James Kirk diploma mills

James Kirk diploma mills
For other educational institutions using the name "LaSalle University", see La Salle University (disambiguation). For other educational institutions named "Edison", see Edison (disambiguation).

Thomas James Kirk II[1][2] (also known as Thomas McPherson[citation needed]) was the operator of several fraudulent higher education organizations (diploma mills), including the University of San Gabriel Valley, Southland University,[3] Bienville University,[4] and LaSalle University (Louisiana, not to be confused with the real La Salle University). He was indicted for fraud in 1996 and, after a plea agreement, was sentenced to five years in U.S. federal prison.

Contents

History

The University of San Gabriel Valley was a correspondence law school based in California.[5] Southland University was later also established in California, based in Pasadena and enrolling about 700 students. At the time, California's regulations allowed for authorization of a degree program if the prospective operator provided a list of faculty and courses and demonstrated $50,000 in assets, and Southland met California's requirements. In 1984 Time reported that a former Southland registrar said that the school had granted a bachelor's degree in engineering based on the student's short résumé and had awarded a law degree to a real estate agent on the basis of an exam designed to test legal assistants. Time quoted Kirk, who claimed he no longer operated Southland, as saying he "had no interest as an educator," but the school "was a good way to make money."[6]

In about 1986 Southland moved to Missouri where it was renamed LaSalle University. Kirk later moved it to Mandeville, Louisiana. According to John Bear, a renowned authority on diploma mills who consulted for the FBI, Kirk set up "World Christian Church" in Louisiana, placed the university in the ownership of the "church" to claim religious exemption from state education laws, and claimed to have taken a vow of poverty.[5]

In the mid-90's, LaSalle provoked the attention of the authorities because thousands of government workers had been awarded promotions and/or salary increases based on fraudulent advanced degrees. According to a prosecutor with the Attorney General's office, more than a dozen known diploma mills had been set up in Louisiana, where the laws were particularly lenient. Federal investigators estimated that LaSalle, alone, had issued in excess of 40,000 fake diplomas, the bulk of them to government employees. In fact, LaSalle's sales and marketing materials highlighted the fact that many of its graduates occupied high positions in government. In bureaucratic circles, LaSalle was a gravy train for higher pay, paid for by the taxpayer.[7]

The school was shut down after a July 1996 raid by the FBI, U.S. postal inspectors, and the Internal Revenue Service.[8] According to John Bear, the U.S. Attorney wrote to every person in the LaSalle files, officially informing them that LaSalle was nothing more than a diploma mill. All were advised that funds were available for refunds, providing they turned in their diploma(s). Many didn't, presumably so they could continue to parlay their degrees for more money in the marketplace, with impunity (they could always claim ignorance, later). The FBI report stated that LaSalle had only one faculty member serving 15,000 students (and her only degree was a Bachelor's from LaSalle). Furthermore, the back of the student application forms contained a disclaimer advising students that their signatures simply made them Ministers of Kirk's World Christian Church, and that any degrees they might get would merely be religious degrees, regardless of the subject.[9]

Kirk was charged with 18 criminal counts, including mail fraud, tax violations, and other crimes.[8] At the time of his arrest, the operation was discovered to have more than $35 million in bank deposits, current cash deposits of $10 million, and other assets.[5] Ultimately Kirk entered a plea agreement in which he was sentenced to five years in federal prison and was ordered not to operate any more schools.[8] Kirk did, in fact, serve five years for all charges relating to these diploma mills.[5] After he went to prison his wife, Natalie Handy, opened Edison University, an unaccredited distance education institution operated from a rented mail box at a Mail Boxes Etc. in Honolulu.[5] Edison later used the name Acton University.[8]

LaSalle University after Kirk's imprisonment

According to John Bear, in 1997 LaSalle University was sold to new owners who operated it as a legitimate operation until January 1999 (however, during this period some students were still doing substandard work for the old LaSalle programs). It continued to operate under the LaSalle name from January 1999 until October 2000, during which time all academic work was intended to meet accepted academic standards. Beginning in October 2000 and continuing until its final closure in the summer of 2002 it used the name Orion College.[8]Pat Brister, a leader of the national and Louisiana Republican Party, served as chief executive officer and chairman of the trustees of Orion College during its brief existence.[10]

Notable incidents involving James Kirk diploma mill credentials

In 1999, World Net Daily reported on the case of William Tiller, who had been hired by the city of Encinitas, CA, to lead its Y2K compliancy efforts.  Ultimately, Tiller was forced to resign when it came to light that his educational credentials were falsified.  Of the three advanced degrees on his resume (including a Ph.D. from LaSalle), none were legitimate.  Tiller's salary was $97K.[7]

In 2001, the Coquille Valley Sentinel profiled a hospital administrator who had asserted both a masters degree and a Ph.D. in Business Administration, from LaSalle University in Philadelphia, PA.[11]  The real La Salle does not have a Ph.D. program in Business (only in Clinical Psychology and Nursing).[12]  Richard Cormier had been newly selected for the head administrator role with Coquille Valley Hospital, when it was discovered that he had been lying about his education.  When questioned, Cormier presented copies of his diplomas, both of which were awarded in October of 1994 by Kirk's outfit in Louisiana.  Shortly thereafter, Cormier recanted his acceptance of the position.[13] 

In 2002, a Massachusetts school superintendent was criticized over a "phony doctorate" from LaSalle University in Louisiana, but was able to retain his job, which did not require a doctorate.[14]

According to a 2004 GAO report on Diploma Mills, which discussed the widespread purchase of fake degrees by high-ranking government officials, one manager in the National Nuclear Safety Administration paid $5,000 for a masters degree from LaSalle in 1996.  He was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Air Force at the time, when he felt pressured to purchase the degree in order to be promotable to Colonel.  He did not attend classes or take any tests, and he called his degree a "joke."[15]

In 2006 a Texas police officer was charged with several violations related to use of false credentials, including claiming a college degree in criminal justice management based on credentials from the unaccredited LaSalle University in Mandeville, Louisiana.[16] That same year, a Texas school superintendent was reported to have received a Ph.D. from LaSalle University in Louisiana. The superintendent told reporters he "had no idea" that the university was fraudulent.[17] A Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board official described LaSalle as a "fraudulent or sub-standard institution" and noted that Texas law made it a misdemeanor to use "a fraudulent or sub-standard degree to promote a business to seek employment or ask extra compensation."[17]

In 2006 TV hypnotist Paul McKenna won a libel action in the United Kingdom and was awarded "relatively modest" damages against the Daily Mirror over a statement by the newspaper that Paul McKenna was dishonest when using his LaSalle degree. The court stated, "Mr McKenna was not, in my judgment, dishonest and, for that matter, whatever one may think of the academic quality of his work, or of the La Salle degree, it would not be accurate to describe it as 'bogus'." "Desmond Browne, QC, for McKenna, said that 'any perceived lack of academic rigour at La Salle' did not prove that his client was dishonest."[18]

In 2008, the Ethics Review Committee of the Georgia Professional Standards Commission (PSC) suspended the Georgia Educator certificate of one of its teachers.  According to the published minutes, years earlier (in the fall of 2005), Harold Oberg, a high school science teacher in the Savannah-Chatham County School System, cited a Ph.D. from LaSalle University on his application for certification.  Because the dates of enrollment conflicted with those shown on his employment application, the degree was called into question.  Oberg could not explain the credits on his transcript, and he acknowledged that he never actually completed a written dissertation.  Ultimately, he admitted that the degree from LaSalle was illegitimate, although he had been receiving a higher salary because of it.  Consequently, the Commission sanctioned Oberg for misrepresenting his qualifications, stating that "the school system cannot have confidence in a teacher who would cheat the system by buying their doctorate degree online."[19]

In early 2009, it was revealed that a Florida-based, Fee-Only Financial Planner had been advertising a Finance Ph.D. from LaSalle University, with Latin honors.[20]  In fact, it was also obtained from Kirk's operation in Mandeville (the real La Salle does not have a doctoral program in Finance).[21]  For more than a decade, Jeffrey Camarda, owner of Camarda Financial Advisors, a registered investment advisor in Jacksonville, FL, promoted a diploma obtained just months before the mill was raided and closed by the FBI.  In a story printed by the Jacksonville Business Journal, Camarda acknowledged an inquiry into his background by the CFA Institute,[22] which induced him to stop using the Ph.D.[23] Years earlier, in a testimonial for his corporate image campaign, Camarda stressed his Ph.D. and noted the impact it had on the growth of his business.[24]  He created the tagline, "Invest In Integrity,"[25] at the same time he was promoting the "Dr." moniker on his own personal blogsite, www.drcamarda.com (which must now be manually navigated to through the wayback machine calendar in web archives).[26] In his bio, Camarda cited having earned his Magna Cum Laud Ph.D. in April of 1996, after a year of study[27] (typically, Ph.D. programs do not bestow Latin honors, and they generally take a minimum of four to five years of full-time effort to complete, on top of a bachelors degree).  He also provided a link to a book manuscript, which he said served as his thesis.[28] In it, he warns "if you are lucky enough to find a skilled planner, odds are good that she will still be a salesperson: an enlightened salesperson to be sure, but still one who walks the delicate ethical line ..."[29] (prior to launching his own practice as a "Dr.," Camarda was an insurance salesman).[30]  On the very last page, he advises the reader to be wary of a planner "who has not done his homework, or chooses not to comply with the law."[31] Misrepresentation is a crime.  In Florida, it is a criminal misdemeanor to use the title "Dr." and/or claim to possess a Ph.D. from any institution lacking proper accreditation.[32]  It is also a violation of Florida's Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act to defraud the public with unfair methods of competition or deceptive acts.[33]  The Securities law governing Investment Advisors also prohibits "any act, practice, or course of business which is fraudulent, deceptive, or manipulative:"[34]

Camarda's manuscript was never published, although he quoted Simon & Schuster as saying that it was "the best book yet written on financial planning."[35]  Simon & Schuster, he noted, was the long-running publisher of  Charles Givens (a rags-to-riches motivational speaker who built an empire of best sellers in the late 1980s and early 1990s).  Ironically, Givens' infomercials, books, and speeches subsequently become the focus of numerous lawsuits, fraud investigations, and court judgements on the basis of misrepresentations of various kinds.[36]  Camarda did publish a book about cigars, the byline of which may be the last vestige of his use of the title "Dr:"[37] (during the time it operated as a diploma mill, from 1986 to mid-1997, LaSalle advertised heavily on matchbook covers).[38] Around the same time that Camarda was exposed, the Courthouse News reported that he had filed suit against a former colleague, who countered that Camarda's use of the Ph.D. was illicit.  The report suggested that Camarda may also have been under investigation by the SEC.[39]  One year later, in 2010, in the Nov/Dec issue of its subscription-based magazine, the CFA Institute published a disciplinary action against one of its members for having advertised an unaccredited Ph.D. all the way into early 2009, when, by 2002, he had been notified by authorities that the degree was invalid.  This was a violation of the CFA Code of Ethics and Standards of Professional Conduct, as the Member "knew or should have reasonably known" that his public representations of having earned a doctorate degree were false, misleading, and in violation of the criminal code where he conducts his business.  The facts seem to indicate this was Camarda.[40]

A 2009 Independent Weekly story reported on the controversy surrounding the newly elected vice chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party, Tim Johnson.  Johnson claimed to have a Ph.D. in Total Quality Management; however, he would not discuss his alma mater, which he had previously cited as LaSalle University, 2000.  In an email signed, "Timothy F. Johnson, Ph.D.," Johnson replied to a direct inquiry merely by saying that he would not answer questions about his background.[41]  Johnson still claims the designation on his own website, but his educational background is not divulged.[42]

In 2010, a Republican candidate for the Michigan House of Representatives, Mark Ouimet, was criticized for claiming a master's degree in business administration from "LaSalle University," implying that his degree was from the accredited La Salle University in Philadelphia when it was obtained from the unaccredited school in Louisiana. Ouimet's degree was awarded in 1999, after Kirk's operation had been shut down.[43] Ouimet won the election.[44]

Few LaSalle transcripts have been made public, although at least two have been deposited on the Internet.  Each was awarded in 1999.  In the case of Tony Izzo,[45] a former executive of Enstar Natural Gas, his transcript shows 60 unidentified credits transferred in, and 60 more awarded over the next year and a half (30 of which were applied in a single month).  Five additional credit hours were assigned to a Bachelors Final, and his degree was issued in the month of December.[46] Renee Newman,[47] a Dearborn, MI community service exponent, was credited for 10 classes in Special Education.  Her grades were applied in February, March, April, May, July, October, November, and December of 1998, for a total of 30 credit hours.  One month later, in January of 1999, she was awarded five more credits for a Masters Thesis, as well as issued a Summa Cum Laude degree.[48]

See also

References

  1. ^ Associated Press (September 25, 1996). Minister indicted on fraud charges involving church-run university. Dallas Morning News
  2. ^ Staff report (September 25, 1996). Ex-Senate candidate indicted in fraud case. The Advocate
  3. ^ Legislator escapes probe, by Teddy Ng, The Standard, April 20, 2005
  4. ^ Louisiana Board of Regents Shuts Down 4 Distance-Learning Institutions, By Andrea L. Foster, The Chronicle of Higher Education, November 8, 2002
  5. ^ a b c d e John Bear, Degree Mills: The $200 Million a year Competitor You Didn't Know You Had. Revised April 7, 2004.
  6. ^ Ellie McGrath, Education: Sending Degrees to the Dogs, Time, April 2, 1984
  7. ^ a b Bresnahan, David. Government inundated with phony degrees: Picking up Falsified Honors is Easier, More Profitable than Ever World Net Daily, June 25, 1999.
  8. ^ a b c d e Bears' Guide to Earning Degrees by Distance Learning by John B. Bear & Mariah P. Bear, Pages 273-274, 15th edition, 2003
  9. ^ Bear, John, quoted on www.degreeinfo.com. Distance Learning Discussion June 29, 2009.
  10. ^ ""Orion College Opens", January 25, 2001". allbusiness.com. http://www.allbusiness.com/education-training/education-systems-institutions/6043872-1.html. Retrieved November 8, 2009. 
  11. ^ Richardson, Janet. Coquille Valley Sentinel, reprinted by Oregon Magazine Would-be Hospital Chief Bows out Following Sentinel's Investigation Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  12. ^ La Salle University Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  13. ^ Richardson, Janet. Coquille Valley Sentinel, reprinted by Oregon Magazine Would-be Hospital Chief Bows out Following Sentinel's Investigation Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  14. ^ Deborah Allard-Bernardi, Furtado gets raise and vote of confidence, The Herald News, May 9, 2002
  15. ^ Cramer, Robert. Diploma Mills: Federal Employees Have Obtained Degrees from Diploma Mills and Other Unaccredited Schools, Some at Government Expense Testimony before the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, May 11, 2004, p. 7.
  16. ^ Some small town officers may be 'gypsy cops' by Byron Harris, WFAA-TV (Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas), 03:34 PM CST on Thursday, January 18, 2007
  17. ^ a b Questionable credentials surround Hutto ISD superintendent by Gina Swanson, News 8 Austin, 10/14/2006 2:16 PM
  18. ^ Rozenberg, Joshua (July 29, 2006). "Hypnotist McKenna wins 'bogus degree' libel case". The Daily Telegraph (London). http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1525101/Hypnotist-McKenna-wins-bogus-degree-libel-case.html. Retrieved May 5, 2010. 
  19. ^ Minutes of the Georgia Professional Standards Commission February 14, 2008, pp. 10-11.
  20. ^ Witkowski, Rachel. Jeffrey Camarda, Well-Known Financial Planner, has Questions Concerning his Ph.D. Jacksonville Business Journal, May 25, 2009.
  21. ^ La Salle University
  22. ^ CFA Institute Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  23. ^ Witkowski, Rachel. Jeffrey Camarda, Well-Known Financial Planner, has Questions Concerning his Ph.D. Jacksonville Business Journal, May 25, 2009.
  24. ^ April 2006 Testimonials BroadBased Marketing & Public Relations, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  25. ^ June 2006 Testimonials BroadBased Marketing & Public Relations, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  26. ^ Archives gateway to www.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  27. ^ Archives gateway to Camarda's bio on wwww.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  28. ^ Archives gateway to Camarda's thesis on wwww.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  29. ^ Archives gateway to Camarda's thesis on www.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  30. ^ Archives gateway to Camarda's chronology on www.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  31. ^ Archives gateway to Camarda's thesis on www.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  32. ^ False Claim of a Ph.D. Florida Statues, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  33. ^ Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act Florida Statues, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  34. ^ U.S. Code Section 15 Investment Advisors Act of 1940, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  35. ^ Archives gateway to Camarda's book discussion on www.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  36. ^ Charles Givens Wikipedia, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  37. ^ Archives gateway to Camarda's Cigar Book manuscript on www.drcamarda.com from February 3, 2009 http://drcamarda.com, Retrieved from archives on June 4, 2011.
  38. ^ Chronicle of Higher Education, cited in Geary, Bob. State GOP Vice-Chair Refuses to Answer Allegations about his Ph.D. Independent Weekly, June 24, 2009.
  39. ^ Financial Planners Fight Takes Nasty Turn Courthouse News Service, February 10, 2009.
  40. ^ Nov/Dec 2010 issue of the CFA Magazine, purchased or obtained through subscription CFA Magazine, Nov/Dec 2010, Vol. 21, No. 6: p. 24.
  41. ^ Geary, Bob. State GOP Vice-Chair Refuses to Answer Allegations about his Ph.D. Independent Weekly, June 24, 2009.
  42. ^ Tim Johnson Consulting Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  43. ^ Ryan J. Stanton, Questions surround Republican state House candidate Mark Ouimet's academic credentials, AnnArbor.com website, October 28, 2010
  44. ^ Ryan J. Stanton, Republican Mark Ouimet wins in race for Michigan's 52nd District House seat, AnnArbor.com website, November 3, 2010
  45. ^ Tony Izzo Chronology www.chugachconsumers.org, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  46. ^ Tony Izzo Transcript www.chugachconsumers.org, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  47. ^ Renee Newman Resume www.reneenewman.net, Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  48. ^ Renee Newman Transcript www.reneenewman.net, Retrieved June 4, 2011.

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