糖心Vlog

Death threats drove scholar cleared of research fraud into聽hiding

The case of Linn茅a Taylor, who was fired by Lund University but fought back through courts, raises questions over misconduct investigations

Published on
December 9, 2020
Last updated
December 9, 2020
Linnea Taylor
Source: Linn茅a Taylor

The case of an academic dismissed from her role for research fraud but then cleared by an employment court has once again raised questions over Swedish universities鈥 handling of misconduct allegations, just as the country tries to recover from one of science鈥檚 worst ever scandals.

Linn茅a Taylor, a British-Swedish eye expert dismissed by Lund University in 2018 after being accused of misconduct by a PhD student, is still fighting her case, and is now taking the institution to the European Court of Human Rights.

During the investigation into her work, Dr Taylor was subjected to 18 months of death threats against her family and two-year-old son from someone who appeared to have inside knowledge of her department. She was eventually forced to move into hiding.

鈥淚 can safely say it鈥檚 been the worst few years of my life,鈥 she told 糖心Vlog. 鈥淎nd that is probably an understatement.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

This year, Sweden set up a new central and independent body to hear accusations of misconduct, partly in response to failures by the Stockholm-based Karolinska Institute when investigating disgraced surgeon Paolo Macchiarini.

Now indicted by Swedish prosecutors, Dr Macchiarini was found to have misrepresented the results of an artificial trachea transplant technique that he touted as pioneering but which left a number of his patients dead.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Dr Taylor, however, was investigated before the creation of this new body, by an internal board convened by Lund 鈥 a practice criticised by unions following the Macchiarini scandal for sometimes being unfair or lacking in transparency.

The case turned on whether Dr Taylor had accurately measured changes in pig and mouse retina tissue following an experiment, with her PhD student unable to replicate some of her results.

Two outside experts at universities in the UK and Denmark, brought in by Lund鈥檚 board, found that in one of these experiments there were unexplained differences between her measurements and those recorded by her PhD student and a postdoctoral student enlisted to double-check the results.

Lund鈥檚 board concluded that these discrepancies must have been the result of deliberate manipulation and fired Dr Taylor. 鈥淭he decision was taken after a full and thorough investigation,鈥 a spokeswoman for Lund said. None of the outside experts involved in the case was willing to speak to THE.

But Dr Taylor maintains that such measurement discrepancies are normal when looking at tissue samples, and that the postdoctoral student was inexperienced in the field.

With the backing of the Swedish Association of University Teachers and Researchers (SULF), she took Lund to a labour court, arguing that she had been unfairly dismissed.

In April this year, the court overturned Lund鈥檚 decision, saying that the university had failed to prove research misconduct by Dr Taylor. It ordered the university to reinstate her and pay damages.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

But the university has instead doubled down on its decision, employing a rarely used clause in the law to pay a SKr2聽million (拢175,600) settlement to Dr Taylor rather than take her back on. 鈥淭hey decided not to follow the court decision, which is very, very unusual,鈥 said Annika Wahlstr枚m, a lawyer for SULF who represented Dr Taylor.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Lund鈥檚 vice-chancellor, Torbj枚rn von Schantz, has publicly that allowing the employment courts to overturn an academic decision could 鈥渏eopardise the credibility of research鈥, and called on the government to clarify who has precedence.

鈥淭hey are willing to pay...rather than lose face,鈥 said Dr Taylor, who believes past campaigning for better gender representation at Lund helped generate hostility towards her at the institution.

In response, a Lund spokeswoman said: 鈥淭he researcher is no longer employed at the university. The vice-chancellor therefore kindly declines to comment on the allegations.鈥

The numerous handwritten death threats received by Dr Taylor while she was being investigated by Lund in 2017-18 labelled her a 鈥渃heating whore鈥 and threatened her husband and her son. Some contained flour or sugar, with the implication that 鈥渘ext time it will be anthrax鈥, she said.

Initially, they arrived in her university postbox, which she said was inaccessible without security card access to her building. Some of the threats appeared to respond to inside information about the ongoing investigation, she added. In response, at one point the university hired a bodyguard and locked the doors of Dr Taylor鈥檚 lab while she worked.

Eventually, the stress of the threats forced Dr Taylor to take sick leave 鈥 but handwritten notes continued to be posted to her apartment several times a week, she said.

No one has ever been caught, as the police found no trace of fingerprints or DNA on the notes, and strict privacy laws thwarted attempts to place a surveillance camera outside her flat, Dr Taylor said. For her safety, the state eventually moved her and her family to an untraceable new address.

Dr Taylor complained that investigations into the death threats had had 鈥渁bsolutely no consequences鈥.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

The Lund spokeswoman said: 鈥淭he threats have been investigated and are part of a larger work environment investigation conducted by the Faculty of Medicine.鈥

david.matthews@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽Death threats force scholar into hiding

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

The apparent proliferation of libel challenges by scientists accused of research misconduct have led to fears that journals and others will be dissuaded from calling out wrongdoers. But is the observation accurate? And is the chilling effect reproducible? Jack Grove reports  

7 November

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT