New York says Secretary of State Rex Tillerson used an e-mail alias to discuss climate change while he was ExxonMobil's chief executive: Wayne Tracker.
Tillerson sent messages from the account to discuss the risks posed by climate change, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said in a court filing about his office's fraud investigation of the company. Tillerson, whose middle name is Wayne, used the Wayne Tracker account on the Exxon system from at least 2008 through 2015, Schneiderman said.
Schneiderman made the claim in a letter Monday to Justice Barry Ostrager in New York State Court in Manhattan, accusing Exxon of failing to turn over all relevant documents required by a court order. The filing comes in a protracted legal dispute in which Exxon seeks to derail probes by New York and Massachusetts into whether the company misled investors for years about the possible impact of climate change on its business.
Tillerson used the account for "secure and expedited communications between select senior company officials and the former chairman for a broad range of business-related topics," after his primary account began receiving too many messages, Exxon spokesman Alan Jeffers said in an e-mail.
New York's claim marks the latest email-handling matter to make headlines in Washington, from Hillary Clinton using a private e-mail server as secretary of state to more-recent revelations that Vice President Mike Pence used a private e-mail account to conduct some official business as governor of Indiana. Neither of those instances involved an alias.
"Despite the company's incidental production of approximately 60 documents bearing the 'Wayne Tracker' e-mail address, neither Exxon nor its counsel have ever disclosed that this separate e-mail account was a vehicle for Mr. Tillerson's relevant communications at Exxon, and no documents appear to have been collected from this e-mail account," Schneiderman said.
The existence of the secondary e-mail account was discovered by Schneiderman's team while reviewing other Exxon documents. New York claims the Irving, Texas-based energy giant has failed to turn over thousands of relevant files. In addition to climate change, the alias account was also used to discuss other "important matters" that weren't specified in the letter.
Julia Mason, a spokeswoman for the State Department, declined to comment and referred the matter to Exxon.