Schools Falsifying signature in college. Consequence?

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A group member has been accused of falsifying signatures on a contribution table used to allocate marks for a project, raising concerns about potential consequences. The discussion highlights that the individual could face severe academic penalties, including failing the course or suspension, as this act is considered a serious violation of trust. The legal implications vary by country, with some jurisdictions treating signature falsification as fraud, potentially leading to criminal charges. The context of the falsification—whether it was an attempt to meet a deadline or a deliberate act to misrepresent contributions—will influence the severity of the consequences. Academic institutions typically have codes of conduct outlining penalties for such actions, and while civil lawsuits are unlikely, they remain a possibility depending on intent and damages.
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Hi all

There is a group member who falsifying the other team members' signature on the contribution table. The contribution table is used to divide up the group mark for each group members for a project. Without the other team members' consents, he falsify others' signature.

Just wondering what kind of consequence will he get? Suspension?

Thank you
 
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At the very minimum he could fail the course. Yes, he could be suspended. That's a pretty flagrant violation of trust. You don't say why he falsified signatures. If it was because other people refused to sign stipulations he wanted, that's kind of stupid. The others will surely object and tell the teacher what he has done.
 
Depending on the laws in your country, suspension might be the least of his troubles. Where i am from, falsifying a signature is fraud, and can be punished with prison.
 
635nm said:
Depending on the laws in your country, suspension might be the least of his troubles. Where i am from, falsifying a signature is fraud, and can be punished with prison.

Ok. But that's from college. Could he be sued?
 
As i said depends on the legal system where you live. I can only say how it works in denmark. Here he would be prosecuted if someone files charges against him, which would be either the univeristy or the students whose signature he falsified.
 
Most schools have an academic code of conduct, which is where the maximum consequences for something like this should be spelled out.

Realisitcally the consequences are likely to vary. If it's a case where the contribution table had to be in by a deadline and he couldn't contact some members of the group and he made the decision to falsify and submit in order to avoid losing marks that's likely to be viewed as a much different scenario by an academic disciplinary committee then deliberately assessing some members of the group poorly and falsifying their signatures. The first is still wrong and could result in some kind of academic probation, whereas the secord is more likely to end up getting the student kicked out.

I would be surprised if anyone would go so far as to pursue it as a civil matter, but again, that would depend on both the malicious intent and the level of compensation a plaintif could realistically expect to obtain.
 
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