MONTCLAIR, NJ – Questions continue to surround Rep. Mikie Sherrill’s time at the U.S. Naval Academy, where she graduated in 1994 amid a major cheating scandal, but where definitive evidence of her role — or lack thereof — remains out of public view.
Sherrill’s name is missing from the official commencement program for the May 25, 1994, graduation, consistent with accounts that she was barred from walking in the ceremony.
She has acknowledged the penalty, attributing it to her refusal to “turn in some of my classmates,” while maintaining she was not involved in cheating and was ultimately commissioned as a Navy officer.
Sherrill maintains her innocence, saying she was just covering for her buddies, but her story doesn’t add up.
She says she wasn’t involved in the cheating scandal, but she could easily exonerate herself and release her disciplinary file to show that she is telling the truth and back up her claim that she served with honor and dignity while at the academy.
Why is it such a big deal? Sherrill is running for Governor of New Jersey, and she and her campaign have been found on several occasions to misrepresent the candidate, whether it’s her stock trades, her retiring rank, or even her policies.
She even got her two kids into the Naval Academy and wrote a press release that hid the fact that they were her daughters.
Key Points
- Sherrill’s name did not appear in the Naval Academy’s 1994 graduation program.
- She says she was punished for failing to report classmates but denies cheating.
- Her disciplinary file remains sealed, leaving gaps in the public record.
Records still off-limits
Her campaign has declined to release her full disciplinary record, which remains private or sealed under military rules. Without access to those files, the precise details of her punishment and whether she faced allegations of cheating directly are unknown.
In September, the National Personnel Records Center mistakenly released a large portion of her military service file. That trove contained performance evaluations, assignments, and sensitive personal data — but nothing that addressed the cheating scandal. CBS News, which reviewed the material, reported it found no evidence she cheated. Still, the absence of documentation is not conclusive proof of innocence.
No formal exoneration
There has been no public statement from the Naval Academy or Navy investigators formally clearing Sherrill. Unlike some midshipmen who were explicitly sanctioned for cheating, her case remains ambiguous. Being barred from walking at graduation could have stemmed from various violations, including failure to cooperate with investigators — a point Sherrill herself cites.