Newark, NJ – 21 Charged With Using Bogus School To Get Student Visas

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    Newark, NJ – Federal officials created a fake university that they say exposed a large-scale conspiracy to allow more than 1,000 foreigners to illegally maintain student visas and obtain work visas.

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    The 21 defendants whose arrests were announced Tuesday knew the University of Northern New Jersey was a sham with no instructors, classes or degree programs, officials said. But, they were unaware the school was the creation of U.S. immigration agents.

    Paul Fishman, U.S. attorney for New Jersey, said at a news conference that once word got out about the bogus school, the visa brokers and recruiters descended. During one secretly recorded conversation, Fishman said, a conspirator said the practice has been going on for years.

    “This was just another stop on the ‘pay-to-stay’ tour,” Fishman said.

    The university’s website promises “a high quality American education to students from around the world.” It could pass for any other college website, with photos of young people sitting around a library table and consulting with a faculty member. The site even has a seal in the university’s colors of blue and green.

    Most of the defendants, who Fishman said are in the U.S. legally, live in New York, New Jersey and California. One lives in Illinois, and one in Georgia.

    They are charged with conspiracy to commit visa fraud and conspiracy to harbor aliens for profit. The second charge carries a maximum prison term of 10 years. They were scheduled to make initial court appearances in Newark later Tuesday.

    Most of the foreigners who benefited from the alleged scheme hailed from China and India and were already in the U.S. on non-immigrant student visas. They have been identified and will be dealt with by immigration authorities, but won’t be prosecuted, Fishman said.

    According to Fishman and Immigrations and Customs Enforcement Director Sarah Saldana, the defendants solicited the undercover agents to enroll their clients at UNNJ, which was located in a building in Cranford, about 15 miles southwest of New York City, in order to fraudulently maintain their student visa status.

    The defendants proceeded with the understanding that their clients wouldn’t attend any classes or earn credits toward a degree, officials said.

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    Online:

    http://www.unnj.edu


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