CORRUPT: Ex-diversity officer smacked with
massive FINE after giving husband fellowship
A former University of Connecticut graduate
diversity officer was fined March 7 after awarding her husband a fellowship for
which he did not apply. The announcement came just days before a college
admissions scandal broke, in which dozens, including celebrities, were
indicted.
The State of Connecticut Office of State
Ethics fined Charmane Thurmand, a former graduate diversity officer at the
University of Connecticut, $20,000 for awarding her husband a more than $50,000
fellowship for which he did not apply did not have the requisite degree.
Thurmand allegedly directed that her husband,
Martinus Evans, “should not be required to do any substantive work in his
graduate assistantship and instructed the DMD department that he should be paid
for such assistantship simply for doing his schoolwork,” according to the State
Ethics Office.
The Citizen’s Ethics Advisory Board, part of
the State Ethics Office, ruled that Thurmand violated the Code of Ethics’
conflict-of-interests and use-of-office sections.
The office cited Connecticut General Statutes
1-84 (c) and 1-84 (a), which respectively “prohibits a state employee from
using her public position to obtain financial gain for her spouse,” and
“prohibits a state employee from having a financial interest in conflict with
her official duties and responsibilities,” according to the press release.
The diversity officer’s husband was not
required to work, “but should
be paid for such assistantship simply for doing his schoolwork.”
College officials give
power to people who have no ethics, and then administrators are surprised when
this sort of thing happens.
Come on, man. You know this
stuff goes on. But, hey, as long as nobody finds out, it never happened.
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