Top Banner
Protecting Your Campus and Students
30

Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance Kim.

Dec 16, 2015

Download

Documents

Daniel White
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Protecting Your Campus and Students

Page 2: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Panel Jenifer RobertsDirector of Student Financial PlanningNew England College of Business and Finance

Kim TibbettsAssociate Director of Financial AidWentworth Institute of Technology

Dora EspitiaSenior Assistant Director of Financial AidWentworth Institute of Technology

Andy TsuiSupervisory Special AgentIRS Criminal Investigation - Boston Field Office

Mark DeckettSpecial AgentDepartment of Education - Office of Inspector General

Page 3: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Overview of the Types of Fraud Identity Theft

Tax Fraud

Financial Aid Fraud

Check Chasers

Page 4: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Segment 1: Identity Theft and Tax Fraud Types of Identity Theft

Financial/Credit Card Insurance Medical Criminal Driver’s LicenseSocial SecurityChild ID Theft

Page 5: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Segment 1: Identity Theft and Tax Fraud What is Tax Refund Identity Theft?

Occurs when someone uses your personal information without your permission to commit tax fraud (Federal Income Taxes).

ID Theft with Puerto Rican IdentitiesID Theft with Prisoner SchemesID Theft with Retires/ElderlyID Theft with Students

Violation of Title 18 U.S.C. § 1028

Page 6: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Why is it Important to You?2011 – IRS Identified 2.2 Million fraudulently filed tax returns. 940,000 of them claiming $6.5 Billion involved identity theft. Who are the victims?

Institutions of Higher Education○ Internal data theft from employees/contractors ○ External data theft from hacking, email fishing, etc…

Students ○ They may not find out for years if they do not file tax

returns.○ Other Id Theft crimes may have occurred (credit

cards, loans, etc…)

Page 7: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

How can Students and Institutions Protect Themselves? Students

Advise students to obtain tax transcripts from IRS even when they are not required to file a tax return

Educate students on the problem of ID theft with tax fraud and other types of fraud

Focus on protecting personal information (shred documents, don’t give out info in suspect situations, don’t download or open suspect electronic files, etc…)

IRS ID Theft http://www.irs.gov/uac/Taxpayer-Guide-to-Identity-Theft FTC http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/microsites/idtheft2012/

Page 8: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

How can Students and Institutions Protect Themselves? Institutions

Promote campus-wide information campaign○ Incorporate information into student orientations○ Provide after hours seminars on ID theft

Create, disseminate and enforce a policy on protecting Personally Identifiable Information (PII)

Provide a readymade packet of resources for victims of ID theft

Page 9: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Alabama Woman Sentenced for Stealing Identities of Student Loan Borrowers and Filing False Tax Returns

12/21/ 2011 Montgomery, Ala.,Janika F Bates, of Millbrook, Ala., was sentenced to 94 months in prison and ordered to pay $246,064 in restitution to HSBC Taxpayer Financial Services and $30,211 in restitution to the IRS.

Bates was convicted by a trial jury in September 2011 of identity theft, wire fraud, aggravated identity theft and conspiracy to make false claims for tax refunds. According to evidence introduced at trial, Bates obtained the names and Social Security numbers of student loan borrowers from the databases at her former employer and conspired to use the stolen identifying information to file false tax returns.

Several victims testified that they did not consent to the use of their names and Social Security numbers on tax returns and they testified that they did not receive any money from refunds generated from the false documents filed with the IRS. Evidence also revealed that Bates and her co-conspirator, Keshia Brayboy, fraudulently obtained refund anticipation loans from a bank predicated on the fraudulently filed tax returns. Brayboy pleaded guilty in 2009 to filing a false tax return and served two years in federal prison.

Page 10: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

South Florida Man Sentenced for Identity Theft Related Charges

09/04/2012 Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Loverson Gelmine was sentenced to 40 months in prison and three years of supervised release for possession of fifteen or more unauthorized access devices and aggravated identity theft.  

According to the factual proffer, Gelmine admitted that he had been involved in stealing identity information from a medical center.  Gelmine admitted that he took pictures of patient files with his phone and then sold the identity information.  He estimated that he sold approximately fifty identities in each of two prior transactions.  

A warrant for the search of Gelmine’s phone revealed approximately 1,100 photographs of patient records containing the personal identity information of patients.

Page 11: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Former Customer Service Representative Sentenced for Stealing Customers’ Identifying Information to File False Income Tax Returns 07/23/2012 Fort Worth, Texas

Youlanda Rochelle Wright was sentenced to 78 months in prison and ordered to pay $166,384 in restitution. Wright pleaded guilty in December 2011 to one count of false claims and one count of identity theft.

According to court documents, Wright worked as a corporate Customer Service Representative in a call center. In that role, she often received customers’ personal identifying information, including social security numbers. Wright used that information to file U.S. income tax returns in customer’s names to claim refunds.

Page 12: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Segment 2: Financial Aid Fraud Who may be targeted

Schools with online programsInstitutions driven by enrollment numbers

ImplicationsCDRsAudit Reviews

Page 13: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Segment 2: Financial Aid Fraud Identifying patterns and quality assurance

# of phone calls from the same area code close to start date

Cross reference email addresses Become knowledgeable about geographic areas

from where fraud is originatingUtilize Google Maps to research address (i.e.,

homes may no longer exist due to hurricanes, tornados or other natural disasters

Engage with students on the phone

Page 14: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Segment 2: Financial Aid Fraud Implementation of interdepartmental

policies to combat fraudAdmissions should request proof of identityOther offices should pay attention to small

details○ Registrar’s withdrawals○ FA verification documents○ Bursar refunds

Educate the staff how to deal with individuals who threaten to call the Department of Education

Page 15: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Segment 3: Check Chasers What are ‘Check Chasers’ Identifying potential fraud

Pulling NSLDS records on all incoming students○ Review previous school history regarding Pell and

loans○ Do they have open loan periods or potential

overlapping loan periods

Do they have transfer credits from several other schools

Student is hesitant to provide more informationStudent knows your refund policy in and out

Page 16: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Segment 3: Check Chasers

Implementation of interdepartmental policies ○ SAP policy will flush them out○ Schools can adjust COAs

Page 17: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

…to prevent and detect fraud, waste and abuse and improve the economy, efficiency and effectiveness of Education Department programs and operations.

Inspector General Act of 1978

17

Page 18: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Statutory and Regulatory Access to Records Under the Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended, OIG can access

any records available to the Department of Education in order to perform audits, investigations and inspections of Department programs and operations.

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) requires schools receiving funding from the Department of Education to protect the privacy of student education records. In many cases consent must be received from a parent or student before records can be disclosed.

FERPA provides that consent is not required in order to disclose student records to the Office of Inspector General. The regulations provide that representatives of the Secretary, which include OIG, may have access without prior consent in connection with an audit, evaluation, or enforcement of legal requirements related to the Department’s programs.

FERPA regulations can be found at 34 C.F.R. Part 99, http://www2.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/fpco/index.html

18

Page 19: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Criminal Penalties

Education Fraud

Title 20 U.S.C. § 1097 (a) Any person who knowingly and willfully embezzles, misapplies, steals,

obtains by fraud, false statement, or forgery, or fails to refund any funds, assets, or property provided or insured under this subchapter and part C of subchapter I of chapter 34 of Title 42, or attempts to embezzle,….

Persons convicted of a felony shall be fined not more than $20,000 or imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or both.

Attempt is defined as, “an undertaking to do an act that entails more than mere preparation but does not result in the successful completion of the act.”

19

Page 20: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

20

Evugeni Tetioukhine aka Finnoghal Maceoghan Convicted in Rhode Island on charges of using a false

social security number, student loan fraud, wire fraud, immigration fraud and false statements.

Tetioukhine was a Russian national that was living in Rhode Island 1990’s. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, he fraudulently assumed the identity of Finnogal Maceoghan, a U. S. Citizen who was living in Ireland. Using the stolen identity he obtain federal student aid, a home mortgage and U.S. Passport. The victim Maceoghan discovered that his identity had been stolen while using Facebook. After a jury trial, Tetioukhine was sentenced to four years in prison and deportation.

Identity Theft Fraud SchemesIdentity Theft Fraud Schemes

Page 21: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Example of OIG InvestigationDistance Education Fraud

These fraud rings generally target institutions with low tuition in the context of distance education programs and involve a ringleader who:

• Obtains identifying information from “straw” students by promising financial gain.

 • Completes multiple financial aid applications using the information collected.

 • Applies for admission under the institution's open admissions program.

 • Participates minimally in the amount of on-line interaction to secure disbursements.

 

Once the institution draws down Federal student aid funds, deducts the institutional charges assessed the straw student, and disburses the credit balances to the straw student by check or debit card.

Straw students then give a portion of the proceeds to the ringleaders while keeping the remaining portion.

21

Page 22: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Examples of Title IV Fraud Schemes

Related to Schools

Ghost students Leasing of eligibility Default rate fraud 90/10 Rule manipulation scheme Financial statement falsification Falsified last date of attendance Obstruction of a federal audit orprogram review. Fraud/Theft by School Employees

22

FAFSA fraud- enrollment Falsification of GEDs/HS Diplomas Falsification of attendance and

Satisfactory Academic Progress Falsification of grades Failure to make refunds Loan theft/

forgeries

Page 23: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

23

Page 24: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

How You Can Help

Ensure that staff receive necessary Title IV training. Review documents thoroughly. Question documents/Verify authenticity. Request additional information from the students or

parents. Compare information on different documents. Contact the OIG if you suspect fraud. Cooperate with the OIG in connection with an audit or

investigation.

24

Page 25: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

34 CFR § 668.16 Standards of Administrative Capability

The Secretary considers an institution to have administrative capability if the institution:

(f) Develops and applies an adequate system to identify and resolve discrepancies in the information that the institution receives from different sources with respect to a student’s application for financial aid under Title IV.

(g) Refers to the Office of Inspector General…any credible information indicating that an applicant for Title IV, HEA program assistance may have engaged in fraud or other criminal misconduct in connection with his or her application.

Schools must also refer to the OIG any third-party servicer who may have engaged in fraud, breach of fiduciary responsibility, or other illegal conduct involving the FSA Programs.

Page 26: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Summary Join forces with other departments Educate families and students Develop, disseminate and enforce PII

policies Utilize available tools

NSLDSStaffStudent Budgets

Report any suspected fraud

Page 27: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Regulations that Support Your Efforts to Prevent Fraud

Dear Colleague Letter GEN 11-17 (October 20, 2011)

Institutions are required to have processes to verify identity that are subject to review by the institution’s accreditor (34 CFR 602.17(g))

Page 28: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Other Resources

Dear Colleague Letter GEN 12-15 (August 14, 2012)

Discharge of loans which were fraudulently certified

Page 29: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Inspector General’s Hotline

1-800-MIS-USED

http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/oig/hotline.html

Page 30: Protecting Your Campus and Students. Panel  Jenifer Roberts Director of Student Financial Planning New England College of Business and Finance  Kim.

Questions?