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German Investigators Protest Editing of Misconduct Report

Volume 10, No. 2, March 2002

Scientists who investigated the biggest research misconduct case in Germany are questioning whether DFG, the country's main research funding agency, is the appropriate body for handling allegations of research misconduct after the agency altered the report submitted by its task force, according to Nature.

The DFG president said the press conference announcing the final report would have had to be canceled if the passages describing alleged irregularities in two papers were not deleted because of pressure being applied by a lawyer for one of the respondents. All three authors associated with those papers were banned by DFG from serving as peer reviewers for specified periods. In total, the investigation involved 6 scientists and about 94 suspicious papers.

The head of the task force argues that the DFG did not have the authority to alter the task force report. He further stated, "What we need is a truly independent panel to handle investigations."


 
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