Exclusive: Shell employee confesses to graduate student misdeeds

A former graduate student at Georgia Tech who at least until recently worked at Shell confessed last year to misconduct in three published papers.

Michael Casciato, who earned his doctorate  from Georgia Tech in 2013, wrote in a June 22, 2020 email to the editor of an American Chemical Society journal as well as the principal investigator of the lab where he completed his PhD, Martha Grover, and a co-author, Dennis Hess:

I am writing to inform you that I committed research misconduct with respect to several pieces of data in papers that I published in Industrial Engineering & Chemistry Research (IECR) while I was a graduate student.  

The email, which Retraction Watch obtained through a public records request, named the three papers and provided fulsome details about which data Casciato recalls as real and which were likely made up. He continued:

I am writing now to share this information with you, apologize for my actions, and request your guidance on how you would like to proceed with these publications.

All of my co-authors on these three papers have been informed that I am contacting you with this note, and I have copied my thesis advisors as well, who have been counseling me on how to proceed as I rectify the mistakes I have made. 

Please know that I committed these acts on my own. Nobody coerced me or suggested this action to me, and nobody else collaborated with me. None of my co-authors or thesis advisors were aware of this behavior. 

I am coming forward now of my own volition to correct the record, borne out of a desire to fix the mistakes that I made. 

I was not compelled in any way whatsoever by any other person, party, investigator or researcher, laboratory or organization, or any other body to disclose my unethical behavior. Furthermore, nobody discovered flaws, errors, or issues with the work I completed and drove me to this disclosure. 

Please accept my sincere apologies for what I did, and please advise how you would like to proceed. 

Philip Savage, the journal’s editor in chief, responded on July 8, 2020:

I appreciate the courage that is required to make that admission. Since some of the published data in the three I&EC Research articles are fabricated, I believe retraction of those articles is the appropriate path to take. For each article, I ask that you work with your co-authors to draft a retraction statement for each and then submit them individually as an Addition/Correction manuscript type in ACS Paragon Plus with all of the original co-authors appropriately listed on each submission. The retraction statement for each article should provide the reason for retraction (falsification or fabrication of data) and perhaps comment on how that data affects the main conclusions in the article. My office will review the text after it is submitted. Please try to submit the retraction statements by no later than July 31, 2020. 

All three of the IECR papers were retracted within two months of Casicato’s email and include a reference to “the voluntary admission of Michael J. Casciato that this article contained data that he had fabricated”:

Casciato refers to a fourth IECR paper, “Capture and Recovery of Organic Iodide Species from the Product Stream of a Process for the Iodative Dehydrogenation of Ethane to Ethylene,” and to the fact that he completed it while employed by Royal Dutch Shell.

This paper does not contain any research misconduct, fabrication, or falsification, and I am fourth author on this paper.

I realize that my word does not carry value with you given the other admissions in this communication, but I did want to highlight this information to you as well for full transparency on my interactions with your journal.

If you plan to contact the co-authors on this particular paper (Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 2018, 57, 42, 13932–13939), I would like to ask if you can please advise me so I can contact them first and advise on the context of this situation with both my co-authors and my managers at Shell. I have been managing this situation so far with my thesis advisors, but if you plan to contact my co-authors, I would prefer first contact be made by me.

Savage, the editor in chief, responded:

You had mentioned a fourth article in your email message. Since there are no known ethical concerns with that article, there is no need to consider it any further.

In response to a request for a copy of reports of any investigations in the case, Georgia Tech said that “records related to the scholarly misconduct inquiry and investigation are protected from disclosure” based on the U.S. Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act “as they relate to Mr. Casciato’s time as a GT student.”

Neither Casciato — who has had a total of five papers retracted, by our count — nor the Shell media office responded to requests for comment.

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11 thoughts on “Exclusive: Shell employee confesses to graduate student misdeeds”

  1. I, too, am most appreciative of Michael Casciato’s courage in deciding to disclose his misdeeds, especially given the apparent absence of external pressures on him to do so. I suspect that Michael would like to put this ugly chapter of his professional life behind him and do so soon enough. However, it seems to me that it would be really useful for the research integrity community if he would also take some time to share any information as to what internal or other factors might have prompted him to confess. Such information could be potentially useful in developing more effective training techniques in the responsible conduct of research.

  2. It’s interesting that in his Linkedin profile he only mentions his MS (which he also received from Georgia Tech in 2013), not his PhD. It makes me wonder if felt like he shouldn’t claim he has a PhD.

    1. As mentioned in a comment above, it’s likely that the dissertation was based at least partly on these fraudulent data, and thus is likely to be revoked or withdrawn.

      I also think it was really brave of him to come forward like this without any external pressure to do so. I wish him well.

    2. I too got a PhD and do not include it. I have no fabricated data but I’m no proud at all of it. My phd papers can be summarized as interesting titles with useless data analysis in it because my phd advisor wanted to publish a lot and fast with unreasonable assumptions. I do similar research now in a private company and it’s very different, much better.
      I think the university should investigate: why the advisor didn’t notice anything, why thr students felt like he had to forge data (pressure to publish, no help whatsoever?)
      We should not forget that many faculties get many grants to increase their salary only, not to do research or sponsor a student.

    1. How did they ruin his life? This is a news site that reports on retractions. Retractions, for whatever cause, need to be made public for the good of the field; this information is not supposed to be hidden.

    2. Seems to me that he ruined his own life when the decided to fabricate data in three journal articles. And no amount of hand wringing and mea culpas is going to change that one fact. If anyone is responsible for ruining this guy’s life it’s him. And nobody else.

  3. There will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than for 99 data thugs who need no repentance.

  4. I am teaching a class on critical reading, ethics and research problems. I am going to use the above verbatim for a class, have undergraduates discuss this in a flipped class with small discussion groups. Clearly this guys has guts, living up to what he did wrong. I am curious what an undergraduate class takes out of this case. Will post later.

  5. Maybe he is looking for inner peace for himself. To be honest, if I found there are something wrong with my paper but nobody points them out, I would just let them there

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