8- The Michigan DailVSummer Weekly - Wednesday, June16,1993 The 'U' confronts scientific fraud Scientific plagues research By AN DIMASCIO DALY STAFF REPORTER Marianne Zorza sat at a desk in 1986 and pecked out a grant proposal for $300,000. She walked home that night, mentally mapping out her life for the next three years. The grant would pay for her salary, benefits and travel during that time. ByDecember,Zorza'smentor,Dr. L. Cass Terry, informed her that the grantproposalwould be revoked. Two months later, he submitted the pro- posal without Zorza's name or ap- proval. Zorza's three-year plans took a permanent vacation. Her quandary is typical among members of the scientific community. Inacountry where thefederal gov- ernment spends $227 billion annually on research, grant money is the bread of universities and their researchers. The Zorza case Zorza worked as aresearch associ- ateunderDr.L.CassTerry,aprofessor ofneurology at the Veterans Adminis- tration Hospital. Terry asked Zorza to formaproposalfor aNationalInstitute of Health (NIH) grant. He promised that if the grant was accepted, Zorza University President James Duderstadt gestures during a speech in February. MICHELLE GUY/Daiy would be listed as the "co-principal investigator." After transferring Zorza to another office, Terry told herhehad withdrawn the proposal. On Feb. 4, 1987, however, Terry submitted the proposal - after omit- ting Zorza's name from the request. WhenZorzafoundout,shereported the "misconduct" to the University. Subsequently, aUniversity committee headed by pathology Prof. Gerald Abramslaunchedaninvestigation into the allegations. The Abramsreportfoundtthat Terry "did not deal forthrightly with Zorza," butsaidthecause wasmiscommunica- tionnotmaliciousomission.Thecom- mittee also confirmed that Terry had plagiarized data in his reseach. The committee forwarded the re- port to NIH for review. The NIH investigated further. Zorza sued the members of the Abrams committee in order to com- pensate for the defamation resulting from the circulation of the report. Washtenaw Circuit Judge Ross Campbell refused to hear her case, ruling that the statue of limitations had passed. The case is now scheduled for the State Court of Appeals. Scientific misconduct defined The University's standard practice guide outlines a sketch for academic misconduct.Itcitesfalsificationofdata, plagiarism, abuse of confidentiality, dishonesty in publication, deliberate violation of regulations, property vio- lations and failure to report fraud as examplesofmisconductthatcouldspell the end of a reseacher's career. After allegations are brought to a departmentdirector,the directordraws up an informal investigation. If the case is deemed to have merit (about four in the country per year do, said University President James Duderstadt), the administration forms a formal investigative committee with one outside source contributing. Sub- jects of such an audit may be sus- pended or during the investigation. Whistleblowing Employees who call an instance of misconduct to the attention of the Uni- versity administration - whistleblowers - ferret out the mis- deeds of their superiors. The threat of being fired for such activity is real. The state and federal governments enactedwhistleblowersprotectionacts to protect employees from retaliation. A conflict arisesdue to the fact that while whistleblowers are protected by law, investigators must maintain the innocence and confidentiality of the accused. Internal investigations After the University issues a report of its investigation, the report is for- warded tothe appropriategrant-giving organization. If the case is severe or an internal report is found insufficient, an organi- zation like the NIH will issue its own investigation. DanielSharphom, theUniversity's assistant general counsel, said he was not sure how the University would police itself ifa member of the admin- istration violated the state Whisleblowers Protection Act. Sharphorn explained many levels of misconduct exist. He said many cases are caused inadvertantly - a result of sloppy documentation rather than malicious intent. "Most people stop at stop signs ... but the reality is it (misconduct) does happen," Sharphorn said. Since the incident, Zorza has de- voted her life to completing her case and aiding otherwhistieblowersinltheir investigations. "After this is over, maybe I should try law school," she said. Scientist ends 33- day hunger strike By BRYN MICKLE DAILY STAFF REPORTER The federalscientist who usedstar- vation to bring attention to scientific misconduct has ended his 33-day hun- ger strike. Walter Stewart, of the National In- Sstitutes of Health (NIH), said a combina- tion of factors led to his deci- sion to quit the strike -prima- rily Sen. David Pryor's (D- Ark.) declara- tion of support. Stewart Pryorhajoined Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.) in support of Stewart's concerns about scientific misconduct and the federal govern- ment. Pryor, who chairs a subcommitte that oversees the activity of federal workers, has written a letter to the Department of Health and Human Ser- vices (HHS) to request an investiga- tionintoStewart'sclaimsoffraudcases involving federal funds - including formerUniversityresearcherMarianne Zorza's accusations of scientific mis- conduct involving the University. "TheinvolvementofSenator Pryor exceeded anything we might have guessed," Stewart said. The scientist ended his fast at the point wherehe was approaching physi- cal harm. He had dropped 30 pounds and his blood pressure had dipped to dangerous levels. Stewartsaidhishungerstrikewould be resumed by other scientists who will each fast for one day as a sign of protest. Stewart and his partner, Dr. Ned Feder, remain on leave from the NIH. They are still unable to access their files and have been told.their supervi- sors cannot to talk to them. Pryorhasrequested HHS'sinvesti- gative report into the Stewart case by July 7. This would coincide with a WashingtonconferenceNIHisco-host- ing on the subject of plagiarism and scientific fraud - Stewart and Feder are forbidden to speak at the confer- ence. 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