T H E O L D E ST C O L L E G E DA I LY · FO U N D E D 1 8 7 8
NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2021 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 29 · yaledailynews.com
Former employee charged with stealing millions from Yale BY ROSE HOROWITCH AND BEATRIZ HORTA STAFF REPORTERS
RYAN CHIAO/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Jamie Petrone-Codrington was charged Friday, prompting an investigation by the FBI and Yale Police Department.
A former administrator at the Yale School of Medicine was charged with fraud and money laundering after stealing up to $30 million from the school in an elaborate scheme of purchasing and reselling computer hardware. Jamie Petrone-Codrington, who most recently served as the director of finance and administration for Yale’s Department of Emergency Medicine, orchestrated an eight-year money laundering scheme to steal computer hardware from the School of Medicine. She started working for Yale in 2008 and, at most, five years later began to illegally purchase and resell the hardware using funds from the School of Medicine. University spokesperson Karen Peart said that Petrone-Codrington is no longer employed at Yale. Petrone-Codrington is accused of stealing up to $30 million through thousands of computer hardware
orders, according to an FBI affidavit unsealed on Friday and obtained by the Hartford Courant. Since January, Petrone-Codrington has ordered 8,000 iPads and Surface Pro tablets, as well as $2.1 million in other computer equipment this past summer. “Yale alerted federal law enforcement authorities to evidence of criminal behavior and has cooperated fully with their investigation,” Peart wrote in an email to the News. “Yale is grateful for the swift action of the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.” The U.S. Department of Justice released a public statement on Sept. 3 stating that PetroneCodrington was charged with a federal criminal complaint. Petrone-Codrington appeared before a judge in New Haven on Friday and was released on a $1 million bond. According to the Hartford Courant, she turned herself in to authorities on Aug. 26, one day after federal prosecutors and the FBI opened an investigation. SEE FRAUD PAGE 4
Yale declines most federal relief funding School of Nursing receives largest-ever donation
YALE DAILY NEWS
The University accepted $4.7 million in funding to distribute among Yale College, graduate and professional students on financial aid. BY ROSE HOROWITCH AND ZAPORAH PRICE STAFF REPORTERS Yale has passed up a total of $28.9 million in government COVID-19 relief funds over the last year, accepting just $4.7 million, which it allocated among students with high financial need. The aid — granted by the Department of Education through the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund, or HEERF — was
allotted in three rounds. The University declined the first round of funding in April 2020, following criticisms from the Trump administration toward Harvard University for accepting the money. Instead, the University called on the government to reallocate the funding to colleges and universities with greater need. In the second round, in January 2021, Yale accepted the money for which it was eligible. Now, with a third, and likely final, round of
funding, the University has chosen to decline its allotment. Some students said they wish the University had accepted more funding to subsidize outstanding expenses in a financially difficult year — especially costs first-generation, low-income students face. University spokesperson Karen Peart told the News that declining the funding allows it to be allocated to other institutions that have more need. “Yale University declined the $17.4 million allotted to Yale in the third round of the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund … with the expectation that the funds would be reallocated to other colleges and universities, ideally among institutions in Connecticut,” Peart wrote in an email to the News. “Yale accepted $4.7 million from HEERF II and awarded the full amount to students with exceptional financial need in Yale College and the graduate and professional schools.” Peart added that the University gave “particular attention” to the financial needs of students at the School of Nursing and School of SEE FUNDING PAGE 4
BY JULIA BROWN STAFF REPORTER Linda Rodman ’73 GRD ’75 and her husband Larry Rodman ENV ’16 gave a $6 million gift to the Yale School of
Nursing this summer to create a new full-time ladder faculty position in gerontology, or the study of aging. SEE RODMAN PAGE 4
YALE DAILY NEWS
Linda Rodman ’73 GRD ’75 gifted $6 million to the School of Nursing, establishing a new faculty position in gerontology.
Steitz funds RNA mentorship program Divinity students advocate for removal of board fee BY SELIN NALBANTOGLU CONTRIBUTING REPORTER
YALE NEWS
Molecular biophysics and biochemistry professor Joan Steitz used her award money from the Wolf Prize to fund the creation of an RNA Scholars Program.
CROSS CAMPUS THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 1984.
As summer fades and temperatures in New Haven begin to drop, several Grace Hopper sophomores try to keep warm via their fireplace. However, they forget to open the flue, bringing smoke, fire alarms and fire trucks to Elm Street.
Joan Steitz, Sterling Professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry, donated her award money from the Wolf Prize to start an RNA Scholars Program within the Yale Center for RNA Science and Medicine. Last February, Steitz was one of three recipients of the prestigious Wolf Prize for her work on RNA. This award is given to scientists for their “achievements in the interest of mankind,” according to the prize’s website. Her share of the award money, approximately $33,000, will be used to create and maintain a Yale RNA Scholars Program dedicated to supporting junior researchers interested in exploring RNA. “I was an undergraduate when I was first introduced to both DNA SEE RNA PROGRAM PAGE 5
INSIDE THE NEWS YALE-NUS
The decision to close of Yale-NUS, a joint college between Yale and the National University of Singapore, happened without Yale's input, University officials told the News. Page 3 UNIVERSITY
MARS
BY JULIA BROWN STAFF REPORTER Every Master of Divinity and Master of Arts in Religion student at the Yale Divinity School
is currently required to pay the school’s annual board fee, prompting criticism from some students this past summer. SEE YDS PAGE 5
VAIBHAV SHARMA/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Citing equity issues, Yale Divinity School students are speaking out against the mandatory $1,250 board fee.
A study conducted by two members of the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences could have crucial implications for the future of space travel. Page 6 SCITECH
DESK
After purchasing a State Street building in December, Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen opened a drop-in center in the renovated space for limited hours. Page 8 CITY
YCC
The Yale College Council has focused its efforts so far on helping students adjust to in-person learning on Yale's campus. Page 13 UNIVERSITY