The Washington, D.C. Superior Court’s May 22, 2025 ruling against Michael Mann is the latest in a series of defeats for the climate scientist’s prolonged legal offensive against his critics. Judge Alfred S. Irving ordered Mann to pay $477,350.80 in attorney’s fees and related costs to the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) and Rand Simberg, following their successful partial dismissal of claims under the District’s Anti-SLAPP Act.
This judgment comes just months after a separate ruling ordered Mann to pay $540,820.21 to National Review. Together, the two awards raise Mann’s current liability to over $1.1 million—a staggering total for a campaign that began over a decade ago with the aim of silencing dissent through strategic litigation.
Mann’s lawsuit, filed in 2012, named CEI, Simberg, National Review, and Mark Steyn as defendants over criticism of his scientific work, specifically the “hockey stick” graph that catapulted him to fame in climate policy circles. From the beginning, Mann positioned the suit as a defense of science against ideological attack. The courts have increasingly seen it otherwise.
In the May ruling, the court rejected Mann’s argument that success on appeal doesn’t qualify as a victory for fee recovery. The judge noted that CEI and Simberg’s appellate success not only resulted in dismissal of two claims—including an emotional distress count—but also changed the practical scope of litigation. CEI, for example, avoided discovery and litigation over its own statements, limiting the remaining case to vicarious liability claims for Simberg’s blog post.
The judgment also reflects judicial skepticism toward Mann’s insistence that his litigation strategy was justified. The court ruled there were no “special circumstances” that would make a fee award unjust. It found CEI and Simberg’s legal fees reasonable, subject to only modest adjustments. These included a $4,428.50 reduction for charges above standard Laffey Matrix rates and $1,535 removed for non-litigation-related activities, such as responding to press inquiries and participating in a Cato Institute event.
A 20% across-the-board reduction was also applied to reflect the partial nature of the anti-SLAPP success. The court awarded an additional $35,951.60 for “fees on fees”—expenses incurred in the process of recovering attorney’s fees. That figure too was discounted proportionally.
This ruling follows the court’s earlier decision in January to award $540,820.21 in fees to National Review. As detailed in Minding the Campus, the court dismissed significant parts of Mann’s claims and found National Review entitled to recover costs under the same statute. That decision similarly highlighted the ineffectiveness of Mann’s strategy, reinforcing that partial victories in speech-related litigation still entitle defendants to reimbursement when key claims are thrown out.
The cumulative picture is increasingly clear. Mann’s legal actions, originally cast as a principled stand against defamation, now appear more like an extended attempt to chill public discourse around climate science. The irony is that the lawsuits have produced not vindication, but growing financial liability, mounting judicial criticism, and a narrowing of the legal issues in his favor.
For CEI, Simberg, National Review, and Mark Steyn—whose $1 million jury verdict was recently slashed to just $5,000—these outcomes signal more than financial recovery. They reflect a turning tide in the battle over who controls scientific debate in the public square. Courts are signaling that disagreement, even sharp criticism, is not defamation—and certainly not actionable when protected by the First Amendment.
As for Mann, the tally keeps rising. What began as an effort to impose reputational costs on his critics has resulted in real financial ones for himself. And the legal system, after years of attrition, is slowly but unmistakably ruling that criticism—especially in matters of public policy—is not a crime, but a right.
Today’s verdict:
Other recent WUWT articles on this neverending case.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2025/04/18/help-a-mann-out/
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2025/04/06/manns-dc-trick/
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2025/04/03/mark-steyn-and-the-reversal-of-fortune/
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2025/03/16/trial-of-mann-v-steyn-post-trial-motions-edition/
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
I do hope Mann doesn’t lose his job over these court cases.
Losing his job over the fraudulent hockey stick would be a different matter.
I’ll settle for him losing his jib because he is bankrupt. But most important I think is that this is now a precedent and very clear that people are entitled to disagree in public and to challenge information that they think is incorrect. Because of course the other thing that Mann forgot is that is the way science works.
Yes but the what would lead anyone to believe that Mann knows a thing about how “science works?”
If he doesn’t understand how science works, then maybe a class action suit on behalf of those awarded degrees from the institutions that awarded Mann’s degrees is called for.
The Poison Ivey League.
Are you being fascetious?
Michael Mann has a history of suing people then refusing backing up his case in ‘examination for discovery’, a court threw out his case against Tim Ball but Mann’s attack ruined Mr. Ball’s last days.
Leak of documents from the CRU revealed he was a conspirator in blocking questioners from publication.
Etc.
I need to find a really big “smilie” emoji to post ! 🙂 🙂
So much of schadenfreude here 😀
What’s the German word for Schadenfreude?
If you plot Mann’s legal costs over time you get… a hockey stick.
Oooh, nice one!
Do they correlate with C02 emissions too?
Jury still out on the C02 emissions, but the correlation is 100% on the hot air emissions.
well played 🙂
Yeah but you cheated to get that plot by splicing older Canadian dollars owed on the left to newer American dollars owed for a short time on the right! And you included the smile upside down!
So Mickey’s legal activities must be driving global warming, right?
No. Just CO2 emissions.
Would that qualify as biogeo-poetic justice?
I wonder if Mann’s lawyers strenuously objected.
As long as they get paid, they’ll be happy.
Will the CSLDF come to his rescue yet again?
Is there any evidence he will suffer any financial loss?
His reputation has been in the toilet for 20 years but he continues to be employed. His net worth is put at $716M so $1M is pocket money for him.
Yep, he gained a lot of money from the corruption of proxy data. !!
I wonder where he got it all from . !
USAID likely
Surely that is the film director of the same name?! When I looked up with climate scientist incuded I obtained a value of $5million.
I had the right Michael Mann but the estimates is based on his presence and influence rather than actual financial worth:
https://peopleai.com/fame/identities/michael-e-mann
Other real numbers agree with $5M.
Being able to call on the CSLDF probably means his legal costs will be paid for. (If DOGE does not step in.)
Surely his odious presence would be a grossly negative number. !
But if someone else pays his legal fees and these court costs, would that be taxable income to Dr Mann?
$1.1 Million in today’s money is not that much. We know he is just a puppet working for a bigger organisation so as long as he doesn’t reveal stuff he should be fine.
Source for that $716M?
Mr. Zorzin: Mr. Will may have the wrong Mann, but I have a different explanation. Prof. Mann is worth $5m. in hard assets; but that doesn’t include “subsidies”. What is the value of good press to a charlatan? Calculate subsidies like an anti-oil activist, and it goes up like a ….. well, too easy.
Where’d you get that figure? My search came up with …..”Michael E. Mann’s highest net worth is estimated to be around $1million.” famouspeoplefacts.com/michael–e–mann
The price of a modest 50-year old home in the SF Bay Area.
Very modest.
I found 5 million which seems more likely.
Lest anyone think that life is fair …
And, to think, I never used to believe in Karma.
None of the MSM which happily trumpeted the initial rulings against Steyn give any mention of these developments. The only outfit that does is deSmog and its outlook on it is rather amusing. Of course it is all DT’ fault, that goes without saying.
Probably won’t be seeing this story in the MSM.
Good! Michael Mann being driven into bankruptcy makes me happy!!!!!!
That’s just a tiny fraction of the legal bill for reparations payments to the masses for agenda science fraud in support of climate policy overreach.
Anyone who followed the case would have come away certain that the hockey stick was unscientific trash. The jury’s decision was ridiculous. Steyn, for example, took Mann and the hockey stick apart piece by piece, with witness after witness showing it to be random nonsense, but since the trial was in DC, Steyn lost the case because had committed the crime of having, at one time, been a regular on Fox News.
And of course you can’t find a jury with sufficient intellectual wherewithal in DC.
The trial wasn’t about the hickey stick. It was about an alleged libel of Dr Mann by Steyn. The hockey stick evidence was pointless.
So Mann didn’t just shoot one of his own feet, he’s shot both feet and his lawyers didn’t get any good references either. Anyone sensible with his record wouldn’t try suing anyone else again until Greenland fully defrosts.
I don’t know; I’m concerned that all this winning might lead to hypowincemia.
Google of “hypowincemia” comes up empty.
Too bad, so sad!
I feel very sorry for him.
Soros has deep pockets.
But does he have the ethical honesty to assist someone who tried to help the Leftist cause, or will he leave him to hang out to dry.
One of DOGE’s revelations is that much of the money “donated” by Soros actually comes from USAID funds, or the US taxpayer in other words.
I have no doubt someone else will continue paying the legal costs for Mann.
Will there be any cost for Steyn for Mann´s legal expenses?
Not that he would pay anything out of his own pocket. I seem to remember reading where some Soros (?) funded NGO promised to pick up legal fees for those who would be litigated against for anything associated with promoting climate change. Just the court and loss exposure is good enough for me though.
But the case wasn’t about climate change.
What is SLAPP? A quick AI explanation.
Assist
Anti-SLAPP laws are designed to protect individuals from lawsuits that aim to silence their free speech, particularly in matters of public interest. These laws allow defendants to dismiss such lawsuits quickly and may enable them to recover legal fees if the case is found to be meritless.
Feels at least 10 years late for that argument.
MEM is about to turn 60 with $1million in debt and a reputation attached to a swindle he executed in his 40s. At this point he hasn’t much choice in what he says or does.
My instinct is to forgive him and move on but it’s easy to say that as a bystander. The people whom he has ardently attacked for decades would have a harder decision to make.
A question for practicing lawyers.
Are these the kinds of things included so the judge has something to throw out and show he’s thought seriously about the expenses, like leaving trivial problems for a building inspector to write up so he doesn’t feel the need to dig deep and find anything at all?
The bloke is clearly a fraud and his fraudulent activities have cost the world a lot of money. He needs to be in goal.
Only if he is playing soccer, or what you call football. I think you meant gaol, which Americans spell jail and pronounce d͡ʒeɪ(ə)l
Wow, silencing people is getting expensive!