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French Professor Fake Nobel Scandal: Expelled for Inventing Award Given to Himself and Chomsky

Shocking Deception Unravels at Besançon University

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The Shocking Revelation of Academic Deception at a French University

In the quiet academic halls of eastern France, a scandal has erupted that has sent shockwaves through higher education circles across Europe. Florent Montaclair, a long-time lecturer in language sciences, has been expelled from his position at the Université de Franche-Comté in Besançon following revelations that he fabricated an entire prestigious award system. What began as a seemingly glittering achievement turned into a tale of intellectual fraud, involving self-awarded honors and even renowned linguist Noam Chomsky. This case highlights the vulnerabilities in academic credential verification and raises critical questions about integrity in university environments.

Who Is Florent Montaclair and His Academic Journey?

Florent Montaclair, born in 1970, served as a teaching lecturer at the Université de Franche-Comté for over two decades, specializing in 19th-century fantastic literature, including the works of Jules Verne. Hired initially as a contract instructor, his career appeared steady but unremarkable until around 2015. Colleagues described him as intelligent and cultured, yet his professional trajectory stagnated. Montaclair supplemented his income by authoring fantasy novels about vampires, published through obscure presses. Little did his peers know, behind this facade lay an elaborate scheme to elevate his status through invented accolades.

Florent Montaclair receiving fake Gold Medal of Philology at Paris ceremony

Constructing the Fake International Society of Philology

The hoax originated in 2015 when a local newspaper speculated Montaclair was on the cusp of a Nobel-equivalent prize. Seizing the opportunity, he invented the International Society of Philology, a fictitious organization purportedly affiliated with the equally phantom University of Philology and Education in Lewes, Delaware—a mere mailbox at a business services firm. He crafted professional-looking websites hosted in France, complete with plagiarized content, fabricated member lists from obscure African universities, and a backstory claiming the society awarded the Gold Medal of Philology every five years since 1927, inspired by Alfred Nobel himself. The medal, purchased for €250 from a Paris jeweler, became the centerpiece of his deception.

The Grand Ceremony: Self-Coronation at the National Assembly

In June 2016, Montaclair orchestrated a lavish ceremony at France's National Assembly in Paris, attended by Nobel laureates, former ministers, MPs, and academics. He presented himself as the first French recipient of the Gold Medal of Philology, claiming predecessors like Umberto Eco had received it. Dressed in finery, he accepted the gleaming medal amid applause, positioning himself as a philology luminary. This event, covered by local media, propelled his fabricated prestige, leading to a TEDx talk titled "The Galilean Challenge." The spectacle was designed to lend legitimacy, blurring lines between reality and ruse.

Extending the Hoax: Awards to Chomsky and Beyond

Montaclair's ambition grew. In late 2016, he awarded an honorary Gold Medal to Noam Chomsky during a Paris event at the Wallonie-Bruxelles Center, attended by 200 people. Chomsky, then 88, spoke on linguistics but later stated he had no recollection of the medal or society. In 2018, he selected Romanian Academy member Eugen Simion as the next recipient, notifying him via ornate letter claiming 123 votes from 200 global universities. Simion's academy celebrated initially, planning a European Parliament ceremony with MEPs Renate Weber and Cristian Bușoi. For more on the Romanian angle, see the original exposé by Scena9 journalists.

Leveraging Fakes for Career Advancement

The true impact emerged in 2018 when Montaclair applied for promotion to associate professor (maître de conférences) at France's Ministry of Higher Education. He submitted a bogus "state doctorate" from his fake Delaware university, securing the role despite its lack of recognition. This netted a significant pay rise and elevated status at Université de Franche-Comté. He listed the medal on his CV, gaining media mentions and invitations. The deception persisted undetected for years, illustrating gaps in French academic promotion processes.

Université de Franche-Comté campus in Besançon, site of the scandal

Exposure: From Romanian Probe to French Reckoning

The scheme cracked in 2018 when Romanian Scena9 journalists investigated Simion's award, uncovering the digital mirage. Their piece, "The Fake Nobel that Duped the Romanian Academy," prompted retractions but faded in France. It resurfaced in 2023 during a university fake news panel where a colleague recalled rumors. By August 2025, Université de Franche-Comté reported to prosecutors. A February 2026 home search revealed a "tissue of lies," per Montbéliard's Paul-Édouard Lallois. Details in The Guardian.

University Expulsion: Disciplinary Action at Franche-Comté

Facing mounting evidence, the university launched a disciplinary probe. On April 7, 2026, its academic council's disciplinary section expelled Montaclair definitively from higher education teaching, a sanction he did not contest. This followed a July 2025 justice referral. The Université de Franche-Comté emphasized safeguarding institutional integrity, marking a swift response to protect students and reputation. Such actions underscore European universities' growing vigilance against internal fraud.

Ongoing Legal Investigation and Montaclair's Defense

Prosecutors pursue charges of forgery, misuse of forged documents, title usurpation, and fraud. Maximum penalties include five years imprisonment. Montaclair admits creating websites and medal but insists no crime occurred—no real medal exists to forge, and it was a failed attempt at a new distinction. His lawyer calls it a "real-life drama." Investigators probe career benefits, with re-interviews pending. As covered by BBC News, the case could set precedents for intellectual fraud.

Implications for Academic Integrity Across Europe

This scandal exposes vulnerabilities in Europe's higher education. In France, promotions rely on self-reported CVs, with limited cross-verification. EU-wide, no automatic diploma recognition exists; national bodies like France Éducation International assess foreign quals, but internal awards slip through. Recent stats show rising concerns: thousands of AI-cheating cases in UK unis, fake paper mills contaminating journals. French unis now review CVs rigorously, per ministry guidelines.

  • Weak vetting of obscure societies and medals.
  • Digital ease of fabrication via cheap websites.
  • Pressure for prestige in competitive academia.

Strengthening Credential Verification in Universities

Post-scandal, Université de Franche-Comté and peers implement stricter checks: third-party verifications for foreign degrees via ENIC-NARIC networks, CV audits, and whistleblower protocols. France's HCERES evaluates institutions, now scrutinizing faculty claims. Europe-wide, Bologna Process promotes transparency, but gaps persist. Actionable steps include:

  • Mandatory database cross-checks (e.g., ORCID, ResearchGate).
  • Training on spotting fakes.
  • AI tools for document authenticity.
Experts urge proactive audits to prevent recurrence.

Similar Cases and Lessons for European Higher Education

Montaclair's case echoes others: Spain's 2025 fake credential wave toppling politicians; UK AI plagiarism surge; Italy's phantom PhD scandals. In Germany, strict Anerkennung verifies quals. Lessons: foster ethical cultures, invest in verification tech, and prioritize merit over prestige. For Europe's 4,000+ unis, this reinforces need for unified standards.

Future Outlook: Rebuilding Trust in Academic Credentials

As probes conclude, expect policy shifts: France may mandate award validations. Broader EU initiatives like the European Education Area aim for digital credentials (e.g., European Student Card). For faculty, transparent careers via platforms like AcademicJobs.com ensure legitimacy. This scandal, though damaging, catalyzes stronger safeguards, ensuring higher education's gold standards remain genuine.

Portrait of Dr. Oliver Fenton

Dr. Oliver FentonView full profile

Contributing Writer

Exploring research publication trends and scientific communication in higher education.

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Frequently Asked Questions

🏅What exactly did Florent Montaclair fabricate?

Montaclair created the International Society of Philology and Gold Medal of Philology, plus a fake US university for his 'doctorate'. He held ceremonies and used them for promotion.

🏫Which university expelled him and when?

Université de Franche-Comté in Besançon expelled him definitively on April 7, 2026, after a disciplinary process started in 2025.

🤔Was Noam Chomsky involved knowingly?

Chomsky received the medal at a 2016 Paris event but later said he had no recollection of it or the society, attending only for a linguistics talk.

⚖️What legal charges does he face?

Forgery, misuse of forged documents, title usurpation, and fraud. Probe ongoing since Feb 2026; max 5 years prison if convicted.

📈How did the hoax boost his career?

Fake credentials secured associate professor promotion in 2018 and pay rise at the ministry of higher education.

📰Who first exposed the scandal?

Romanian Scena9 journalists in 2018-2019, investigating Eugen Simion's award, titled 'The Fake Nobel that Duped the Romanian Academy'.

🔍What are European universities doing post-scandal?

Implementing CV audits, ENIC-NARIC verifications, and AI tools for docs. France pushes ministry-level checks.

🌍Are there similar academic fraud cases in Europe?

Yes, Spain's 2025 fake credentials wave, UK AI cheating surge, Italy PhD fakes. Highlights need for Bologna Process enhancements.

How can professors verify awards legitimately?

Use ORCID, contact issuers directly, check via HCERES in France or national NARICs. Platforms like AcademicJobs aid transparent careers.

📚What lessons for higher ed integrity?

Prioritize ethics training, digital verification, whistleblower protections. Scandals like this rebuild trust through transparency.

🛡️Impact on Université de Franche-Comté?

Prompted internal reforms, signaled to prosecutors, protected reputation amid Europe's competitive uni landscape.