Nonsense. Mann was on trial and fraud was what they were aiming for.
Mann has never been on trial, yet here you are saying that he was. Why is that, do you think?
What the vexatious litigation is aimed at is just what it has struck in you - the belief (or perhaps strengthened belief) that Mann is a dubious character. He gets involved in court-cases not of his instigation, he has to hire lawyers, and he insists on keeping his private correspondence private. In your somewhat fuzzy mind this coalesces into "he got off on a technicality".
The better part of three pages on this since you brought it up. That's probably normal on the blogs you normally frequent, but it really isn't in the big world.
The case was dismissed because the evidence was protected.
Got off on a technicality. Bloody activist judges, eh?
The AG believes the emails might show Mann was lying in order to secure government grants.
Cuccinelli's aiming at the governership, and he knows how to get the Tea Party on his side - attack Mann (the lynch-pin of the whole hoax as far as they're concerned) while making loud noises about AGW being a fraud. He won't go short of coal-money for his run either.
There is no reason to think that the research grant in question is any different from others granted by UVA, and all the relevant documents are available. No sign of fraud. Nada. Zip. Bugger-all. That's why they're going for the private correspondence.
What's special is that it has Mann's name on it (the
bete-noire of the denialist cult) and was made in Virginia, where Cuccinelli's writ runs.
If the emails were disclosed and it was shown he did lie in order to secure funds he'd be charged with defrauding the government.
As the Spartans said, "If ..."
I don't believe that myself.
Heaven forbid any should even
suggest that you brought it up because you believed in it.
I think at worst he unknowingly made errors that led to some confirmation bias, but lie, no.
It's
bias that might lead to errors, not
vice versa. You have a very disorganised mind; you might to work on that.
You imagine there might be errors in the Mann
et al reconstruction (known as the Hockey-Stick) and you imagine these would be ignored because of confirmation bias. Notice that :
because of the confirmation, not leading to it. You imagine the same mistakes have been made in all credible reconstructions made since then, and haven't been found. That's quite some imagination.
The weird world of denial is still trying to break that old Hockey-Stick, and since they can't do it with data and maths they've turned to demonising the lead author. (If that reminds you of lawyers there's a good reason for it.) On the one hand you have scientists such as Mann and his appreciative colleagues and on the other you have politicians, lawyers and lobbyists. Of course the deniers have taken it to the courts, it's the only arena they have an advantage in. Well, that and the media. And politics. Actually, anywhere that money talks louder than evidence.
The Cuccinelli case brings it all together very elegantly. A politician and a well-funded lobby-tank use the courts to get media coverage and free electioneering while smearing climate science in the pedestrian public mind. It could become a case-study in days to come.