• News
  • Film and TV
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Weird
  • Community
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
Twins handed $1.5 million in damages by college after it accused them of cheating in exam

Home> News

Published 11:28 5 Dec 2022 GMT

Twins handed $1.5 million in damages by college after it accused them of cheating in exam

A South Carolina college has had to cough up a hefty sum in damages after it wrongly accused a pair of twins of cheating

Aisha Nozari

Aisha Nozari

A South Carolina college has had to cough up a hefty sum in damages after it wrongly accused a pair of twins of cheating.

Kayla and Kellie Bingham, now 30, were enrolled at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) in 2016 and were both studying to become doctors when they were accused of cheating by ‘signalling’ to each other in a medical exam.

But after 'six years of torment' following the accusation, which lead to the sisters filing a lawsuit in 2017, a jury has now decided that the medical school defamed the sisters, awarding them compensation.

The Binghams have been awarded $1.5 million in damages by MUSC, with a court ruling that the twins came up with the same answers to questions because ‘their minds were connected’.

Advert

At the time of the incident, Kayla and Kellie were 24 and had been assigned seats at the same table during an exam.

Kayla and Kellie Bingham, now 30, were enrolled at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) in 2016.
Facebook

Speaking to Insider, Kellie insisted it was ‘virtually impossible’ for her and her sister to see one another’s computer screens and pointed out that it wasn’t the first time she and Kayla had scored similarly on tests.

"We were just nodding at a question at our own computer screens," Kayla said. "There was no signaling."

She then added that they 'never looked at each other'.

Not only did the twins have the same SAT scores - they tested on different days and locations - but they even scored within a ‘fraction’ of each other on high school tests.

Various professionals came to Kayla and Kellie’s defence, with one of their college professors saying that he noticed their ‘striking similarities’ in exams previously - despite them sitting at opposite ends of the table for said test.

Professor Nancy Segal, a psychologist and behaviour geneticist specialising in the study of twins at California State University, also defended the twins and even testified for them in court.

Segal said she’d have been ‘stunned’ if the twins didn’t reach the same conclusion on their papers, noting that ‘cheating complaints filed against twins are common in higher education.

The professor explained to Insider: “They are genetically predisposed to behave the same way. They've been raised the same and are natural partners in the same environment.”

Segal also told the jury: “Identical twins just have this kind of understanding that goes beyond what we typically think of as a close relationship.”

The twins have insisted how it was impossible for them to cheat during the exam.
Shutterstock

Kayla called MUSC's cheating claims 'ridiculous’ and insisted she and Kallie didn’t have 'twin telepathy or a secret language’.

In 2016, the siblings left MUSC ‘at the recommendation of the dean because of how hostile it had become’ - their fellow students even believed they had cheated - and the twins filed a lawsuit against the college in 2017.

Kellie said she was shattered when they were forced to abandon their medical career: "It honestly killed me. I'd dreamed about being a doctor since I was little - Kayla and I wanted to help people."

However, Kayla has now said the moment the jury read its findings was the ‘biggest moment of our lives’ and ‘restored everything to us’.

Featured Image Credit: Facebook / Medical University of South Carolina

Topics: Education, US News

Aisha Nozari
Aisha Nozari

Advert

Advert

Advert

Choose your content:

19 mins ago
an hour ago
  • NASA/JPL-Caltech/Keith Miller (Caltech/IPAC)
    19 mins ago

    NASA discovers potentially habitable planet 'remarkably similar to Earth'

    The planet is considered very cold due to the star it orbits

    News
  • Getty Images/Jeff Kravitz
    an hour ago

    Fans notice Jamie Foxx comment to Chappell Roan as she shows up 'topless' to Grammy's red carpet

    The 'Pink Pony Club' singer sported a sheer dress held up by faux piercings, body artwork, and a flowing, red cape

    Celebrity
  • Getty Images/Connect Images
    an hour ago

    Study reveals how often the average American couple have sex and how many are left unsatisfied

    The researchers also looked into what factors led to couples having more sex

    News
  • Getty Images/Kypros
    an hour ago

    New footage shows what it was like inside Jeffrey Epstein's prison cell

    Epstein was arrested in July 2019 before his death two months later

    News
  • Husband of teacher accused of performing 45 'sexual acts' with student stands by her as she faces new accusations in court
  • Outrage as popular college degree is no longer counted as 'professional' by Trump administration
  • Trump accused of forgetting which country Melania is from in awkward moment at movie premiere
  • Twins share shocking change to face after one of them smoked and the other didn't