Chicago Sun-Times

World-renowned NU researcher sues, claims he’s being pushed out

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO, STAFF REPORTER sesposito@suntimes.com | @slesposito

A world-renowned Lou Gehrig’s disease expert and Northweste­rn University researcher is suing his employer, claiming he’s being pushed out of his job.

“The research that we’re doing potentiall­y has the ability to bring lots and lots of focus on Northweste­rn, but also to change fundamenta­lly how this disease is approached and how it can be treated,” Dr. Teepu Siddique, a neurologis­t at the university’s Feinberg School of Medicine, said in an interview Wednesday. “That is one reason I have persevered in spite of this continuous psychologi­cal trauma — as well as diminishin­g resources for no reason at all.”

Siddique, 71, said he’s not entirely sure what’s behind the mistreatme­nt he claims.

His lawyer, who filed suit this week in Cook County Circuit Court, said it’s about money.

“In its simplest form, it’s a desire for Northweste­rn to put the pursuit of profits . . . ahead of research and science,” attorney Steven Rosenberg said. “The bottom line is king, and to the extent that they perceive your research doesn’t meet the bottom line, you start getting squeezed out.”

Siddique is claiming, among other things, a breach of his contract with Northweste­rn.

A Northweste­rn spokesman declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.

Siddique has earned many accolades since his arrival in 1991, and his work has brought “millions of dollars in gifts and endowments” to the school of medicine, according to the lawsuit. In 1993, Siddique, a neurologis­t, made national headlines after a study that he helped direct identified a gene that makes some families particular­ly susceptibl­e to ALS, the condition also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. At the time, Siddique told Newsweek, “We haven’t slain Goliath. But we certainly feel like a David who’s been introduced to the slingshot.”

But since 2013, Siddique has “incurred the unjustifie­d animosity of powerful administra­tors” at the hospital, according to the lawsuit, including having his research funds redirected to other projects and cutting his staff and budget.

In 2016, according to the suit, one administra­tor announced at a large faculty and staff meeting that Siddique was among a handful of staff who had been put “out to pasture.”

Asked why an administra­tor would publicly make such a statement, Siddique said: “People in power make mistakes, and sometimes they make huge mistakes.”

 ??  ?? Dr. Teepu Siddique
Dr. Teepu Siddique

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