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Valley City woman upset with VCSU vetting process
Monday, 21 April 2008

    VALLEY CITY (AP) — The mother of a slain college student’s boyfriend says state higher education officials disregarded a community’s worries when they opted to forego FBI background checks on Valley City State University president candidates.
    Bonnie Ranum, whose son dated Mindy Morgenstern, who was killed in September 2006, said president candidates should not be exempt from the fingerprint-based checks.
    The state Board of Higher Education earlier this month rejected a recommendation to require the FBI check for the finalists to replace retiring Valley City State President Ellen Chaffee. Officials said presidential candidates already undergo criminal history checks based on name, birth date and Social Security number, along with credit checks, and degree and employment verifications.
    University system attorney Pat Seaworth also said that the risk is small that a candidate for a college or university presidency would have a dangerous background.
   Morgenstern was killed by Moe Gibbs, who had worked as a campus security guard and Barnes County jailer.
   School officials said after Gibbs was arrested that a background check on him came up clean when he applied for work. An FBI background check was not conducted on Gibbs when he was hired as a jailer. Officials discovered later that he had changed his name from Glen Dale Morgan Jr.
    ‘‘If a Mr. Gibbs can slip through, anybody can slip through at any level,’’ Ranum said. ‘‘I don’t think people at other levels should be exempt.’’
    Larry Robinson, a member of the presidential search committee and a state legislator, said he also was disappointed the Higher Education board rejected the committee’s request to do FBI checks.

For full story, see Monday's edition of the Valley City Times-Record. 

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 22 April 2008 )
 
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