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Pharmacy school lawsuits show deep divide

"You just need to shut up and stop being a bitch."

By Mariam Khan

khan.197@osu.edu

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Published: Monday, October 19, 2009

Updated: Monday, October 19, 2009

In lawsuits filled with accusations of retaliation, plagiarism, verbal abuse and destruction of evidence, two professors at the College of Pharmacy contend they’ve suffered years of discrimination there.

Further, a former adjunct professor in the College of Public Health has filed a similar suit stemming from the turmoil at the pharmacy school.

In separate but similar suits, Sheryl Szeinbach and Enrique Seoane-Vazquez contend their bosses and colleagues have humiliated them, plotted against them and given them low pay raises while making their work lives miserable. Rosa Rodriguez-Monguio, Seoane’s girlfriend, claims her OSU career was ruined by the turmoil.

Ohio State, represented by at least five attorneys including some from the Ohio Attorney General’s Office, has denied the claims. The university does not comment on pending litigation, Amy Murray, assistant director of Media Relations, said in an e-mail Monday.

The litigation stems from an escalating battle within the pharmacy faculty that began in 2004, when Szeinbach and Seoane expressed reservations about plans to hire Raj Balkrishnan as a professor. Balkrishnan left OSU this summer and took a job at the University of Michigan.

“I have moved away from the Ohio State University in 2009 primarily because of the terrible environment created by these lawsuits which according to me are based on completely false and unsubstantiated allegations by the plaintiffs,” Balkrishnan said in an e-mail Friday.

Despite the objections of Seoane and Szeinbach, Milap Nahata, chair of the Division of Pharmacy Practice and Administration, hired Balkrishnan, who started at OSU in January 2005. During the interview process Balkrishnan acknowledged that while he worked at the University of Texas at Austin, he had “experienced conflicts with colleagues at the university at which he was then employed,” according to the suit.

Szeinbach alleges that Nahata preferred faculty and students who were of South Asian Indian origin, such as Balkrishnan, while treating those of Spanish origin with less respect. Szeinbach is Caucasian.

After he was hired, Balkrishnan called one of Szeinbach’s students a “bitch,” according to her suit. Also, while at a 2007 college meeting, Balkrishnan jumped out of his chair, confronted Szeinbach with clenched fists and stated, “You just need to shut up and stop being a bitch.” OSU investigated that incident and found it to be true. Balkrishnan was disciplined.

The bitterness has taken a toll on the pharmacy faculty. In a deposition, OSU Human Resources consultant Anne Massaro testified that she interviewed 29 faculty members and some called the dispute a “cancer” in the department.

The university could have avoided the suits, said Eric Rosenberg, attorney for the three professors.

“It appears OSU administrators apply rules differently to people who raise Title VII [federal discrimination law] claims,” Rosenberg said. “If rules for tenure and academic misconduct had been applied consistently in this case, this could have been avoided.”

Szeinbach contends in her suit that she has been falsely accused of academic plagiarism. 

Balkrishnan sent harsh e-mails to the entire faculty about an article Szeinbach had published in an academic journal. In April 2007, he e-mailed Mark Levy, the editor of The Primary Care Respiratory Journal, questioning how Szeinbach used data in the piece. 

While Levy was looking into the allegation, Balkrishnan e-mailed the faculty saying that the article created a “matter of great shame and disrepute to the Ohio State University College of Pharmacy.” 

In August 2005, Seoane, who is Hispanic, filed a discrimination and retaliation complaint with OSU regarding actions taken by Balkrishnan, Nahata and other faculty members. 

Szeinbach alleges that because she has supported Seoane in his effort to get tenure, Balkrishnan retaliated against her by telling many students to not take classes with either her or Seoane. She also claims former OSU employees Philip Schneider and Craig Pederson discouraged students in the OSU Hospital Pharmacy Program from working with her and Seoane. 

That affected their evaluations, they claim, and so they got lower pay raises than their colleagues.

In September 2006, Seoane filed charges of discrimination with both the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Ohio Civil Rights Commission. Szeinbach has filed similar charges with both agencies.

The plagiarism dispute stems from Balkrishnan’s contention that Szeinbach used the same data in two separate articles.

Szeinbach’s suit states that Balkrishnan knew this was not true. She also claims that Balkrishnan, Nahata, Pederson, Schneider and Robert Brueggemeier, the dean of the college, plotted to use her support of Seoane and the questions about her articles against her. Her suit says she was the victim of a “Retaliation Plan.”

“I have been a faculty member for 20 years. During this time, I have never observed a faculty member treated so unfairly as Dr. Enrique Seoane-Vazquez,” Szeinbach said in an e-mail Saturday. 

“As a result of my support for Dr. Seoane, I was subjected to numerous forms of retaliation, which have damaged me personally and professionally. However, I hope that my actions may help to level the playing field for future students and faculty who have the courage to report civil rights violations,” she said.

Szeinbach also claims that because of e-mails Balkrishnan sent to others universities about her supposed plagiarism, one school halted employment discussions with her.

After investigating Balkrishnan’s complaint, editor Levy told Szeinbach she had done nothing seriously wrong by using very similar data in two articles. He said in an e-mail that although she had failed to cross reference the similar data, the oversight “was not intentional.” 

Despite Levy’s e-mail, Balkrishnan filed a complaint with OSU’s Human Resources Office, claiming that Szeinbach had violated university policy. Human Resources referred the issue to the Office of Research Compliance. 

That office appointed a committee that found Szeinbach did not commit self-plagiarism by using her own material twice. Nevertheless, the committee concluded Szeinbach violated OSU’s Research Misconduct policy and recommended Brueggemeier establish a committee to investigate the issue further. 

Both Szeinbach and Seoane contend in their suits that several faculty members, including the dean, engaged in far more egregious “publication practices that appear to violate commonly accepted practices within the scientific research community.”

Her suit contends that in March 2008, OSU offered to dismiss its investigation of her supposed plagiarism if she would agree not to participate in Seoane’s tenure process. She refused. That offer, the suit says, is more evidence that the college was retaliating against her.

The case has generated more than 100,000 documents. In preparation for trial, Rosenberg has tried to document the years of testy and exasperated exchanges among the affected faculty, human resources employees, university attorneys and others.

In recent court filings, Rosenberg contends that university employees destroyed many important documents that would have helped his clients win their cases. In July Rosenberg asked the judge to impose sanctions on Ohio State for “willfully allowing the destruction of evidence.” The judge has not ruled on that yet.

Szeinbach’s suit is a long way from over, Rosenberg said. He continues to gather information for an eventual trial.

Rodriguez-Monguio contends she lost her job at OSU because she lost research money due to Balkrishnan’s complaints about her to the College of Public Health. She now teaches at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.

The College of Pharmacy denied Seoane tenure earlier this year. He has appealed and that process continues at OSU.

Seoane’s suit was dismissed on Oct. 9 because the judge ruled that Seoane still had administrative options to pursue at the university for his grievances. He can refile his suit after those options are exhausted, Rosenberg said.

In her 2007 assessment of the college, Massaro of Human Resources reported that the years of wrangling was hurting the faculty.

“Disruptive and adversarial behavior of a few faculty, and the distraction caused by this disruptive behavior, is of grave concern for almost all in the Division,” her report said.

“Examples of the disruptive/adversarial behavior include: unprofessional meeting behaviors, inappropriate student advising, scholarly misconduct, fiduciary misconduct and failure to obtain IRB [institutional review board] approval for research involving patients.”

Rosenberg says he’s concluded that, at least in this case, OSU could have avoided this protracted and expensive battle if it had just applied the same behavior standards to faculty as it does to students.

“When you look at the Honor Code applied to students,” he said, “it appears certain faculty members have engaged in far more egregious behavior than any students and have not been subject to the same scrutiny.”

Comments

16 comments
Ex-Faculty
Mon Nov 9 2009 10:58
As a former pharmacy faculty, buffoon professors like Raj are tolerated simply because he has the ability to bring in grant money and improve the exposure of the College. The sad part of this is that narcisstic professors like Raj (read his own comments and you will see that he is high on himself) are not really concerned about the education component, versus their own fame. Those professors that are devoted to the profession end up getting a raw deal simply because there ends up being preferential treatment to cancerous characters like Raj. Faculty like Raj need to get off their high horse, and work as a professional team player with the College and University, and ultimately the profession in mind. For Raj specifically, you may also want to know what you are talking about...i.e., your incorrect words on CNN about antidepressants being "tranquilizers" per se.
alumni
Mon Nov 2 2009 19:01
So saddened to read about this childish behavior, especially as an OSU College of Pharmacy Alumni. I remember some great professors, including Dr. Nahata, and also a few insignificant ones, such as Balkrishnan. Be adult, and stop tarnishing our great college's reputation.
NOTTHELASTWORD
Sun Oct 25 2009 19:33
A rule in job hunting and also in litigation is to never badmouth the former employer and stick to the facts.

He who sligs mud loses ground very fast.

I am glad the Professor has such a good self esteem and zealous confidence.

It is exactly what recruiters look for in todays lean job market

Mary Sue Coleman should be very proud. She has dealt with similar accusations in the Law School

Rajesh Balkrishnan
Sat Oct 24 2009 06:46
Yes unlike the cowards below who hide behind nameless faces, I don't hesitate to say the truth because I know that I have been falsely accused of all this by these faculty members, whose only goal was to get me out of OSU as soon as possible. Anyway, OSU did not deserve me. I am much happier and fulfilled at the more prestigious and no-nonsense U of M!
Metal Retrobution
Thu Oct 22 2009 22:11
A Tenured Dean does NOT Resign his post unless he has sexually, racially, or physically, assaulted someone. Tenure = Bulletproof unless the 3 exceptions above are in play.
Otherwise any student or faculty challenging them are without merit and consequently the professor will be vindicated.

Clearly these three chambers are in play. We've seen this before YES THE MEEZAN CASE !

Dancing on the line sayiing these accusations are clearly without merit and my collegue and I will be vindicated and we are fully prepared to vigorously defend these accusations is weak. Why destroy evidence! Oh wait it is incriminating

GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR DEFENSE

Student
Wed Oct 21 2009 11:51
Another college that has a similar circus to follow is the College of Human Ecology and the College of Education at Ohio State University. Yes as mentioned before, by the prior posting, "we are all expected to act like professionals." However, some of the Administrators and Professors in the College are considered lifelines and backbones of the college have different degrees and different aptitudes and they differ greatly from what they preach .

"Don't do as I do, do as I say"
"I have a philosophy my way or the highway"
"By resignation of this one or that one, I assume Interim or Acting that leads to Permanent. After all, nobody wants it"

We all no what happens when we ass u me!

I too will decline to mention personal names, but I too expect that many current and past students can relate to this in other colleges too.

"The departments decision is Final" and also many lecturers and senior lecturers and adjunt faculty sit and perch on a position for decades that is offered at the same time, quarter and classroom, with students that give very negative reviews and the individual still thrives.

This University does not "practice what it preaches" at all.

Another PharmD Student
Tue Oct 20 2009 23:38
I always wondered about the administration of the college. While he's a nice guy who basically means well, I've never thought that Dean Bruggemeier did such a great job at keeping his fingers on the pulse of what was going on in the College of Pharmacy, so this isn't too surprising. Gordon Gee has spent too much time handing out buttons and not enough time on academics and administration. It's not surprising that things like this are the result. It was the Gee administration, after all, that fired half of the Arts and Sciences deans and put the dean of the College of Business in as provost. Admittedly, many of these things happened before Gee took over, but his inaction with College of Pharmacy administration helped create the circus that is the Pharmacy Practice and Administration division.

The most troubling thing about this is that Ohio State's Pharmacy Practice and Administration division was one of the best in the country, and it is sad that the juvenile actions of one professor, Dr. Balkrishnan, as well as the inability of College administration to deal with it, has left that part of the College in complete and utter disarray. Dr. Seoane was, by far, one of the best teachers that I had in the PharmD program, and it sickens me to see the College of Pharmacy toss aside such a professor in order to kiss up to a disgrace to the profession like Dr. Balkrishnan.

As future health care professionals, we are expected to act like professionals. Some of the administrators and professors in the College could be the poster children of professionalism. Without them, the College would have crumbled into nothingness around Dean Bruggemeier years ago. For fear of causing them grief by linking them to this article, I won't mention names, but I expect that the PharmD students and alumni could agree on a lot of them. At the same time, a good number of the faculty and administration of the College of Pharmacy should learn to actually practice what they preach when it comes to acting like a professional.

Hyunjae
Tue Oct 20 2009 21:30
Everybody read the first comment, it's from Rajesh Balkrishnan himself hahahaha
PharmD Student
Tue Oct 20 2009 20:51
I have been an active student in the College of Pharmacy for over 3 years, and I'm very surprised by this article. This behavior has certainly not trickled down into the extracurricular and classroom environments. There are many wonderful administrators and educators in the college - Please do not judge the entire department based on this article.
Your name
Tue Oct 20 2009 20:48
the Pharm.D. students give unconditional praise to the current staff excluding Dr. Szeinbach. Long live Dean/Dr. Brueggemeier!
Mary Weir
Tue Oct 20 2009 20:23
The whole dept. needs to grow up! These sound like high schoolers! Maybe they should all be let go and start over.
A concerned citizen
Tue Oct 20 2009 18:17
I concur with the observation that students behaving in this way would've been shown the door a long time ago. If Rajesh were a graduate student, he would've been thrown to the curb in a New York minute!
Joe
Tue Oct 20 2009 16:27
Ahhhhhh

All about eoe/eeo/m/f/d/v/aa not merit!

"Competence is like pornography, we know it when we see it" Sandra J. O'conner

Ashton Herb
Tue Oct 20 2009 13:12
Fire all of them. What a disgrace. This is a classic example of the OSU culture in our professional and graduate schools. Each school is it's own little world, doing shenanigans like this, and out of control.

Get some control Gee. Stop pretending like you care about the students and handing out pins. Get real.

Chad
Tue Oct 20 2009 09:55
You are posting about this in a public forum with ongoing litigation? Doesn't seem really intelligent to me.
Rajesh Balkrishnan
Tue Oct 20 2009 09:36
I strongly object to the Lantern reporting this biased story, which clearly is an attempt to malign the reputation of many faculty members in my erstwhile institution. I am misquoted as there are quotation marks used for a statement which I never made exactly as written and were uttered only after years of provocation and insults from Dr. Szeinbach. The statement I made after the provocation was " Will you stop being such a bitch" and not what has been quoted. I have since regretted my outburst. I reproduce below my response to Ms. Khans request for information which she selectively used to present her biased unobjective opinion.
"Hello Ms. Khan:
I have moved away from the Ohio State University in 2009 primarily because of the terrible environment created by these lawsuits which according to me are based on completely false and unsubstantiated allegations by the plaintiffs. These lawsuits have also significantly impeded the great strides the College of Pharmacy at OSU is making as a leader in Pharmacy Education and was hoping to further with my hire in 2005. I really do not want to be involved any further with these lawsuits and have given 2 days of deposition, transcripts of which should be available with the university counsel Mr. Jan Neiger, which can give you the further details you may need.
Best Wishes,
--------------------------------------------------
Rajesh Balkrishnan, PhD"

I want the readers to decide for themselves if this is any way to objectively report a dispute that has not yet been resolved.







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