Tenured professor’s husband convicted of a drugs-trafficking felony – are there any career implications? [closed] The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Post tenure job search in the humantities: a waste of time?Effect of offensive speech online on grad student lifeHow could a postdoc look competitive against a tenured professor?J1 or J2 visa for post-docAre there grants and fellowships for PhD students past the first year, but before candidacy?Tenured professor wanting to go back to school for a PhD in a different fieldStruck up in a bad situationIn US universities, are the sport coaches typically considered tenured professors?As temporary faculty, how to deal with a colleague who, via email, questions agreements made in a meeting?Short postdoc abroad
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Tenured professor’s husband convicted of a drugs-trafficking felony – are there any career implications? [closed]
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Post tenure job search in the humantities: a waste of time?Effect of offensive speech online on grad student lifeHow could a postdoc look competitive against a tenured professor?J1 or J2 visa for post-docAre there grants and fellowships for PhD students past the first year, but before candidacy?Tenured professor wanting to go back to school for a PhD in a different fieldStruck up in a bad situationIn US universities, are the sport coaches typically considered tenured professors?As temporary faculty, how to deal with a colleague who, via email, questions agreements made in a meeting?Short postdoc abroad
At the university I work at in the US, a tenured professor’s husband has been convicted of drugs trafficking. Would there be any likely (career) implications for the professor?
Obviously, their personal life will be affected, but is it likely to have implications otherwise?
united-states professors drugs
closed as off-topic by corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev Apr 8 at 15:20
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This question is not within the scope of this site as defined in the help center. Our scope particularly excludes the content of research, education outside of a university setting, and undergraduate admissions, life, and culture." – corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev
|
show 4 more comments
At the university I work at in the US, a tenured professor’s husband has been convicted of drugs trafficking. Would there be any likely (career) implications for the professor?
Obviously, their personal life will be affected, but is it likely to have implications otherwise?
united-states professors drugs
closed as off-topic by corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev Apr 8 at 15:20
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This question is not within the scope of this site as defined in the help center. Our scope particularly excludes the content of research, education outside of a university setting, and undergraduate admissions, life, and culture." – corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev
9
What does this have to do with academia? Is this boat programming? meta.stackexchange.com/questions/14470/…
– Anonymous Physicist
Apr 8 at 10:29
3
I'm not sure I understand the boat programming reference, but the question is definitely about academia. The question is asking whether there would be career consequences for a professor whose husband had been convicted of a felony. If the Professor herself had been convicted, I think the answer would be clear. In this case, the connection between the felony and the professor is less direct. However, the nature of the crime (compared to say, assaulting someone) makes the link a little stronger than it might otherwise be
– user1778351
Apr 8 at 10:41
1
you are innocent until proven guilty, so a "somewhat stronger link to a felony" still equals innocent.
– Maarten Buis
Apr 8 at 11:14
5
I'll note that drug laws in the US are insane. People get charged with "drug trafficking felonies" when they are nothing more than addicts sharing drugs with friends. The jails/prisons are full of such people.
– Buffy
Apr 8 at 11:54
2
Your ‘assumption’ is a baseless accusation wrapped up to look pretty.
– Jon Custer
Apr 8 at 13:19
|
show 4 more comments
At the university I work at in the US, a tenured professor’s husband has been convicted of drugs trafficking. Would there be any likely (career) implications for the professor?
Obviously, their personal life will be affected, but is it likely to have implications otherwise?
united-states professors drugs
At the university I work at in the US, a tenured professor’s husband has been convicted of drugs trafficking. Would there be any likely (career) implications for the professor?
Obviously, their personal life will be affected, but is it likely to have implications otherwise?
united-states professors drugs
united-states professors drugs
edited Apr 8 at 14:29
user1778351
asked Apr 8 at 9:50
user1778351user1778351
12529
12529
closed as off-topic by corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev Apr 8 at 15:20
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This question is not within the scope of this site as defined in the help center. Our scope particularly excludes the content of research, education outside of a university setting, and undergraduate admissions, life, and culture." – corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev
closed as off-topic by corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev Apr 8 at 15:20
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This question is not within the scope of this site as defined in the help center. Our scope particularly excludes the content of research, education outside of a university setting, and undergraduate admissions, life, and culture." – corey979, Dmitry Savostyanov, Bryan Krause, user3209815, Dmitry Grigoryev
9
What does this have to do with academia? Is this boat programming? meta.stackexchange.com/questions/14470/…
– Anonymous Physicist
Apr 8 at 10:29
3
I'm not sure I understand the boat programming reference, but the question is definitely about academia. The question is asking whether there would be career consequences for a professor whose husband had been convicted of a felony. If the Professor herself had been convicted, I think the answer would be clear. In this case, the connection between the felony and the professor is less direct. However, the nature of the crime (compared to say, assaulting someone) makes the link a little stronger than it might otherwise be
– user1778351
Apr 8 at 10:41
1
you are innocent until proven guilty, so a "somewhat stronger link to a felony" still equals innocent.
– Maarten Buis
Apr 8 at 11:14
5
I'll note that drug laws in the US are insane. People get charged with "drug trafficking felonies" when they are nothing more than addicts sharing drugs with friends. The jails/prisons are full of such people.
– Buffy
Apr 8 at 11:54
2
Your ‘assumption’ is a baseless accusation wrapped up to look pretty.
– Jon Custer
Apr 8 at 13:19
|
show 4 more comments
9
What does this have to do with academia? Is this boat programming? meta.stackexchange.com/questions/14470/…
– Anonymous Physicist
Apr 8 at 10:29
3
I'm not sure I understand the boat programming reference, but the question is definitely about academia. The question is asking whether there would be career consequences for a professor whose husband had been convicted of a felony. If the Professor herself had been convicted, I think the answer would be clear. In this case, the connection between the felony and the professor is less direct. However, the nature of the crime (compared to say, assaulting someone) makes the link a little stronger than it might otherwise be
– user1778351
Apr 8 at 10:41
1
you are innocent until proven guilty, so a "somewhat stronger link to a felony" still equals innocent.
– Maarten Buis
Apr 8 at 11:14
5
I'll note that drug laws in the US are insane. People get charged with "drug trafficking felonies" when they are nothing more than addicts sharing drugs with friends. The jails/prisons are full of such people.
– Buffy
Apr 8 at 11:54
2
Your ‘assumption’ is a baseless accusation wrapped up to look pretty.
– Jon Custer
Apr 8 at 13:19
9
9
What does this have to do with academia? Is this boat programming? meta.stackexchange.com/questions/14470/…
– Anonymous Physicist
Apr 8 at 10:29
What does this have to do with academia? Is this boat programming? meta.stackexchange.com/questions/14470/…
– Anonymous Physicist
Apr 8 at 10:29
3
3
I'm not sure I understand the boat programming reference, but the question is definitely about academia. The question is asking whether there would be career consequences for a professor whose husband had been convicted of a felony. If the Professor herself had been convicted, I think the answer would be clear. In this case, the connection between the felony and the professor is less direct. However, the nature of the crime (compared to say, assaulting someone) makes the link a little stronger than it might otherwise be
– user1778351
Apr 8 at 10:41
I'm not sure I understand the boat programming reference, but the question is definitely about academia. The question is asking whether there would be career consequences for a professor whose husband had been convicted of a felony. If the Professor herself had been convicted, I think the answer would be clear. In this case, the connection between the felony and the professor is less direct. However, the nature of the crime (compared to say, assaulting someone) makes the link a little stronger than it might otherwise be
– user1778351
Apr 8 at 10:41
1
1
you are innocent until proven guilty, so a "somewhat stronger link to a felony" still equals innocent.
– Maarten Buis
Apr 8 at 11:14
you are innocent until proven guilty, so a "somewhat stronger link to a felony" still equals innocent.
– Maarten Buis
Apr 8 at 11:14
5
5
I'll note that drug laws in the US are insane. People get charged with "drug trafficking felonies" when they are nothing more than addicts sharing drugs with friends. The jails/prisons are full of such people.
– Buffy
Apr 8 at 11:54
I'll note that drug laws in the US are insane. People get charged with "drug trafficking felonies" when they are nothing more than addicts sharing drugs with friends. The jails/prisons are full of such people.
– Buffy
Apr 8 at 11:54
2
2
Your ‘assumption’ is a baseless accusation wrapped up to look pretty.
– Jon Custer
Apr 8 at 13:19
Your ‘assumption’ is a baseless accusation wrapped up to look pretty.
– Jon Custer
Apr 8 at 13:19
|
show 4 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
This is a question which can only the respective university can answer. (I assume in my answer that the police has not proven involvement of the professor in the drug thing.)
Ideally (and most likely also by law, but you do not specify your location), husband and wife (or husband and husband, wife and wife) are treated as two separate people -- if one does a crime, it does not mean that both are involved. That the professor is not involved should also be the default assumption of the university unless the police proved otherwise.
Of course, people often talk and make decisions which are not backed up by the law. It may be of course that there are implications for the professor -- most likely, it's not explicitly said that they are connected to the drug thing.
For implications outside of the university, the same holds. Ideally, nobody treats the prof differently, but people sometimes do.
New contributor
If you need security clearance of some sort (think nuclear physics) spouses might count though.
– Borgh
Apr 9 at 7:46
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is a question which can only the respective university can answer. (I assume in my answer that the police has not proven involvement of the professor in the drug thing.)
Ideally (and most likely also by law, but you do not specify your location), husband and wife (or husband and husband, wife and wife) are treated as two separate people -- if one does a crime, it does not mean that both are involved. That the professor is not involved should also be the default assumption of the university unless the police proved otherwise.
Of course, people often talk and make decisions which are not backed up by the law. It may be of course that there are implications for the professor -- most likely, it's not explicitly said that they are connected to the drug thing.
For implications outside of the university, the same holds. Ideally, nobody treats the prof differently, but people sometimes do.
New contributor
If you need security clearance of some sort (think nuclear physics) spouses might count though.
– Borgh
Apr 9 at 7:46
add a comment |
This is a question which can only the respective university can answer. (I assume in my answer that the police has not proven involvement of the professor in the drug thing.)
Ideally (and most likely also by law, but you do not specify your location), husband and wife (or husband and husband, wife and wife) are treated as two separate people -- if one does a crime, it does not mean that both are involved. That the professor is not involved should also be the default assumption of the university unless the police proved otherwise.
Of course, people often talk and make decisions which are not backed up by the law. It may be of course that there are implications for the professor -- most likely, it's not explicitly said that they are connected to the drug thing.
For implications outside of the university, the same holds. Ideally, nobody treats the prof differently, but people sometimes do.
New contributor
If you need security clearance of some sort (think nuclear physics) spouses might count though.
– Borgh
Apr 9 at 7:46
add a comment |
This is a question which can only the respective university can answer. (I assume in my answer that the police has not proven involvement of the professor in the drug thing.)
Ideally (and most likely also by law, but you do not specify your location), husband and wife (or husband and husband, wife and wife) are treated as two separate people -- if one does a crime, it does not mean that both are involved. That the professor is not involved should also be the default assumption of the university unless the police proved otherwise.
Of course, people often talk and make decisions which are not backed up by the law. It may be of course that there are implications for the professor -- most likely, it's not explicitly said that they are connected to the drug thing.
For implications outside of the university, the same holds. Ideally, nobody treats the prof differently, but people sometimes do.
New contributor
This is a question which can only the respective university can answer. (I assume in my answer that the police has not proven involvement of the professor in the drug thing.)
Ideally (and most likely also by law, but you do not specify your location), husband and wife (or husband and husband, wife and wife) are treated as two separate people -- if one does a crime, it does not mean that both are involved. That the professor is not involved should also be the default assumption of the university unless the police proved otherwise.
Of course, people often talk and make decisions which are not backed up by the law. It may be of course that there are implications for the professor -- most likely, it's not explicitly said that they are connected to the drug thing.
For implications outside of the university, the same holds. Ideally, nobody treats the prof differently, but people sometimes do.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Apr 8 at 9:57
HollaHolla
712
712
New contributor
New contributor
If you need security clearance of some sort (think nuclear physics) spouses might count though.
– Borgh
Apr 9 at 7:46
add a comment |
If you need security clearance of some sort (think nuclear physics) spouses might count though.
– Borgh
Apr 9 at 7:46
If you need security clearance of some sort (think nuclear physics) spouses might count though.
– Borgh
Apr 9 at 7:46
If you need security clearance of some sort (think nuclear physics) spouses might count though.
– Borgh
Apr 9 at 7:46
add a comment |
9
What does this have to do with academia? Is this boat programming? meta.stackexchange.com/questions/14470/…
– Anonymous Physicist
Apr 8 at 10:29
3
I'm not sure I understand the boat programming reference, but the question is definitely about academia. The question is asking whether there would be career consequences for a professor whose husband had been convicted of a felony. If the Professor herself had been convicted, I think the answer would be clear. In this case, the connection between the felony and the professor is less direct. However, the nature of the crime (compared to say, assaulting someone) makes the link a little stronger than it might otherwise be
– user1778351
Apr 8 at 10:41
1
you are innocent until proven guilty, so a "somewhat stronger link to a felony" still equals innocent.
– Maarten Buis
Apr 8 at 11:14
5
I'll note that drug laws in the US are insane. People get charged with "drug trafficking felonies" when they are nothing more than addicts sharing drugs with friends. The jails/prisons are full of such people.
– Buffy
Apr 8 at 11:54
2
Your ‘assumption’ is a baseless accusation wrapped up to look pretty.
– Jon Custer
Apr 8 at 13:19