Harvard University has suspended an economics professor accused of sexual harassment after a probe determined he “engaged in unwelcome conduct,” according to a report.

Roland G. Fryer Jr., 42, was placed on a two-year administrative leave and his campus research lab will permanently shutter as a result of the investigation, the Harvard Crimson reported Wednesday.

The sanctions against the star faculty member come a year after a former employee claimed he sexually harassed her. Several other women then came forward with similar accusations, all of which were filed with the Title IX office.

In one of the complaints, the accuser said Fyrer “objectified and sexualized” women, including staffers, at his lab, EdLabs. She said he made “sexually inappropriate comments” to and about employees, according to the Crimson.

Should he return to campus in 2021, Fryer will be barred from advising or supervising other students for two years, the newspaper reported. His undergraduate classes will also be “subject to monitoring by a Title IX-trained individual.”

“I was particularly upset to learn of the ways in which EdLabs members have been impacted, both personally and professionally,” Claudine Gay, dean of the faculty of arts and sciences, wrote in an email to faculty on Wednesday. “The totality of these behaviors is a clear violation of institutional norms and a betrayal of the trust of the FAS community.”