Enduring mystery: Who leaked climate scientists’ emails?

By Leslie Kaufman | MSNBC / The New York Times

For two years, the mystery has endured: who set out to undercut climate scientists by publishing more than 1,000 of their private e-mails on the Internet?

The original e-mails, released in 2009 on the eve of a high-stakes United Nations climate conference in Copenhagen, sowed doubts about the scientists research and integrity and galvanized skeptics who challenge the scientific consensus that global warming is under way.

It set off six separate official inquiries, all of which cleared the researchers of scientific misconduct.

Then the controversy receded. Yet recently, speculation about the identity of the person who leaked the messages has surged with the release of new e-mails and signs that a police inquiry is under way in Britain.

In November, just before another major international climate conference opened, this time in Durban, South Africa, another round of e-mails between the scientists were distributed online.

A taunt?
Like those released in 2009, they were part of a trove taken from a computer server at the Climate Research Unit of the University of East Anglia in England; as before, the e-mail hijacker alerted the public to the e-mails in comments posted on various blogs.

But Novembers leaker left additional clues behind as well. Not much an encrypted file and a note ending in what seemed to be a taunt but enough to revive fervent speculation about what sort of person might be behind the stunt.

The note, somewhat cryptic, seemed to suggest that efforts to fight global warming siphoned money from worthy causes like fighting poverty. Every day nearly 16,000 children die from hunger and related causes, it said.

Then the notes author seemed to dangle a challenge for hackers and programmers, saying that even though he was releasing 5,000 e-mails, The rest, some 220,000, are encrypted for various reasons.

We are not planning to publicly release the pass phrase, the note added coyly.

The stunt was enough to jump-start a police investigation that had long seemed dormant.

In December, citing a request from British law enforcement, the Justice Department asked that Automattic, the parent company of the blog host WordPress.com, preserve three days of digital logs for three blogs where the links to the latest e-mails first appeared.

Police raid
In a raid in Leeds, England, the police also confiscated laptops from the home of one blogger; he says the police have told him that he is not a suspect.

The note, the encrypted file and the fresh signs of police interest have inspired musings on both sides of the climate divide.

Kert Davies, the research director of the environmental group Greenpeace, suggested that the note was a strong clue on the predisposition of the hacker.

It smells a lot like a certain quadrant of the denier community, he said. They pretend to be concerned that we are impeding development in poor countries. Only certain think tanks think that way and play that way mostly in Europe, he said.

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