Crime & Safety

Ex Temple Business School Dean Gets Prison For Rank Inflation

Moshe Porat, 75, of Bala Cynwyd, will spend 14 months in prison after artificially inflating the School of Business's nationwide rankings.

PHILADELPHIA — The former dean of Temple University’s Richard J. Fox School of Business and Management will spend more than a year behind bars after being convicted of fraud for trying to artificially inflate the school’s program rankings against other schools nationwide.

Federal authorities said Moshe Porat, 75, of Bala Cynwyd, was sentenced to one year and two months in prison, three years of supervised release, and was ordered to pay a $250,000 fine.

Porat, who was the Dean of Temple University’s Richard J. Fox School of Business and Management from 1996 until 2018, was convicted of fraud in connection with a scheme to artificially inflate the school’s program rankings against other schools nationwide.

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In November 2021, Porat was convicted after trial on charges that he conspired and schemed to deceive the school’s applicants, students, and donors into believing that the school’s business degree programs legitimately earned top rankings, so that they would pay tuition and make donations to Temple.

In April of the same year, Porat was charged by Indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and one count of wire fraud, stemming from a multi-year conspiracy in which the defendant participated with a Fox professor named Isaac Gottlieb and a Fox employee named Marjorie O’Neill to submit false information about the school’s online MBA (OMBA) and part-time MBA (PMBA) programs to U.S. News & World Report in order to inflate Fox’s rankings in the annual U.S. News surveys of top OMBA and PMBA programs.

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Among other things, the conspirators agreed to provide false information to U.S. News about the number of Fox’s OMBA and PMBA students who had taken the Graduate Management Admission Test (“GMAT”); the average work experience of Fox’s PMBA students; and the percentage of Fox students who were enrolled part-time, all because it was believed that better numbers for these metrics would result in better rankings for the programs.

Relying on the false information it had received from Fox, U.S. News ranked Fox’s OMBA program Number One in the country four years in a row (2015 – 2018).

U.S. News also moved Fox’s PMBA program up its rankings from No. 53 in 2014 to No. 20 in 2015, to No. 16 in 2016, and to No. 7 in 2017.

Finally, Porat boasted about these rankings in marketing materials directed at potential Fox students and donors.

Enrollment in Fox’s OMBA and PMBA programs grew dramatically in a few short years, which led to millions of dollars a year in increased tuition revenues.

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