Body
Question
What procedures need to be followed if research misconduct is suspected?
Answer
A. RECEIPT AND ASSESSMENT OF ALLEGATIONS
- Where to Report
- Any employee, student, or individual associated with USD who becomes aware of possible misconduct shall promptly report it to the Vice President for Research/ VPR
- Form of Allegation
- Should be in writing and signed
- Should include all available documentation supporting the allegation
- Confidentiality
- The identity of complainants, respondents, and witnesses is limited to those with a legitimate need to know, which may include IRBs, journals, publishers, co-authors, collaborators, and federal agencies
- This limitation no longer applies after a final institutional determination (ORI Final Rule)
- Preliminary Assessment
- The VPR determines whether the allegation:
- Falls within the regulatory definition of research misconduct
- It is sufficiently credible and specific to justify moving to an inquiry
- If not, the matter is closed at this stage and documented
B. SEQUESTRATION OF RESEARCH RECORDS
- Timing
- Sequestration occurs on or before the date the respondent is notified that an inquiry will begin
- Items to Sequester
- Laboratory notebooks
- Electronic data
- Hard-copy data
- Proposals, manuscripts, publications
- Emails and correspondence
- Any materials relevant to the allegation
- How to sequester
- Obtain original materials when possible
- If originals cannot be obtained, substantially equivalent copies may be used
- Document:
- What was taken
- Who collected it
- From where
- When
- Chain of custody
- Ongoing Sequestration
- Records may continue to be sequestered when newly identified or relevant (Final Rule)
C. INQUIRY
- Purpose
- To determine whether the allegation warrants a full investigation
- Not to make a final finding
- Who Conducts the Inquiry
- Per Final Rule:
- The VPR or a designated official may conduct the inquiry
- A committee is not required at this stage
- Notice to Respondent
- Respondent receives written notice including:
- Allegation description
- Scope of inquiry
- Sequestration steps already taken
- Their rights
- Inquiry Activities
- Review sequestered records
- Interview complainant, respondent, or witnesses (interviews may be transcribed)
- Perform preliminary analyses
- Timeline
- The inquiry must be completed within 60 days, or delays must be documented
D. INQUIRY REPORT REQUIREMENTS
- The Final Rule requires the inquiry report to include:
- Identity of the respondent
- Description of allegations(s)
- Description of PHS or federal support
- Analyses conducted
- Transcripts of any interviews that were transcribed
- Timeline and procedural history
- Inventory of all sequestered records
- Institutional actions taken during the inquiry
- Basis for recommending whether an investigation is warranted
- Respondent Access
- Respondents must be provided with access to all interview transcripts
- Outcome
- If investigation is warranted → proceed to Investigation
- If not → matter closed and reported to complainant and respondent
E. INVESTIGATION
- When to Begin
- Must be initiated within 30 days after completion of the inquiry
- Notice to Respondent (Expanded)
- Includes:
- Allegations being investigated
- All ORI-required notifications
- Policies and procedures
- Committee membership
- Rights/responsibilities
- Committee Appointment
- Five impartial USD faculty members, appointed by the VPR with concurrence of Faculty Senate Chair
- At least two must have scientific expertise in the area
- Committee chair must hold academic rank at least equal to respondents
- Multiple Respondents
- If additional respondents are identified:
- A new inquiry is NOT required
- Multiple Institutions
- If multiple institutions are involved:
- A lead institution is designated to coordinate and obtain all research records
- Committee Meetings
- Chair schedules meetings
- Respondent and complainant may participate as outlined
- Proceedings are confidential
- Detailed minutes maintained
- Mode of Investigation
- Review all research records and evidence
- Conduct recorded and transcribed interviews
- Perform scientific, statistical, or forensic analyses
- Maintain chain of custody and documentation
- Respondent Rights
- Present at meetings where evidence is received
- Submit questions for witnesses
- Access to documentation
- Provided all interview transcripts
- Right to counsel (counsel may attend but not participate)
- Timeline
- Per Final Rule, investigation must be completed within:
- 180 days, including:
- Conducting investigation
- Preparing the Investigation Report
- Allowing for respondent comments
- Submitting to ORI (with extension request if needed)
F. INVESTIGATION REPORT REQUIREMENTS
- The Final Rule requires the Investigation Report to include:
- Allegations
- Description of federal/PHS support
- Institutional charge
- Policies and procedures used
- Inventory of all sequestered materials and how sequestration was conducted
- Transcripts of all interviews
- Scientific or forensic analyses conducted
- Findings:
- Whether misconduct occurred
- Specific facts supporting findings
- Whether intent (intentional, knowing, reckless) was established
- Type of misconduct (FFP)
- Impact and extent
- Recommended actions
- Respondents are provided with the report and may respond in writing
G. INSTITUTIONAL DETERMINATION
- Deciding Official reviews the Investigation Report for:
- Objectivity
- Thoroughness
- Procedural compliance
- Proper application of the misconduct definition
- The DO may:
- Accept findings
- Reject findings
- Request for additional investigation
- Appointing a new committee
- Finality of Decision
- Institutional findings are final and do not require ORI agreement to take effect
- Respondents, complainants, and committee are notified in writing
H. REPORTING TO ORI AND SPONSORS
- The University must notify ORI:
- Within 24 hours if criminal violations are possible
- When an investigation is initiated
- During the investigation if:
- Health hazard exists
- Funds/equipment require protection
- Persons require protection
- Public disclosure is likely
- Criminal violations suspected
- At the completion of investigation, the University must provide ORI:
- The entire institutional record, including:
- Assessment
- Inquiry Report + all records reviewed
- Investigation Report + all records reviewed
- All interview transcripts
- DO decision
- Appeal records
- Index of evidence collected
- Description of sequestered but unused records
I. RETENTION OF RECORDS
- All research misconduct records—including:
- Data
- Interviews
- Minutes
- Reports
- Evidence
- Sequestration documentation
- Must be retained for at least 3 years after completion of the proceeding or longer if required by ORI
- Respondent Record Retention
- Destruction of research records
- Refusal to provide records
- Intentional withholding of records
- May constitute evidence of misconduct
- Simple failure to maintain adequate records alone is not evidence of misconduct
J. SUBSEQUENT USE EXCEPTION
- An allegation older than six years may proceed if the respondent:
- Cites
- Republishes
- Or otherwise uses
- The research record is alleged to be fabricated, falsified, or plagiarized for their own benefit
- The citation must be to the specific portion of the record alleged to be misconduct