Florida university fires criminology professor blemished by retractions

Florida State University last week terminated a criminology professor accused of research misconduct, Retraction Watch has learned, capping a years-long, highly publicized saga the school says has caused almost “catastrophic” damage to its standing.

In a termination letter obtained by Retraction Watch, the university accused the former professor, Eric A. Stewart, of “extreme negligence and incompetence.” It also asserted that, due to Stewart’s actions, “decades of research” once believed “to be at the forefront of” criminology has “been shown to contain numerous erroneous and false narratives.”

“The details of problematic data management, false results, and the numerous publication retractions have negatively affected the discipline on a national level,” FSU Provost James J. Clark wrote in the letter, dated July 13. 

Clark added that the debacle had also affected recruitment of faculty and students and caused the university’s researchers to worry about their chances of getting papers into top journals.

“The damage to the standing of the University and, in particular, the College of Criminology and Criminal Justice and its faculty approaches the catastrophic and may be unalterable,” he wrote.

Stewart, whose work focuses on racial disparities in the criminal justice system, could not be reached for comments. He was hired by FSU in 2007.

The misconduct allegations date back to 2019, when one of Stewart’s coauthors, Justin Pickett, suggested in emails to the university that Stewart had “falsified data and findings.” Pickett grew suspicious of his former collaborator following an email from a “John Smith” outlining problems with five of Stewart’s papers. A 27-page article that Pickett posted to a preprint server later that year detailed his concerns about one of the studies, as we reported at the time. 

All of the five papers, along with a sixth, have since been retracted

The decision to terminate Stewart, which he called “arbitrary and capricious” in a long response (with an appendix) to FSU earlier this year, comes after years of bitter feuding. As revealed by dozens of internal documents obtained by Retraction Watch and made public here for the first time, the researcher vehemently defended himself against his critics. At one point he told colleagues in an email (p. 88) that “Justin Pickett has essentially lynched me and my academic character, thereby severely impacting my career, credibility, and professional advancement” — a particularly stinging charge, given that Stewart is Black.

On another occasion, Stewart claimed that the “baseless allegations” against him “serve as a means of harassment, as well as waste time and resources.”

To investigate, FSU conducted three preliminary probes over as many years. While Stewart’s work contained several problems and statistical mistakes, the probes found no clear signs of research misconduct. 

The inquiry committees all recommended against doing a full investigation, a decision that has drawn criticism from Pickett and others. Pickett also argues that the university ignored its own conflict-of-interest rules by appointing two of Stewart’s coauthors to one of the inquiry committees.

While the termination letter stops short of accusing Stewart of research fraud, it does point out that he has not been exonerated:

The misconduct claims were not rejected, but in all inquiries into the matter, there was found to be insufficient evidence to support a full investigation into research misconduct which is defined as fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism in proposing, performing, or reviewing research, or in reporting research results. 

Reached for comments, Amy Farnum-Patronis, director of News and Digital Communications at FSU, said: “The termination letter speaks for itself. We have nothing to add.”

One problem facing the inquiry committees was that Stewart’s raw data had gone missing. Allegedly, he handed over three data files to the university in July 2019. But the school since lost the files, as one of its lawyers explained in an email this year (p. 90ff) to the U.S. National Science Foundation Office of Inspector General, which investigates grant fraud.

However, Stewart later admitted that he had not handed over the raw data to the university as he had not been asked to do so (p. 28)

In addition, the hard drive on which Stewart kept his data crashed in December 2019, he explained in an investigatory interview last year (p. 96ff). He had no backup, he said.

“A data file that is ‘lost’ while it is under investigation is particularly peculiar,” Thomas G. Blomberg, dean of the College of Criminology and Criminal Justice at FSU, wrote in a series of comments on Stewart’s statements (p. 110ff). “Three outcomes are potentially possible. First, the data could have been lost (least likely explanation). Second, the data may have never existed. Third, the data existed in some format but were destroyed to prevent others from accessing them.”

Blomberg, who did not respond to a request for comment, also questioned what Stewart described as his “pretty extensive” training in statistics:

If his training in statistical analysis was extensive, then there is no way that he would have created the errors that he did in his studies. Calculating the standard deviation, for example, is something that is taught in middle and high schools and yet he repeatedly miscalculated and/or misreported the standard deviation.

In an overview of Stewart’s research, Blomberg listed 16 studies (p. 106) published over 17 years that all had indicators of “impossible results and erroneous statistics”: 

These were no errors that could be explained away by human error or analytical decisions as they were detected across multiple studies using different data and that employed a variety of methodological and statistical approaches. In short, the problematic indicators were found to be pervasive in his studies, were not confined to just a single problematic indicator, and were detected across a lengthy stretch of his academic career providing compelling documentation of flagrant research incompetence.

Some of these studies are linked to federal grants, according to one of the inquiry reports. That probe concluded that, based on available evidence, “there is little reason to believe the anomalous [standard deviations] are due to research misconduct as opposed to honest error.”

In March, after Stewart received a letter describing the university’s intent to terminate him and he was put on administrative leave, he requested that his case be reviewed by a university peer panel. 

Of the three members of that panel, only one supported his termination. Another recommended less severe punishment, while the third found disciplinary action unwarranted.

In the termination letter, Clark said Stewart had “distorted some important facts” in the information he had shared with the panel, which could have swayed some members in his favor.

In conclusion, Clark wrote, “I do not see how you can teach our students to be ethical researchers or how the results of future research projects conducted by you could be deemed as trustworthy. Therefore, I am proceeding with a termination.”

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4 thoughts on “Florida university fires criminology professor blemished by retractions”

  1. It’s pretty unsavory for him to blame Pickett when in the various reports he acknowledges that essentially all of Pickett’s criticisms are correct. “I made a whole lot of mistakes but pointing them out is persecution” is not a great argument.

  2. I have to say as a layman, the university’s statement feels a little over-the-top to me. Literally no damage will be undone, the public policies this research supported will remain in force, and it will all happen again because this was sociological research serving the purpose sociological research is meant for. The state seeks a metatext of rigor to support their policy agenda in and academics bid to author that metatext.

    The White Scare won’t be called off because of these retractions and the counter-narrative the un-manipulated data seems to show will never get it’s own treatment. Grant dollars will remain in the government’s pocket until another Sociologist comes along peddling graphs and tables to append to administrative agency documents recommending further repression, dispossession and abuse of White Americans.

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