Ex-Harvard senior charged with falsifying application, stealing $45k in grants
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/20...-applications/
Ex-Harvard senior charged with fabricating life history, stealing grant money - Local News Updates - MetroDesk - The Boston Globe Quote:
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Crazy story. Do they know what his background was? I mean I'm guessing a regular guy couldn't walk in to Harvard and get by. He had to either be some kind of savant or had some educational background.
I guess the sad thing is that this guy will probably see more time behind bars than people who ripped the country off of billions of dollars. |
Usually the schools (at least high school) had to send out the transcript sealed and signed. Same thing for colleges.
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I bet this is pretty common. I think you're really at a disadvantage if you put out completely honest resumes for everything. The occasional high profile criminal case beat-down for the cheater is definitely a good thing.
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Yeah, I don't see how things like high school transcripts and SAT scores can be falsified when they have to be sent to the college by other parties. The fact that he could pull all of this off for 5 years should probably be enough to get into Harvard anyway.
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This is from the Globe story:
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If he hadn't applied for a Rhodes or a Fulbright, he'd probably have graduated from Harvard this year. The New Republic also posted his resume, saying he'd applied for an internship there that he hadn't been accepted for, well before this actually got released. Quote:
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That's my take on it. Although the fact that he was cheating on the actual work is bad. |
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If he was able to forge all this shit and get into Harvard, I don't understand why he didn't devote his energies into getting into a really good job. And just bypassing school altogher.
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He probably got a rush knowing that he was getting away with lying and forgeries, and that made those activities more interesting to him.
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And his wife is Morgan Fairchild...yeah, that's the ticket.
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So how is what he did an actual crime? As far as I can tell, he lied on his transcripts and resumes, but be never pretended to be another actual person. If all he did was get a scholarship and grants for $45k, I can't see as how that's a crime, or else we'd have to arrest any number of university faculty to wasting thousands of dollars of grants.
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He was accepted on false pretenses. It was their failure, but I suspect the whole "scholarships and grants for $45k" that were earmarked for a person that he said he was, but he wasn't. That's theft. It's a sketchy definition in the sense that one might assume "Harvard failed by letting him in" but then, you don't get the be the #1 school in the country by not making an example out of someone who you feel beat your system. This makes them look bad, especially when other organizations outside of the Ivy League had already managed to discover this fraud for who he was without more than a glance or two. Meanwhile, he had Yale calling until his parents put an end to the ruse. |
He sounds like a good fit for Harvard Law ;)
SI |
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Not that easy to just walk up and "[get] into a really good job". However, if you make "smaller" lies and get a Harvard degree, it probably opens a lot of doors. Means to an end, basically. SI |
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