University Of Illinois College Of Law Fined Over Fake, Inflated LSAT Statistics By American Bar Association

American Bar Association Imposes $250,000 Fine On Illinois Law School For Fudging Figures

The pressure is on for competitive law schools, and University of Illinois College of Law appears to have caved, allegedly tipping Lady Justice's scales of truth and fairness on the quest to attract more students.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the law school -- in an effort to battle feared downward enrollment trends by returning to its old post amid the country's top-ranked law schools -- published false admissions data and will now have to pay for it.

The American Bar Association [ABA] Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar -- the group responsible for the accreditation of American law schools -- is fining the school $250,000 for forging facts about its student body's profile. The school reportedly intentionally published inflated statistics on students' average GPA and Law School Admissions Test scores.

The school brought the issue to the ABA's attention in 2011, according to the Wall Street Journal. The paper also reported on the college's opinion as to how the figures were intentionally distorted, writing that:

An investigative report, which was prepared by law firm Jones Day and financial-advisory firm Duff & Phelps Corp., DUF +11.60% was issued by the College of Law last fall. That report blamed the falsified data on the College of Law's former assistant dean for admissions and financial aid, Paul Pless, but said the school lacked internal controls and oversight that would have discovered those actions.

The school released a statement Wednesday saying the ABA agrees with the College of Law and believes the wrongdoing was done by a single individual. The statement adds that the ABA also believes that the school did not have enough control of its former employee.

The statement further breaks down the penalties the American Bar Association has placed upon it, which, in addition to a $250,000 fine, forces the college to "issue a corrective statement to ABA-approved law schools sharing details of its institutional compliance plan."

As a final penalty, the ABA is shutting down a program it gave to the College of Law in 2009 that allowed certain undergraduates from the University of Illinois Urbana campus to enter into the College of Law without taking the LSAT.

In its public statement, the College of Law also said:

We are disappointed by the sanctions imposed by the Council. The University of Illinois College of Law has been an ABA-accredited law school since 1923 and respects that historic relationship. We look forward to sharing with our peers the details of our institutional compliance plan -- designed to be the most rigorous and comprehensive in the nation.

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