Gina Grant college admissions controversy
Gina Grant (born 1976) is an American woman who gained notoriety for receiving early admission to Harvard University, only to have it rescinded when it became known that she had killed her mother and had omitted this fact from her college application.
Background
Gina Grant was the daughter of Charles Grant and Dorothy Mayfield, both of whom lived in Lexington, South Carolina. She had one sister, who was 9 years older than she was. Gina's father died of lung cancer when Gina was 11 years old.[1]
1990 killing and aftermath
At the time of her crime, Grant was a juvenile so as per the law pertaining to minors, the criminal records are sealed.[1] However, the Lexington County sheriff, James Metts—who handled the original case—released Grant's name immediately after her arrest.[1] Thus, the facts of the case are available in copious newspaper and magazine articles published in the early 1990s.
On September 13, 1990, in Lexington, South Carolina, the 14-year-old Grant bludgeoned her mother 13 times with a crystal candlestick, crushing her skull. She mopped up pools of blood from the kitchen floor and hid the candlestick and bloody rags in a closet. She then tried to make the death look like suicide by sticking a carving knife into the side of her mother's neck, and wrapping her mother's fingers around the handle.[1]
Grant changed her story several times. Initially, she told police that her mother attacked her while holding a knife and then stabbed herself in the throat. When the candlestick was discovered, Grant changed her story, eventually telling the police that she had committed the killing in self-defense. She was charged with murder.[1]
In mitigation, evidence suggested that Grant's mother was an alcoholic. Gina claimed that her mother had been physically abusive, to which Gina's sister attested. Grant pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced to a year in juvenile detention, with probation until age 18. Her boyfriend pleaded no contest to being an accessory to voluntary manslaughter after the fact and served nearly a year in juvenile detention.[1]
Grant was given permission by the juvenile court to relocate to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to live with a paternal aunt and uncle. She began attending Cambridge Rindge and Latin High School in 1992, where she excelled academically, tutored impoverished children, and was co-captain of the tennis team.[1]
Admissions revocations
In January 1995 Grant was admitted to Harvard University, reportedly having told her Harvard interviewer that her mother had been killed in an accident.[2] After she was featured in an April 2 Boston Globe article about students who had overcome difficult circumstances, Harvard and The Globe received anonymous communications containing old news articles about Grant's mother's death.[3] Harvard rescinded Grant's admission the next day, referring only to a list of general reasons that admissions are sometimes rescinded. Harvard refused Grant's request to meet with the admissions committee.[1]
Her lawyer later argued that educational institutions are forbidden by Massachusetts law to ask about criminal matters not resulting in "convictions"—
Some campus publications sided with Grant, citing her mother's alcoholism and Grant's allegations of physical abuse. An editorial in The New York Times,[4] an article in the Chicago Tribune,[5] and Harvard professors Charles Ogletree and Alan Dershowitz[3] also criticized Harvard's action.
Columbia University and Barnard College also rescinded acceptances they had extended to Grant, but Tufts University allowed their acceptance of her to stand, and Grant entered Tufts as part of the Class of 1999.[2]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Mayer, Jane (June 5, 1995). "Rejecting Gina". The New Yorker.
- 1 2 Honan, William H. (June 11, 1995). "For Student Who Killed Her Mother, Acceptance". The New York Times. Retrieved May 3, 2010.
- 1 2 "Harvard rescinds admission offer after learning student killed mother". The Daily Pennsylvanian. April 17, 1995. Retrieved April 10, 2011.
- ↑ "Harvard's Unseemly Haste". The New York Times. April 13, 1995. p. A24.
- ↑ Gaines, Patricia (June 4, 1995). "When Do We Start Forgiving". Chicago Tribune. p. 6.