Trenton, NJ – Rep. Mikie Sherrill is facing renewed scrutiny over her record at the U.S. Naval Academy after offering conflicting accounts of why she was barred from walking at her 1994 graduation during the fallout of a major cheating scandal.
The scandal, which unfolded in 1992–93, implicated more than 130 midshipmen accused of obtaining and sharing stolen answers to an electrical-engineering exam.
Approximately two dozen students were expelled, and the academy implemented disciplinary measures that resulted in resignations and reforms.
Sherrill was involved in that scandal but she had acknowledged receiving punishment that prevented her from participating in commencement. Her name does not appear in the official program, though she was commissioned as an officer and went on to serve in the Navy for nearly a decade.
Sherrill’s own shifting explanations have reignited the controversy.
In earlier comments to reporters, she stated the punishment stemmed from her refusal to “turn in some of my classmates.”
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But at a recent campaign event in Plainfield, she described the circumstances differently, saying she had taken a stolen test without realizing it was stolen, later hearing rumors of its theft and failing to come forward. Both versions emphasize that she did not report misconduct, but they differ in whether she had prior knowledge of the test’s origins.
Her disciplinary record remains sealed, and Sherrill has declined to authorize its release. The uncertainty, coupled with variations in her public statements, has fueled demands from opponents for transparency.
Some are now claiming her father was a CIA operative who helped the family bury the scandal and her involvement under the rug, but those claims have remained as unconfirmed as her claims that she did not cheat on the test.
The issue came to light after the National Archives’ release of her military file—containing sensitive personal data and disciplinary references , sparked backlash in Washington. Democratic leaders, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, have urged a criminal inquiry into the disclosure, which they argue may have violated federal privacy protections.
The cloud over her graduation day is once again casting a shadow on her political future.