Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
International

Top Indian-American Cancer Scientist Inder Verma Facing Misconduct Allegations

IANS, 25 Apr, 2018 12:18 PM
    A prominent Indian-American cancer and gene therapy scientist in the US has been placed on administrative leave following allegations of “inappropriate conduct” against him.
     
     
    Inder Verma, a cancer and gene therapy scientist at the prestigious Salk Institute for Biological Studies in California, has been placed on administrative leave, pending the outcome of the investigation into the allegations against him.
     
     
    The institute did not give any reason for suspending 70-year-old Verma, who is considered one of the world’s leading authorities on gene therapy and cancer.
     
     
    The institute has hired The Rose Group, a San Diego-based international employment law and consulting firm, to investigate allegations, not yet made public, that were reported to the institute in February.
     
     
    “Recently, the institute became aware of allegations concerning Inder Verma. Consistent with Salk’s policies governing workplace conduct, the institute has undertaken a formal investigation that is being led by an independent outside party,” Dan Lewis, chairman of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies said in a statement.
     
     
    “Verma has been placed on administrative leave, pending the outcome of the investigation. He will not be performing scientific or administrative roles on behalf of the institute during this period,” he said, without referring to the nature of the investigation.
     
     
    The action against Verma comes nearly four months after he was placed on temporary leave as editor of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a prestigious scientific journal.
     
     
    The allegations of inappropriate conduct against Verma were first reported by Science magazine, according to which last summer, three female Salk senior scientists sued the institute for gender discrimination calling it an “old boys club” that had systematically impeded their careers because they were women. The lawsuits are set to go to trial next December.
     
     
    Verma told the San Diego Union-Tribune that the leave had stemmed from the lawsuits that Salk professors filed against the Institute in July. Verma, 70, who is also on the boards of several Indian scientific institutes, has denied the allegations.
     
     
    “I have never used my position at the Salk Institute to take advantage of others. I have also never engaged in any sort of intimate relationship with anyone affiliated with the Salk Institute,” he said in a statement to Science through his attorney.
     
     
    “I have never inappropriately touched, nor have I made any sexually charged comments, to anyone affiliated with the Salk Institute. I have never allowed any offensive or sexually charged conversations, jokes, material, etc, to occur at the Salk Institute,” said Verma who earned his MSc in Biochemistry from Lucknow University.
     
     
    Denying misconduct allegations to the Union-Tribune, Verma said, “I believe that it is inappropriate for an individual in a position of authority to engage in any intimate relationship with a direct report or to use that position of authority to take advantage of others.”    In 2005, he was appointed as foreign fellow by the Indian National Science Academy.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Tells Truck Loggers He Wants Reconnect Communities With Forestry

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Tells Truck Loggers He Wants Reconnect Communities With Forestry
    Premier John Horgan says the relationship between British Columbia and the forest industry has fractured over outdated government policy that hurts communities and threatens many small business contractors.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Tells Truck Loggers He Wants Reconnect Communities With Forestry

    Abandoned At Birth, Indian Grows Up To Become Swiss Parliamentarian

    Abandoned At Birth, Indian Grows Up To Become Swiss Parliamentarian
    His biological mother Anasuiya could never have imagined that Niklaus-Samuel Gugger, whom she abandoned in a hospital 48 years ago just after his birth, would be the first Indian to be elected to the Swiss parliament.

    Abandoned At Birth, Indian Grows Up To Become Swiss Parliamentarian

    US' Strong Retort After Pak PM's ‘No Case Against Hafiz Sahib’ Statement

    US' Strong Retort After Pak PM's ‘No Case Against Hafiz Sahib’ Statement
    "There is no case against Hafiz Saeed sahib in Pakistan. Only when there is a case can there be action," the Pakistani prime minister had said in an interview when asked why there was no action against the terrorist.

    US' Strong Retort After Pak PM's ‘No Case Against Hafiz Sahib’ Statement

    Indian-Origin Doctor, 60, Jailed For 12 Years In UK For Sex Assault On Patients

    Indian-Origin Doctor, 60, Jailed For 12 Years In UK For Sex Assault On Patients
    The 60-year-old, who had moved to Britain with his family at the age of three, was also placed on the sex offenders' register indefinitely and made the subject of a 15-year sexual harm prevention order at the end of the hearing at Wolverhampton Crown Court.

    Indian-Origin Doctor, 60, Jailed For 12 Years In UK For Sex Assault On Patients

    Indian-American Educator Deep Saran Announces To Run For US Congress

    Deep Saran, 45, is one of almost a dozen Democrats in the fray for the primary to earn the right to challenge the two- term GOP Congresswoman Barbara Comstock from the 10th Congressional District of Virginia.

    Indian-American Educator Deep Saran Announces To Run For US Congress

    Over 40 pc of foreign-born tech workers in Seattle Indians: Report

    Over 40 pc of foreign-born tech workers in Seattle Indians: Report
    More than 40 per cent of the foreign-born tech workers in Seattle–which is home to Microsoft, Amazon, and Boeing—are from India, according to a media report.

    Over 40 pc of foreign-born tech workers in Seattle Indians: Report