The Search For The Climate “Leaker”

Eric Holder’s Justice Department has joined forces with the UK authorities:

In the U.S., the academic and political Left have had fits about Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli exercising even more specific, anti-fraud authority to seek further records from University of Virginia in following up on indications from the first Climategate release of possible fraud against the taxpayer.

Apparently, that represented an abuse of the police power. No word yet if they are outraged by DOJ’s current foray or that of the UK raiding team.

The DOJ attorney sending the preservation letters, as it happens in this small world, a graduate of the University of Virginia (UVA). And UVA is also the subject of litigation a group I am associated with, the American Tradition Institute (ATI), that has filed suit on behalf of Virginia taxpayers seeking Climategate-related emails the school holds.

This is a case which has members of the Virginia faculty and establishment beside themselves and demanding an all-out effort to oppose production of the requested documents in an effort to wear us and Cuccinelli down.

So far UVA has spent upwards of $1 million fighting Cuccinelli’s request, and school officials continue to fight us in court every step of the way.

Clearly, this is no small matter in the quarters insisting that this taxpayer-financed information never see the light of day. Even the criminal legal apparatus of the U.S. and UK must be invoked against this threat, apparently.

They’re upset because their fraud has been exposed.

4 thoughts on “The Search For The Climate “Leaker””

  1. UVA has dropped $1 million (so far). You have to figure there’s stuff there that would justify that expense.

  2. There’s a real simple way for the UVA to fight such requests in the future. Don’t accept public funds for research (and the associated communications) that you want to keep secret. I can understand the desire to get public funds without the accountability requirements associated with public funds, but I don’t have to support it.

  3. Would be funny if this led to the release of the password to that big encrypted file that I assume was being used as insurance against this sort of thing.

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