Granger, Neukom Institute director, resigns

By William Schpero, The Dartmouth Staff

Published on Saturday, April 19, 2008

Web Update, last updated on Apr 19 | 2:03 pm

  • Print
  • Report an Error

Dartmouth computer science professor Richard Granger has resigned as director of the Neukom Institute for Computational Science following the arrest of his wife last month for allegedly stealing over $300,000 from a church in California, the Grangers' prior residence.

Lean Granger was arrested by Hanover Police Mar. 27 and subsequently extradited to California, where she awaits trial in Orange County Superior Court.

She is charged with eight counts, including grand theft and acts constituting forgery, according to the Orange County online case database.

Lean Granger is accused of writing checks to herself from the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church, where she served as the treasurer and bookkeeper from October 2002 through November 2006, Sgt. Evan Sailor of the Newport Harbor Police said.

Lean Granger also allegedly wrote checks to cover credit card bills for a company, Caspian Scientific, LLC., registered in her husband's name. Caspian, currently registered in New Hampshire, provides "consulting services in the area of interdisciplinary neuroscience," according to documents filed with the state. The company is "not in good standing," according to the New Hampshire company registry.

Before coming to Dartmouth in July 2006, Richard Granger was a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and director of UC Irvine's Brain Engineering Laboratory.

The Orange County District Attorney's Office prosecutor in the case, Yvette Patko, refused in past interviews to comment on whether Richard Granger is under investigation, citing office policy. Patko also would not confirm whether the investigation is ongoing.

Richard Granger will continue to direct Dartmouth's Brain Imaging Laboratory and maintain his position on the faculty. Associate Dean of the Faculty Lindsay Whaley, who is also a linguistics and cognitive science professor, will direct the Neukom Institute in the interim.

An e-mail to Richard Granger was not returned by the time of this web update.

Comments

Comments are closed on this article.

Most Viewed | Latest Comments

  1. Lohse: Telling the Truth
  2. Pollard: Muckraking for a Buck
  3. Rolling Stone article targets College culture
  4. Obama nominates College President Jim Yong Kim to lead the World Bank
  5. Rolling Stone publishes article about hazing at Dartmouth
  6. Chang: Inequity in Our Backyard
  7. Tuck initiative broadens use of online resources
  8. UJAO drops all 27 SAE hazing charges
  9. Mahoney: How Not to Combat Hazing
  10. Romney allegedly eyeing Ayotte