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Related: About this forumBay Area woman paid to write county history book reportedly plagiarized from Wikipedia, SF news outl
A Bay Area government employee commissioned to write an exorbitantly expensive Santa Clara County government history book is under fire after the Mercury News found a significant portion of the manuscript was plagiarized from multiple sources, including its own publication, Wikipedia, SFGATE, the History Channel, the Washington Post and a number of other local and national news outlets.
Jean McCorquodale, the president of McCorquodale Corporation and the wife of former county supervisor and state Sen. Dan McCorquodale, has been working for the county since 1995. Her duties included completing grant applications and related tasks before she became the countys sole grant writer from 2009 to 2014, the Mercury News reported. Her contract was then renewed and she was tasked with the history book project in 2018, an undertaking that was delayed by two years. The county has reportedly paid her at least $2.45 million since 2009.
After the 580-page manuscript was finally submitted by Jean McCorquodale last January, the Mercury News found that many excerpts were allegedly copied word-for-word from the websites she was drawing her research from, including a section from the Wikipedia page for politician Jonathan D. Stevenson, a paragraph from a History Channel article about the Spanish-American Wars Treaty of Paris and segments from another page on the Santa Clara County Parks and Recreation website.
The Santa Clara County Executive Office, which is conducting an investigation of the incident, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from SFGATE. But county executive Jeff Smith told the Mercury News he was shocked and very concerned to discover that passages from the draft submitted by McCorquodale were nearly identical to the source material.
https://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/Jean-McCorquodale-plagiarizes-Bay-Area-book-17221009.php
CurtEastPoint
(19,157 posts)RockRaven
(16,214 posts)getting a non-competitive/no-bid contract to do that initial grant writing on the absolutely absurd grounds that she had unique/special skills/knowledge unavailable in others. The fucking plagiarism in the history text disproves that nonsense, but it was laughable on its face from day one.
The supervisors et al are going to pretend they've got the vapors over the plagarism, but the plagiarism is a distraction from the foundational corrupt choice to hire her in the first place a decade ago.
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)It's kinda how history works.
I'm not making a comment on how much this lady made and whether it was a corrupt process, I don't know.
Also, given it's only a manuscript, this seems like a logical explanation: "McCorquodale told the outlet the sections in question were placeholders, and she did not plan to use them in the final project."
Seems kinda like Democrat bashing to me