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MIT Probe Rejects BMD Research Fraud Claim

The internal MIT review did not find that MIT made any significant mistakes
by Staff Writers
Cambridge MA (UPI) May 24, 2006
An internal MIT review has found university officials largely blameless for a three- to four-year delay in examining allegations of research fraud at Lincoln Laboratory, the Boston Globe reported Saturday.

The investigation into the possible fraud in a missile defense study began two months ago, five years after the allegations were raised by Theodore Postol, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Postol has criticized MIT for dragging its feet, but university officials have said they were hamstrung by the U.S. government's refusal to allow them access to the necessary materials. Postol argued that a team that included MIT scientists could not have acted in good faith when they used what he said was flawed data to deem ''basically sound" the results from a 1997 test of an infrared missile sensor, the Globe said.

A panel of four MIT professors began looking into the delays in the fall.

The committee affirmed MIT's assertions that the U.S. Department of Defense was responsible for most of the delay. After an initial MIT inquiry concluded in 2002 that a more detailed investigation was warranted, the government refused to allow MIT to investigate and classified some of MIT's documents related to the case, the Globe said.

MIT and Defense Department officials finally worked out a compromise, announced in March, under which the Pentagon would investigate and share its conclusions with MIT.

The panel also found that Postol contributed to delays and complications by failing to offer a clear and detailed explanation of his charges at the outset, adding to his allegations over time.

"The absence of a clear, concise and consistent definition of the allegation complicated the conduct of the inquiry," the panel said. They faulted Postol further for revealing confidential information to the media and others.

The panel recommended a few small changes to MIT investigative procedures. They identified a few minor factors that slowed the university's initial inquiry, including a period of uncertainty about whether MIT's research misconduct policy applied to the situation, given that the work was done for the government, not for MIT. But the panel did not find that MIT made any significant mistakes, the Globe said.

Postol dismissed the panel's findings Friday, the paper reported.

Source: United Press International

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US consults Europeans on anti-missile site
Washington (AFP) May 22, 2006
The United States is consulting European allies about deploying missile defenses in Europe to thwart a Middle Eastern ballistic missile threat, a Pentagon spokesman said Monday.









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