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Influential U of M public health professor resigns amid plagiarism allegations
Catharine Richert and Matt Sepic
Minneapolis
April 15, 2025 6:19 PM
A nationally known public health researcher is leaving her job next month at the University of Minnesota amid accusations of plagiarism.
Rachel Hardeman’s last day will be May 14, according to an email sent to faculty by School of Public Health Dean Melinda Pettigrew on Monday. The email did not state a reason for Hardeman’s departure, and a spokesperson for the university said the U would not elaborate further.
The announcement came four days after a former protégé and colleague posted on LinkedIn that Hardeman poached her work and passed it off as her own.
“When I say ‘verbatim’ I mean, she performed a find+replace in my document, and replaced all instances of ‘Mike Brown’ with ‘Philando Castile,’ and all instances of ‘St. Louis, Missouri’ with ‘Minneapolis, Minnesota,’ and submitted this to the NIH as if it were her own,” wrote Brigette Davis, now a social epidemiologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
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www.mprnews.org
Catharine Richert and Matt Sepic
Minneapolis
April 15, 2025 6:19 PM
A nationally known public health researcher is leaving her job next month at the University of Minnesota amid accusations of plagiarism.
Rachel Hardeman’s last day will be May 14, according to an email sent to faculty by School of Public Health Dean Melinda Pettigrew on Monday. The email did not state a reason for Hardeman’s departure, and a spokesperson for the university said the U would not elaborate further.
The announcement came four days after a former protégé and colleague posted on LinkedIn that Hardeman poached her work and passed it off as her own.
“When I say ‘verbatim’ I mean, she performed a find+replace in my document, and replaced all instances of ‘Mike Brown’ with ‘Philando Castile,’ and all instances of ‘St. Louis, Missouri’ with ‘Minneapolis, Minnesota,’ and submitted this to the NIH as if it were her own,” wrote Brigette Davis, now a social epidemiologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
Read the rest here:

Influential U of M public health professor resigns amid plagiarism allegations
Rachel Hardeman’s work catapulted her to prominence following the murder of George Floyd in 2020. A St. Louis researcher, however, says Hardeman copied her work. Hardeman denies it. A University of Minnesota dean told faculty on Monday that Hardeman will leave the U on May 14.
