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Grant, through a lawyer, argued that educational institutions are forbidden by
Massachusetts law to ask about criminal matters not resulting in "convictions"‍—‌juveniles are "adjudicated delinquent" rather than "convicted"‍—‌and that she was not obliged to disclose an event that occurred
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received anonymous communications containing old news articles about Grant's mother's death. Harvard rescinded Grant's admission the next day, referring only to a list of general reasons that admissions are sometimes rescinded. Harvard refused Grant's request to meet with the admissions committee.
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was rescinded after it became known that four years earlier, at age 14, she had killed her mother. Controversy ensued over questions including whether she was obligated to disclose crimes committed as a juvenile; whether she had escaped justice for the killing; and whether the decisions, made by
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Grant changed her story several times. Initially, she told police that her mother attacked her while holding a knife and then stabbed herself in the throat. When the candlestick was discovered, Grant changed her story, eventually telling the police that she had committed the killing in
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until age 18. Her boyfriend pleaded no contest to being an accessory to voluntary manslaughter after the fact and served nearly a year in
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but does not summarize the timing or sequence of the various events mentioned. The causal timing is not explained in the lead.
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On
September 13, 1990, in Lexington, South Carolina, the 14-year-old Grant bludgeoned her mother 13 times with a crystal
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Harvard and several other universities that reconsidered her admission in the wake of the revelations, were justified.
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in 1992, where she excelled academically, tutored impoverished children, and was co-captain of the tennis team.
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Some campus publications sided with Grant, citing her mother's alcoholism and Grant's allegations of physical
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allowed their acceptance of her to stand, and Grant entered Tufts as part of its class of 1999.
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Gina Grant was the daughter of
Charles Grant and Dorothy Mayfield, both of whom lived in
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article about students who had overcome difficult circumstances, Harvard and
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168:(born 1976) is an American woman who gained notoriety when her admission to
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437:"Harvard rescinds admission offer after learning student killed mother"
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185:. She had one sister, her elder by nine years. Gina's father died of
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Grant was given permission by the juvenile court to relocate to
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In mitigation, evidence suggested that Grant's mother was an
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also rescinded acceptances they had extended to Grant, but
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and was sentenced to a year in juvenile detention, with
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University and college admissions in the United States
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when she was a juvenile and was reflected only in her
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407:"For Student Who Killed Her Mother, Acceptance"
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53:Learn how and when to remove these messages
120:This section is about an event or subject
153:Learn how and when to remove this message
532:Cambridge Rindge and Latin School alumni
234:. Gina claimed that her mother had been
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484:Gaines, Patricia (June 4, 1995).
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16:1995 Harvard admissions incident
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88:provide an accessible overview
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486:"When Do We Start Forgiving"
189:when Gina was 11 years old.
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465:"Harvard's Unseemly Haste"
183:Lexington, South Carolina
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259:Cambridge, Massachusetts
442:The Daily Pennsylvanian
223:. She was charged with
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537:Academic controversies
269:Admissions revocations
244:voluntary manslaughter
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470:The New York Times
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303:. An editorial in
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252:juvenile detention
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405:(June 11, 1995).
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445:. April 17, 1995
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380:"Rejecting Gina"
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494:. p. 6.
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137:(March 2021)
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36:Please help
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376:Mayer, Jane
319:professors
317:Harvard Law
213:candlestick
187:lung cancer
506:Categories
345:References
240:no contest
177:Background
166:Gina Grant
128:improve it
96:March 2021
39:improve it
449:April 10,
285:The Globe
248:probation
232:alcoholic
132:talk page
80:summarize
45:talk page
199:juvenile
206:sheriff
418:May 3,
315:, and
294:sealed
225:murder
301:abuse
451:2011
420:2010
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