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MIT reinstates professor who accepted Epstein donations

Seth Lloyd faces years of restrictions on pay and student involvement

Published on
December 22, 2020
Last updated
December 22, 2020
MIT
Source: iStock

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has agreed to reinstate a mechanical engineering professor who accepted donations from convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, while imposing limits on his involvement with students.

The professor, Seth Lloyd, who was placed on paid leave in January, also faces upon his return five years of reduced salary and professional limitations, and a requirement for training in professional conduct.

The case is part of the fallout from revelations that MIT accepted some $850,000 (拢650,000) in donations from Epstein after his 2008 conviction and guilty plea to聽a charge of procuring a teenage girl for prostitution.

The heaviest blame was assigned to Joi Ito, a former MIT professor and director of the MIT Media Lab, who helped arrange and hide donations and contacts with Epstein. Professor Ito聽resigned from MIT聽in September 2019 after The New Yorker revealed his actions.

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Professor Lloyd received $285,000 from Epstein, including $60,000 for him personally, an MIT-commissioned investigation reported earlier this year.

MIT, after its formal review of the case, acknowledged the institution聽did not have policies in place聽for handling controversial donors. The review faulted Professor Lloyd for failing to tell MIT leadership that Epstein was a convicted sex offender and聽found聽he had violated two MIT policies.

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The case nevertheless led to campus protests, including complaints that MIT leadership did not respond to concerns that others had provided them about Epstein鈥檚 involvement, as well as the resignations of two Media Lab researchers.

MIT鈥檚 provost, Martin Schmidt, in announcing the institution鈥檚 decision with regard to Professor Lloyd, acknowledged 鈥渢hat some will be disappointed鈥 by it.

The five-year set of penalties on Professor Lloyd will include limits on soliciting donations, on his involvement in first-year undergraduate advising, and on 鈥渘ormal privileges accorded to a faculty member鈥, Professor Schmidt wrote in a聽.

鈥淭hese steps cannot undo the harm done,鈥 Professor Schmidt wrote. 鈥淧rofessor Lloyd鈥檚 failure to share what he knew about Epstein鈥檚 conviction when he accepted his 2012 donations was unacceptable.鈥

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Professor Lloyd issued his own statement聽expressing regret for not having 鈥渃onsulted further about Epstein鈥檚 appropriateness as a donor鈥.

paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

... and let's not forget MIT's complicity in the tragic death of Aaron Swartz. The more I learn about MIT, the more I see it as an institution totally lacking in a moral compass.

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