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Science

Prosecutors in Mexico Seeking Arrest Warrants For More Than 30 Scientists (theguardian.com) 57

Mexico's scientific community has reacted with outrage after the country's chief prosecutor requested arrest warrants for 31 scientists, researchers and academics on accusations of organised crime, money laundering and embezzlement -- charges that could land them alongside drug cartel kingpins in one of the country's most notorious lockups. From a report: A judge at the maximum security Altiplano prison -- from which Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman escaped in 2015 -- denied granting the arrest warrants on Wednesday. But the federal prosecutor immediately announced plans to pursue arrest warrants for the third time. The university professors have been accused of violating a law that prevents members of an advisory board from receiving money from a government science fund. But that law was passed in 2019, and the scientists got the $2.5m years earlier when it was apparently legal. Those involved have denied the funds were illegal or misused. The National Council on Science and Technology (Conacyt) has described the reaction to the arrest warrant applications as "a concerted wave of disinformation," which was spreading "terror" in the scientific community.
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Prosecutors in Mexico Seeking Arrest Warrants For More Than 30 Scientists

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  • ... allowed in Mexico?

  • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @03:42PM (#61838701) Journal
    Ignoring the retroactive nature of applying the law, the bigger problem here seems to be a law that is designed to prevent scientists from serving on government advisory boards. Cutting off your government from getting scientific advice on its policies never turns out well as the current pandemic has made glaringly obvious.
    • by brunes69 ( 86786 ) <slashdot@nOSpam.keirstead.org> on Monday September 27, 2021 @03:49PM (#61838731)

      The reporting on this is horrible as usual.

      The regulation is designed to prevent someone from serving on an advisory board that doles out funds *while also* serving as a scientist in an organization receiving said funds. It makes perfect sense and is a good common sense policy to prevent conflict of interest.

      • The regulation is designed to prevent someone from serving on an advisory board that doles out funds *while also* serving as a scientist in an organization receiving said funds. It makes perfect sense and is a good common sense policy to prevent conflict of interest.

        In sensible places you simply are required to recuse yourself from the panel when your grant or any from your institution or with any current or recent collaborators is being assessed and ranked. So you get to sit on the board while having essen

        • by brunes69 ( 86786 )

          Again - THE REGULATION **IS NOT** PROHIBITING âoeSCIENTISTSâ FROM SERVING ON BOARDS.

          It is simply prohibiting someone from serving on a board who also doles out funds TO THEIR INSTITUTION.

          • Again - THE REGULATION **IS NOT** PROHIBITING ÃoeSCIENTISTSÃ FROM SERVING ON BOARDS.

            It is simply prohibiting someone from serving on a board who also doles out funds TO THEIR INSTITUTION.

            Right, so serving on the board in their area of expertise prevents them from getting funding. Great idea!

          • So the punishment is to lock them up with men who have headless corpses hung off of bridges for the whole public to see.

            Eh, not too far from how the US INjustice system works actually.

        • Except of course the large winks you give your colleagues as you leave the room
        • by narcc ( 412956 )

          The guy who forgot to sign out of their obvious troll account makes a good point:

          That is not how the world works. Board member A will recuse himself but ask for votes from the other board members in exchange for votes when they need them. That happens all the time.

          This is exactly right.

          Anyone who has ever served on a board knows that most decisions are made long before the meeting. This is true for ordinary things, not just this kind of corruption.

          We're too quick to accept corruption with cynical quips "just they way business is done" or "that's how things work in the real world" as if acting honestly was hopelessly naive. It certainly doesn't help when people get a real thrill out o

          • "People used to value their integrity. We need to get back to that."

            Yeah I miss the days when it took years to find out about the massive corruption and rot from our publicly esteemed leaders who put on a good feels show for the public.

            They don't really try hard with the good feels charade anymore. Quality's slippin' everywhere man!

          • > Anyone who has ever served on a board knows that most decisions are made long before the meeting.

            It's why some bureaucrats hate when I show up. I'm often not pre-briefed on the internal politicking, which leads to me asking about pain points in the project and has destroyed a few contracts. It's also saved some people, including my own company, from massive losses when an overlooked requirement is brought up by me.

      • by tragedy ( 27079 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @04:31PM (#61838857)

        Ideally you would have experts on the advisory board apportioning funding to the experts doing the research. Trouble is, in the real world, the only experts you can find for the board are going to be the same people doing the research that needs the funding. Creating that ethical divide is good in principal, but it may run into severe practical problems. If it's a choice between sitting on a board and getting no funding for research and not sitting on the board and having a chance to get funding, the board is going to be empty, or at least filled only with administrators who don't do research.

        • No researcher would sit on such a board if they knew they could be prosecuted. So you're going to end up with non-experts with no fucking clue agreeing to proposals, and if corruption is so bad at Mexican universities, what's to stop an evil unethical scientist from trying to influence the uninformed board members? At least when they're on the board, their discussions are on record, and it's a helluva lot easier to determine if bias or self-serving motives are at play.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Huitzil ( 7782388 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @03:58PM (#61838757)
    The president of Mexico (AMLO) has spent the past few years going after the bourgeoise establishment that includes a large part of the scientific, professional, and entrepreneurial classes. His wife and several members of a close circle form part of an anti-establishment academic circle, that revolves around the Philosophy ("Filosofia y Letras"), Political Science, and Law faculties in the University of Mexico. These faculties have historically been incredibly active in politics, but for the most part represented opposition ideologies until the government flipped in 2016 and now there is a direct link between government and the group of opposition academics. SUPER Important to note that all of these faculties value humanities, and hold a particularly romantic view of Latin American history with very favorable views of the Cuban revolution. They do not see hard science as valuable in the building and development of a society, and have most recently aligned with far left governments in Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, and other places.

    The context of AMLO's crusade is really important - he uses the government to punish and persecute those he has resented during his lifetime. The CONCACYT (board of science and technology) represents in large part a technocratic effort to develop Mexico's universities and academics in STEM+, rather than in humanities, and was highly resented by AMLO's group. Mostly because the CONACYT has been fairly progressive in its ideals to open up Mexico's university and research apparatus and globalize by sending talent abroad for development, and spending money in STEM research. AMLO hates this organism - in large part because he is inept at mathematics and failed out of the university system. He wants to shape academia to reflect his system of values, and simplistic view of the world.
    • But scientists and academics describe the prosecutions as an attempt at silencing them as the administration of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador imposes punishing austerity policies and pays short shrift to science in his response to the pandemic.

      “The message from Conacyt and the prosecutor to the national academic community is strong and clear: if you think differently than us, it’s best you find something else to do,” wrote political economist Javier Aparicio in the newspaper Excélsior.

      It would be incredibly refreshing to refer to this incident as a rare one-off departure from established scientific belief... but, I suppose, if you're waiting for that ship, events in not that ancient history might lead you to be particularly unsurprised it has set sail.

    • The person who wrote this does not have the slightest idea of current events in Mexico or is a troll who wants to make Mexico look bad on English-speaking people. CONACYT was used for an exclusive elite (they call themselves scientists). They were unchecked on their deeds so they did whatever they pleased, twisting and ignoring the law. What you are seeing, in this case, is called accountability.
      • Are you referring to the news article or to my post?
        If you're referring to my post, let me fact check with a Mexican scientist.
        Oh wait! That's me, I am a Mexican scientist!
        It's all true.
        Let add more clarity: Over the years I have worked and met truly outstanding scientists that received training in high end fields because of Conacyt. Across many disciplines - engineering, biology, medicine, genetics, maths. The top of the top in many STEM fields were able to receive instruction and training that
  • The only good news (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @04:26PM (#61838837)

    If they pursue the scientists as effectively as they do the cartels, the scientists have nothing at all to worry about.

    Unless the scientists don't have enough money to pay off the prosecutors...

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @05:56PM (#61839057) Journal

      I think the scientists should be very worried. The cartels can offer corrupt officials a lot of money, or alternatively can hang them headless from bridges. I doubt there are a lot of scientists in Mexico with hundreds of millions of US dollars stashed in foreign accounts, or have the desire or the stomach to torture and behead university officials that threaten to deny grant requests. In other words, prosecutors, to give the appearances that they're tough on corruption, will go after easy targets like scientists, rather than tough and even outright dangerous targets like drug cartels. It's what "get tough on crime" always devolves into; throwing jaywalkers into jail forever because they can't afford their bail, while Wall Street tycoons rob the economy blind. It's hard and expensive to go after big criminals, a lot easier to go after some poor African-American who got caught passing a phony $20 bill.

      Remember when Italy went after some geologists because they committed the grievous crime of not being clairvoyants?

  • by ireul1010 ( 8768935 ) on Monday September 27, 2021 @04:52PM (#61838913)
    Just some clarification in this case. These scientist serve in a public board called "Foro Consultivo Científico y Tecnológico A.C." that board was create by law and approved by the congress to operate. The funds were from the government and authorize in the budged of the nation. So no money laundry or other crazy accusation is real. Also this board was for helping any government (local or federal) with problems that need some sort of science.
  • Drug kingpins in jail will relish new inmates with horn-rimmed glasses...

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