Plagiarism Suspect Blames Editor
A Santa Ana law school dean accused of pulling text from an encyclopedia to write an article for the school’s journal is a victim of sloppy editing, his attorney said Monday.
Tom Borchard, attorney for Winston L. Frost, said the editor reading the story for Trinity Law Review omitted footnotes that would have provided proper attribution in Frost’s article on the history of human rights published last year.
Law review editors could not be reached for comment.
Frost, 43, was suspended with pay from his job at Trinity Law School while his supervisors look into allegations that he lifted text from the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Gregory L. Waybright, president of Trinity International University, the law school’s parent university, said last week that some portions of the law review article “appear to be much the same as another identified article previously published by a separate author.”
Although Frost’s 28-page article included numerous footnotes, none of them naming the Britannica, Borchard said the editor deleted footnotes giving proper credit.
Borchard would not say which publication was named in the footnotes that he alleged were deleted.
Borchard said Frost could not have plagiarized from the Britannica because the encyclopedia article was not published until 1998, and Frost’s article originated from a speech he gave in 1996.
But Frost’s article has numerous similarities to the encyclopedia’s 1986 edition.
“He is denying the allegation, and we have opened our own investigation,” Borchard said. “We’re trying to find out where the formal charges came from. We need to know who the accuser is. And there is a concern that there was a mistake in the editing.”
University officials said they were alerted to the similarities in the articles two weeks ago.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.