Las Vegas Review-Journal

The former coroner’s dubious academic degrees

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Mistakes happen and assignment­s sometimes fall through the cracks. But Clark County officials have some explaining to do when it comes to the former coroner.

The Review-journal’s Arthur Kane reported last week that John Fudenberg, who served in the county coroner’s office for 17 years — earning an appointmen­t to the top post in 2015 before retiring in 2020 — claimed degrees from a dubious institutio­n of higher education on his updated resume. Mr. Fudenberg, now serving as the executive director of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Coroners and Medical Examiners, listed degrees from Barkley University in San Francisco, including an MBA.

Barkley University, Mr. Kane reports, “was linked in 2015 by The New York Times to a Pakistani diploma mill, and the school now has a defunct website.” Mr. Fudenberg also hired his girlfriend’s meditation company on the taxpayer dime and apparently accepted speaking fees for speeches given while on the clock, Mr. Kane revealed.

“Any manager has to rely on the judgment/ethics of your department head,” said Jeff Wells, the assistant county manager who oversees the coroner’s office. “You can only take action on things you know about.”

Perhaps. But it’s one thing to miss a midlevel employee’s effort at resume-padding. It’s quite another to take as a matter of faith a high-ranking, high-profile manager’s background claims.

It’s worth noting that Mr. Fudenberg for many years made clear that he had little concern about unnecessar­ily spending other people’s money. He repeatedly refused to release the results of child autopsy reports in defiance of the state’s open records laws, leading the county into a financiall­y wasteful and failed legal fight. County taxpayers were forced to eat more than $80,000 thanks to the coroner’s intransige­nce.

The county’s sloppy oversight recalls the fiasco five years ago when UNLV hired as a purchasing analyst a woman who had been forced to quit a similar job at the

Las Vegas Valley Water District after she became ensnared in a scandal involving $4.5 million in stolen inkjet cartridges. University officials sputtered to explain their hiring process.

Mr. Wells said the county recently implemente­d more stringent background checks for employment applicants, including a fingerprin­t requiremen­t. Fine. But the Fudenberg resume fiasco could have been uncovered by even the most rudimentar­y due diligence. The county commission­ers should be asking some tough questions of those in charge of supervisin­g department managers and making employment decisions.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal.

All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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