Appeals Court To Finally Hear Arguments In Ousted Temple Dean Moshe Porat’s Case
Will Ousted Temple Dean Moshe Porat Ever Go To Prison?
Will Ousted Temple Dean Moshe Porat Ever Go To Prison?

Former Temple Fox School of Business Dean M. Moshe Porat

The last we heard about Moshe Porat, an appeals court had stayed both his 14-month prison sentence and his $250,000 fine for his role in the biggest university cheating scandal in a rankings publication.

That was on May 9, 2022, the day the 76-year-old former dean of Temple University’s Fox School of Business was slated to report to prison after a federal jury of eight women and four men convicted him of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and other charges. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals then allowed Porat to go home pending the results of the appeal.

It’s been radio silence ever since.

Now there appears to be some movement in Porat’s case. Appellate court documents filed April 25 say that oral arguments on Porat’s appeal are scheduled for Thursday, May 18, 2023. Both prosecutors and Porat’s defense will be allotted 45 minutes to present their arguments.

It’s unclear when the appellate court judges will issue their ruling after the arguments.

PORAT WANTED TEMPLE TO PAY HIS LEGAL FEES

In a separate court action – connected to the scandal but not a part of Porat’s criminal case – the Superior Court of Pennsylvania in March reversed a previous court’s order that Temple University pay Porat’s legal fees.

Temple had previously paid Porat’s fees in cases associated with the rankings scandal from October 2018 to February 2021. The university stopped payments in April 2021 (the same month he was criminally indicted), stating Porat was not a representative of the university that qualified for such payments under its bylaws.

Porat sued Temple University in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County in a civil action, and that court ruled in his favor.

On November 4, 2021, (coincidentally five days before the start of his criminal trial) Temple University appealed the decision to the state’s Superior Court. That court reversed the lower court’s ruling, according to a court document filed on March 16, 2023. However, the court also did not take up Temple’s counter claim that Porat’s federal conviction required the former dean to pay back attorney fees the university had previously paid.

What this all means is that Porat, not Temple, was responsible for paying his attorneys in the six months leading up to his criminal trial, the trial itself, and throughout the 13-month-long (so far) appeals process.

A SCANDAL THAT’S PERSISTED FOR HALF A DECADE

Oral arguments for Porat’s appeal next week are just the latest milestone in a scandal that has slowly unraveled over the course of more than five years.