Tradition American Institute seeks release e-mails with journalists to find details that could be used to discredit science
The American Institute of ultra-conservative tradition has expanded its legal pursuit of climate scientists, using transparency laws to try to eliminate potentially harmful emails.
strategy - used to find records of eminent scientists such as Michael Mann -. It is considered by scientists as an excuse to try to dig embarrassing or damaging communications that could be used to discredit climate science
Now, for the first time the media is also developed with ATI for the release of scientific communications with some journalists. The list of news organizations deal with the application include the New York Times, Associated Press, Frontline and The Guardian.
previous applications focused on exchanges between scientists. "We see this as a new chapter," said Jeff Ruch, a lawyer working with the Global Climate Science Legal Defense. "Before we were after interactions between scientists is essentially an espionage operation to see that you speak, but I guess the idea is the same: .. To find material that is potentially useful to discredit a scientist "
Christopher Horner, the director of the ATI Environmental Law Centre, the new tactics deployed for the first time last week, in a July 5, 2012 application for registration opened two scientists from public universities in Texas . Horner, who is responsible for the Competitive Enterprise Institute and ATI has led to the pursuit of climate scientists around the laws of open registers. You have searched communications access to Michael Mann, the author of the hockey stick curve, the NASA climate scientists James Hansen and Gavin Schmidt, and this year, Katharine Hayhoe, a atmospheric scientist at Texas Tech University. Hayhoe has become known to the public when Newt Gingrich, the former Republican presidential candidate, has decided to cut a chapter he had written a forthcoming book on the environment. She and Andrew Dessler, a climate scientist at Texas A & M University, were attacked again last week, when asked their universities Horner deliver all email exchanges with reporters specific scientific dating from November 1, 2009.- Horner also asked scientists to establish communications with the Union of Concerned Scientists, who has also been involved in the defense of climate scientists and Richard Ades, who served as a consultant for PR scientists. Both universities comply with the request. Horner told the Washington Examiner - a free newspaper owned by billionaire Philip Anschulz conservative - that his decision to go to the contacts between scientists and journalists was motivated by an article on the front page the
Ruch said such use on the basis of increasing transparency laws - not only by conservative groups such as ATI. This year alone, the organization, the Public Employees environmental responsibility, heard seven other scientists who had undergone open enrollment after appearing as an expert witness in court cases involving mountain coal mines.
Last month, a pair of oceanographers BP accused of violating his academic freedom, demanding the release of emails related to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Meanwhile, some public universities began to fight against these claims. Penn State University, where Mann works now, is not subject to calls for transparency. Other public universities are moving in the same direction.
Horner has defended the use of transparency laws, citing objections were political scientists. "Our motivation is no doubt that Greenpeace launched when these demands," he said in an email. "Truth is that I see no problem with using transparency laws like this. Only have problems with people who do not use them as such. "
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