So, my roommate and I (both pre-med) got into a discussion about our third, former roomie today, also pre-med, after she contacted us to say she was accepted to a school this week. This roomie was pretty much a terrible person in terms of ethics. In our second year together, she was caught by the school forging signatures to get into closed classes. I mean a DOZEN forgeries. At first she lied about involvement, but finally relinquished under threat of expulsion. The school was lenient. She got off with some community service hours, an ethics project, counseling, and disciplinary probationary status. Of course, the following semester, she was dismissed from the university with a 1.75 GPA (cumulative, no less) and failure to comply with sanctions. She then attended community college and finished her degree at a new institution by transferring her community college credits (not her transcripts from the dismissing university). I asked how she explained the dismissal/IAs (like a good skeptic) and she said she just didn't submit transcripts from our university. So, in total, she violated conduct code, was dismissed from school, then falsified her academic history to AAMC.
Barring that there's a strong chance she's just lying about the acceptance (although, her family blew up her facebook with congratulatory comments), what are the chances this is going to get caught by the med school? Hell, how have they NOT caught this? I've heard that there are ways to 'circumvent' the system, but now I'm really curious as to what the safe guards are for a person like this. How do med schools go about reviewing the truthfulness of an applicant in terms of IAs/dismissals/transcripts?
(No, I am not trolling. I couldn't make this **** up if I tried.)
Barring that there's a strong chance she's just lying about the acceptance (although, her family blew up her facebook with congratulatory comments), what are the chances this is going to get caught by the med school? Hell, how have they NOT caught this? I've heard that there are ways to 'circumvent' the system, but now I'm really curious as to what the safe guards are for a person like this. How do med schools go about reviewing the truthfulness of an applicant in terms of IAs/dismissals/transcripts?
(No, I am not trolling. I couldn't make this **** up if I tried.)