Bellesiles’ story was false

Pressured into vetting the suspicious story of confirmed academic fraud Michael Bellesiles, the Chronicle of Higher Education has found that the story is indeed false. The Chronicle also blames the student whose “story” Bellesiles told, cutting Bellesiles–and, by extension, themselves–way too much slack. Here’s the editor’s note appended to the bottom of the article:

The Chronicle has looked into questions raised by commenters and bloggers about this article.

We talked to the teaching assistant for the course, who confirmed Mr. Bellesiles’s account of the student’s story. According to the teaching assistant, a Marine veteran, the student told him that his brother had been shot in the head and later died from his injuries.

The Chronicle also spoke with the student called “Ernesto” in the article. The student said the soldier who died was his half-brother, was a member of the U.S. Army, and had died in Afghanistan in November. The student declined to provide further details because of unspecified “issues.”

At The Chronicle’s request, an Army spokesman searched a database of all U.S. military deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan using the name the student provided. There were no matches. The Chronicle’s own search of Department of Defense news releases turned up no casualties under any name that matched the student’s description.

Subsequently the student told us that he had fabricated several details in the story he had told Mr. Bellesiles and The Chronicle. The student said he knew a soldier who he believed had died in Afghanistan, but he said the person was not his half-brother. The student had no explanation for why the name was not on the military’s casualty lists.

Asked for a response, Mr. Bellesiles said he was saddened that his student had altered the details of a personal tragedy and that he regretted that he had unknowingly passed on a story that was not accurate. “But I hope that no one mistakes the point of my article in calling for greater sympathy and support in our colleges for veterans and the families of those who have suffered loss in our current wars.”

This poor man. First a flood destroys the data he used in Arming America, causing him to be found guilty of academic fraud, and costing him his job. And now this.

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3 Comments

  1. Eveningsun says:

    Bellesiles said he was saddened that his student had altered the details of a personal tragedy and that he regretted that he had unknowingly passed on a story that was not accurate. A typical non-apology. Anyway, aren’t historians supposed to critically examine their sources so that they don’t “unknowingly” pass on falsehoods?

  2. jason says:

    ugh. love how mr. B plays the victim. like he couldn’t have possibly applied a bit of critical thinking to that story and said “this looks suspicious.” even thought it’s all made up, i hope everyone gets the point? perhaps he should have done some real research and used a real example.

  3. Dom says:

    “Bellesiles said he was saddened that his student had altered the details …” I grow sad when I think of the good old days, too.

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