Most unethical federal scientists go unpunished
Investigation into employees
NIH investigated 103 employees after revelations in 2004 that many had failed to report their paid relationships with drug companies. Of the 44 alleged offenders, six left NIH before they could be punished and two had offenses so minor they merited no sanction, Burklow said.
The majority received reprimands or warnings for failing to properly obtain approvals for their outside consulting work, he said. Suspensions ranging from a week to 45 days were meted out to a few who did not get prior approval or did not report their drug company ties, said Burklow.
Sunderland is under investigation by the HHS inspector general and the Justice Department, officials have said. And a government official told AP that Walsh, a prominent cancer researcher, is the only other case the inspector general is reviewing. The official requested anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.
NIH ethics reports allege the two scientists had unauthorized, unreported deals with drug companies — Sunderland earning more than $600,000 over eight years and Walsh more than $100,000 in five years — and that their consulting improperly overlapped with government duties.
Lawyers for both scientists said in written defenses to NIH investigators that the two put in exceptionally long hours at their government jobs, even if the proper paperwork was missing for taking leave to perform outside work.
NIH refused to let researcher leave
Documents obtained by AP show Sunderland initially got a green light to retire in November 2004 and he had his 11-year research project transferred to a New York center where he planned to accept a prominent post. But NIH officials subsequently recommended against his departure and the center now is moving on to hire someone else.
Robert Muse, Sunderland’s lawyer, cites a litany of mixed signals Sunderland received from NIH, including months of refusal to meet after stating a willingness to work out his release.
Burklow, citing privacy concerns, would not discuss any individual cases.
“The bureaucratic inaction,” Muse wrote the congressional subcommittee on Monday, “has unreasonably interfered not only with Dr. Sunderland’s career but also with his important Alzheimer’s research,” which he said cost the government millions of dollars.
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Some scientists whose consultancies were negatively highlighted in 2004 congressional hearings and press accounts left NIH voluntarily. They suffered no repercussions.
Cancer researcher Lance Liotta said he retired in May 2005 with pension and benefits, accepting “a great opportunity” in research at George Mason University. His consulting activities, though questioned after the fact by Congress, were approved at the time, and he never was sanctioned.
Another former researcher, 33-year NIH veteran Michael Brownstein, had held nearly $2 million in stock with four companies whose boards he served on while he worked at NIH. The agency approved the consulting and never accused him of wrongdoing, said Brownstein, who continues his genetic research at the J. Craig Venter Institute in Rockville, Md.
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