, or covering up versus sealing up the Bible, 1819'' by
George Cruikshank. ("39 articles" refers to the
Church of England) The following list is considered to be a typology since those who engage in cover-ups tend to use many of the same methods of hiding the truth and defending themselves. This list was compiled from famous cover-ups such as the
Watergate Scandal, the
Iran-Contra Affair,
My Lai massacre, the
Pentagon Papers, the cover-up of corruption in New York City under Boss Tweed (
William M. Tweed and
Tammany Hall) in the late 19th century, and the tobacco industry cover-up of the health hazards of smoking. The methods in actual cover-ups tend to follow the general order of the list below. ; Initial response to allegation • Flat
denial • Convince the media to bury the story • Preemptively distribute false information • Claim that the "problem" is
minimal •
Claim faulty memory • Claim the accusations are
half-truths • Claim the critic has no proof • Attack the critic's motive •
Attack the critic's character ; Withhold or tamper with evidence • Prevent the discovery of evidence • Destroy or alter the evidence • Make discovery of evidence difficult • Create misleading names of individuals and companies to hide funding • Lie or commit
perjury • Block or delay investigations • Issue restraining orders • Claim executive privilege ; Delayed response to allegation • Deny a restricted definition of wrongdoing (e.g. torture) •
Limited hang out(i.e., confess to minor charges) • Use biased evidence as a defense • Claim that the critic's evidence is biased • Select a biased blue ribbon commission or "independent" inquiry ;
Intimidate participants,
witnesses or
whistleblowers • Bribe or buy out the critic • Generally intimidate the critic by following him or her, killing pets, etc. •
Blackmail: hire private investigators and threaten to reveal past wrongdoing ("dirt") • Death threats of the critic or his or her family • Threaten the critic with loss of job or future employment in industry • Transfer the critic to an inferior job or location • Intimidate the critic with lawsuits or
SLAPP suits • Murder; assassination ; Publicity management •
Bribe the press •
Secretly plant stories in the press • Retaliate against hostile media • Threaten the press with loss of access • Attack the motives of the press • Place defensive advertisements • Buy out the news source ; Damage control • Claim no knowledge of wrongdoing •
Scapegoats:
blame an underling for unauthorized action • Fire the person(s) in charge ; Win court cases • Hire the best lawyers • Hire scientists and expert witnesses who will support your story • Delay with legal maneuvers • Influence or control the judges ; Reward cover-up participants •
Hush money • Little or no punishment • Pardon or commute sentences • Promote employees as a reward for cover-up • Reemploy the employee after dust clears == In criminal law ==