alberts
April 5, 2025 6:18 am

Mr. Alberts: Takes practice.
Thx for reading.

joe-Dallas
April 4, 2025 9:11 am

Google – Mann defamation verdict reduced. Only one major media source reports it (washington post) and that article grossly distorts the courts ruling.

April 4, 2025 11:48 am

Is it my imagination or was the photo of Mann that originally was appended to this story removed?

April 4, 2025 4:30 pm

Remember Mikey. When seeking revenge, dig two graves. One for your victim, the other for yourself.

Looking like only one grave will be needed.

Rasa
April 4, 2025 6:38 pm

What a waste of space is “hockeystick mann”.
His early dubious/refuted bit of “research” has meant he has spent a sizeable chunk of his career trying to get it accepted.