Aaron Sibarium Profile picture
Jan 2 34 tweets 7 min read Read on X
SCOOP: Harvard president Claudine Gay was hit with six additional allegations of plagiarism tonight in a complaint filed with the university, pushing the total number of allegations near 50. 

These are some of the most extreme and clear-cut examples yet.🧵freebeacon.com/campus/harvard…
7 of Gay’s 17 published works have already been impacted by the scandal, but the new charges extend into an 8th: In a 2001 article, Gay lifts nearly half a page of material verbatim from another scholar, David Canon, a political science professor at the University of Wisconsin.
That article, "The Effect of Minority Districts and Minority Representation on Political Participation in California," includes some of the most extreme and clear-cut cases of plagiarism yet.
At one point, Gay borrows four sentences from Canon’s 1999 book, “Race, Redistricting, and Representation,” without quotation marks and with only minor semantic tweaks. She does not cite Canon anywhere in or near the passage, though he does appear in the bibliography.
Beyond that, Gay’s first two footnotes are copied verbatim from Canon’s endnotes.
Canon, like several of the scholars Gay has quoted without attribution, insisted that she had done nothing wrong.

"I am not at all concerned about the passages," Canon told the Washington Free Beacon. "This isn't even close to an example of academic plagiarism."
Though Harvard's governing board, the Corporation, said in December that it had reviewed Gay’s published oeuvre and found several cases of "inadequate citation," it did not identify any of the examples described in the new complaint.
The discrepancy raises troubling questions not just about the scope of Gay’s plagiarism, which appears to afflict half of her published works, but also the thoroughness and seriousness of the Corporation’s probe.
The review was completed in just a few weeks—far less time than the 6 to 12 months typical of other plagiarism investigations—and the Corporation has refused to disclose the names of the academics who conducted it.
A Harvard spokesman, Jonathan Swain, did not respond to a request for comment about whether the school has reviewed all of Gay’s work, and, if so, how it missed the examples unearthed on Monday.
"The board’s review of Gay’s work was too brief to inspire confidence," the complaint reads. "So we now know for certain that the board’s investigation was a sham."
The allegations filed Monday also include more material from Gay’s dissertation, which has already received three corrections. In one of the new examples, Gay lifts a full sentence from her thesis adviser, Gary King, to describe a mathematical model.
While some of Gay’s defenders have claimed that technical descriptions do not require attribution in the social sciences, since there are only so many ways to explain a method or a formula, a Harvard handbook from 1998—the year Gay completed her dissertation—says otherwise.
"Citing tells your readers that the strategy or method isn’t original with you and allows them to consult its original context," the handbook states. King, who has downplayed previous charges against Gay, did not respond to a request for comment. conncoll.edu/media/website-…
The rest of the new examples center on a 1996 paper by Frank Gilliam, "Exploring Minority Empowerment: Symbolic Politics, Governing Coalitions and Traces of Political Style in Los Angeles," that Gay repeatedly quotes without attribution, changing just a few words here or there.
Those passages describe big-picture findings and do not include technical verbiage. Gilliam, now the chancellor of the University of North Carolina-Greensboro, did not respond to a request for comment.
The new complaint comes as an increasing number of Harvard students are speaking out against Gay, arguing that she has been held to a lower standard than the average undergraduate for examples like this one:
One student on Harvard’s honor council wrote in an anonymous op-ed that students are routinely suspended for doing what Gay did. Some students have called on Gay to resign, and others seem reluctant to defend their embattled president.
"President Gay Plagiarized, but She Should Stay," read the headline of a Harvard Crimson editorial. "For Now."
That qualified position represents a shift in tone from the paper’s editorial board, which previously opined that—for the sake of a "free democracy"—Gay "must not yield" to "partisan attacks" in the wake of her disastrous testimony on anti-Semitism.
Gay’s most outspoken defenders have been her faculty colleagues. Randall Kennedy, a Harvard Law School professor, told the New York Times that the plagiarism charges were ginned up by "professional vilifiers" and "bad faith" actors. nytimes.com/2023/12/21/us/…
Another Harvard lawyer, Charles Fried, was more explicit, describing the allegations as an "extreme right-wing attack on elite institutions."

"If it came from some other quarter, I might be granting it some credence," he told the Times. "But not from these people."
Harvard said in December that Gay’s "duplicative language," while "regrettable," did not constitute research misconduct because it was not "intentional or reckless," citing a policy that only governs faculty and is less stringent than the rules for students.
But as more allegations have surfaced, some professors have begun to break ranks. A few told the Boston Globe in December that Gay’s treatment reeked of hypocrisy and double standards. bostonglobe.com/2023/12/21/met…
And Omar Haque, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical School, said that the sheer breadth of the examples—especially those from the pre-word processor days—made it hard to fathom that everything was unintentional.
"Gay's alleged plagiarism in the 1990s may be more serious than in in recent years," he told the Free Beacon, "because prior to the use of computers to highlight and copy/paste text in seconds, plagiarism was more likely to be non-accidental and intentional and reckless."
Haque, who said he was speaking only in a personal capacity, added that it took "greater effort" to plagiarize with a typewriter.
The blowback has been exacerbated by the Harvard Corporation’s feckless response to the allegations, which it initially tried to squash with a legal threat to the New York Post—and to the unnamed whistleblower who brought those allegations to the Post’s attention.
Through the bellicose litigation boutique Clare Locke, Harvard said that it would sue for "immense damages" if the Post published a story on the charges. It also "threatened to use legal means to out who had supplied the comparisons," according to the paper’s reporting.
That person, a professor at another university, whom the Free Beacon has identified and granted anonymity, is behind the Monday complaint to Harvard, as well as a separate complaint last month alleging around 40 cases of plagiarism.
While several Harvard scholars have faced plagiarism allegations since the early 2000s, none have seen such a large percentage of their work implicated. thecrimson.com/article/2019/2…
Beyond outlining the new charges against Gay, the latest complaint argues that Harvard’s legal saber-rattling violated its research misconduct policy for faculty, which forbids retaliation against complainants.
"At one point Gay and Harvard asked the Post, ‘Why would someone making such a complaint be unwilling to attach their name to it,’" the Monday complaint reads.
"I was unwilling because I feared that Gay and Harvard would violate their policies, behave more like a cartel with a hedge fund attached than a university, try to seek ‘immense’ damages from me and who knows what else."

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More from @aaronsibarium

Dec 23, 2023
MORE PLAGIARISM: Harvard’s review of the plagiarism allegations against Claudine Gay unearthed a new case of "inadequate citation" that was not included in any of the documents sent to the school, raising fresh questions about the scope of her misconduct.🧵freebeacon.com/campus/harvard…
The new example comes from Gay’s dissertation, where she quoted a 1981 article by Richard Shingles, "Black Consciousness and Political Participation: The Missing Link," without proper attribution, Harvard told the Chronicle of Higher Education on Wednesday.
But Shingles, now an emeritus professor at Virginia Tech, was never named in the allegations Harvard received—either from an anonymous whistleblower on Tuesday or from the New York Post in late October.
Read 16 tweets
Dec 19, 2023
SCOOP: Harvard today received a complaint outlining over 40 allegations of plagiarism against its embattled president, Claudine Gay.

The document (available online) suggests a pattern of misconduct more extensive than has been previously reported. 🧵freebeacon.com/campus/fresh-a…
The complaint, which was submitted to Harvard's research integrity officer, includes the examples reported by the Beacon and other outlets, as well as dozens of additional cases in which Gay quoted or paraphrased without proper attribution.

Read it here: freebeacon.com/wp-content/upl…
The allegations range from missing quotation marks around a few phrases or sentences to entire paragraphs lifted verbatim.

The full list of examples spans seven of Gay's publications—two more than previously reported—which comprise almost half of her scholarly output.
Read 23 tweets
Dec 11, 2023
SCOOP: Rufo’s examples are just the tip of the iceberg. In four articles published between 1993 and 2017, including her dissertation, Gay paraphrased or quoted almost 20 authors without proper attribution, in some cases lifting entire paragraphs verbatim.🧵freebeacon.com/campus/this-is…
We worked with nearly a dozen scholars to analyze 29 potential cases of plagiarism. Most of them said Gay had violated a core principle of academic integrity plus Harvard’s own anti-plagiarism policies, which state that "it's not enough to change a few words here and there."
Rather, scholars are expected to cite the sources of their work, including when paraphrasing, and to use quotation marks when quoting directly from others. But in at least 10 instances, Gay lifted full sentences—even entire paragraphs—with just a word or two tweaked.
Read 41 tweets
Dec 6, 2023
The presidents of Harvard, Penn, and MIT appeared before Congress today to discuss the rising anti-Semitism on their campuses.

The hearing highlighted how utterly hypocritical these institutions have become.🧵

freebeacon.com/campus/anti-se…
The presidents struggled to explain why their institutions—which have repeatedly denounced, disinvited, and punished professors for airing conservative views—suddenly discovered the value of free speech when students and faculty began defending Hamas.
"In what world is a call for violence against Jews protected speech, but a belief that sex is biological and binary isn’t?" Rep. Tim Walberg (R., Mich.) asked Harvard president Claudine Gay.
Read 18 tweets
Dec 5, 2023
EXCLUSIVE: Congressional Republicans have introduced a bill that would create a dedicated office for investigating race discrimination in college admissions, the most dramatic effort yet to enforce the Supreme Court's ban on affirmative action.🧵

freebeacon.com/policy/republi…
The College Admissions Accountability Act, introduced by J.D. Vance and Jim Banks, would establish a special inspector general within the Education Department—separate from OCR—to probe potential violations of the colorblind standard set forth in SFFA v. Harvard.
The bill would also bar schools that flout the decision from receiving any form of federal aid.

"Every student in America is entitled to equal protection under the law, regardless of their background," @JDVance1 told the Washington Free Beacon.
Read 26 tweets
Dec 2, 2023
Remember that Wall Street Journal article about the segregated classes in Evanston, Illinois? The Journal suggested that such courses were legal as long as they were optional.

But civil rights lawyers told the Beacon that this was manifestly untrue.🧵

freebeacon.com/columns/the-le…
The journal said that "Federal antidiscrimination laws prevent public schools from mandatorily separating students by race, but education lawyers say optional courses can comply with the law." wsj.com/us-news/educat…
It is not clear who those unnamed lawyers were or what they told the nation’s second-largest newspaper. But the attorneys we spoke with—they did provide their names—were flabbergasted by the notion that black-only courses would hold up in court.
Read 7 tweets

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