Schemes and improprieties’ cost Seton Hall Law almost $1 million, report findsA small number of trusted, long-time employees .
were found to have cheated Seton Hall Law School out of more than $975,000, Seton Hall University’s leaders announced Wednesday.
The workers, whom the school did not name, “engaged in a series of schemes and improprieties designed to enrich themselves”
at the expense of the school community over several years, university president Joseph E. Nyre and board of regents chair Kevin H. Marino said in the announcement.