Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
DOJ: Government grants induced Christians to commit fraud
DOJ: Government grants induced Christians to commit fraud
Jan 30, 2026 6:19 PM

Even the federal government now admits that its federal financial aid policy is so immoral it can turn theology students into criminals. The Justice Department accuses a Christian theological institute of creating phantom students in order to cash in on federal college funding.

According to prosecutors, the North Carolina-based Apex School of Theology set up a satellite in Georgia to serve students in Georgia, Alabama, and Florida. There’s just one problem: There were no students.

The DOJ says that Apex’s Georgia/Alabama Learning Center recruited people to pose as students and submit fraudulent federal financial aid applications for Pell grants and other federal aid. The center would then pocket part of the funding and give the individual posing as a student a cut of the proceeds. To maintain the charade, Apex employees would “submit falsified homework, tests, and other course work as if they were the student, to deceive” the Department of Education “and falsely show the student in good standing and eligible for additional federal financial aid.”

According to a federal indictment, one Apex recruiter “told individuals that they could obtain ‘free’ money without doing any schoolwork and without attending any classes.” She just needed their Social Security numbers and personal information. Then, she allegedly created “fictitious ‘spiritual autobiographies’ to reflect that student’s ‘spiritual journey’ which were an integral part of the application.” Sometimes, Apex falsified GEDs.

Apex would then receive federal aid equal to $11,796 per enrollee and give each “student” approximately $3,300 of the take. Meanwhile, Apex employees would write pseudonymous research papers on the finer points of Christian ethics to keep the ing.

This is, of course, the federal government’s version of the now-shuttered school’s story, and everyone is presumed innocent until proven guilty. If true, the story shows how federal funding can tempt students of God’s Word to violate at least two of the Ten Commandments. It is yet another example of how big government is a near occasion of sin.

But the tale of government-induced fraud and frailty only probes one level of this story. One is tempted to believe the DOJ pounced on this alleged fraud for one simple reason: The government petition.

In many ways, the alleged Apex scandal is more humane than the way colleges and universities game the labyrinth of federal financial aid programs. Unlike Apex’s purported fraud, colleges and universities victimize very real students.

Colleges receive government aid for most students enrolled in their institutions. Therefore, universities have a financial incentive to accept as many students as possible, regardless of their ability plete college-level coursework. In a more balanced world, administrators would only accept students capable of doing the work, while high school guidance counselors would encourage other students to investigate apprenticeships and trade schools.

The students end up bearing a heavy burden for this arrangement. Since the federal government beganofferingsubsidized loans to all students in 1978, the cost of college tuition has skyrocketed by1,375% (or238%since 1980 in inflation-adjusted dollars). Researchers have found that every dollar in federal financial aid raises college tuition as much as dollar-for-dollar.

These incentives would only be stronger if the government established “free” college tuition. As it is, tuition and fees accounted for only 21% of public university revenue in 2013. The student loan crisis is so severe that we dedicated the Spring 2019 issue of Religion & Liberty to the topic.

Meanwhile, the universities’ silent partner is the federal government. Since a piece of Obamacare legislation – the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 – virtually nationalized the student loan market, the federal government nowholds$1.2 trillion of the $1.5 trillion in student loan debt. Those loans constitute almost 60% of all assets held by a government that is more than $27 trillion in debt. That means the federal government has a financial incentive for the unsustainable status quo to continue. (That value is threatened, however, as 1,400 studentsdefaulton their student loans every day.)

The federal government incentivizes colleges and universities to admit as many students as possible in order to maximize their share of federal financial aid and loans. Federal aid makes it more palatable for colleges to raise tuition. Two million students a year drop out of college, often deeply indebted to the federal government, whose intervention in the college market drove up prices in the first place.

Federal financial aid and the student loan crisis is a spiral of iniquity the government can, and must, end. Until then, American taxpayers, indebted graduates, and embittered dropouts unable to pay back their federal student loans will continue to pay the price.

As the alleged Apex scandal shows, federal financial aid’s perverse incentives are enough to turn good people bad.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Report: Dire situation for Syrian Christians
A roundup at Notes on Arab Orthodoxy paints a grim picture for Christians — and clashing Islamic sects — in Syria. It’s a gut-wrenching account of kidnappings, torture and beheadings. One report begins with this line: “Over 40 young men (including a couple of doctors) from the Wadi area, were killed by the bearded men who are eager to give us democracy.” The article also links to a report in Agenzia Fides, which interviewed a Greek-Catholic bishop: The picture for...
Wong and Rae on How and When to Fire Someone
Donald Trump's tagline: "You're fired."Last week I raised the question of whether being a Christian businessperson means you do some things differently, and particularly whether some of these things that are done differently have to do with terminating an employee. Here’s a snip of what Kenman Wong and Scott Rae say in their recent book, Business for the Common Good: Although panies may take on certain employees as an act of benevolence, it is not the norm. Employees are bound...
30 Years Ago Today: Reagan’s Westminster Address
The Washington Post’s editorial page reminds us that today is the 30th anniversary of Ronald Reagan’s address at Westminster Hall, London. The speech, famous for its “ash heap of history line,” was Reagan’s challenge to the Soviet Union’s very legitimacy and pointed to its hollow core. Reagan’s great strength was not just America’s military posture against the Soviets, but that he truly made the Cold War a battle of moral ideas. It was a decisive pivot away from America’s policy...
Samuel Gregg: Unions and the Path to Irrelevancy
On National Review Online, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg demolishes the left’s knee-jerk explanation for labor union decline, which blames “the machinations of conservative intellectuals, free-market-inclined governments, and businesses who, over time, have successfully worked to diminish organized labor, thereby crushing the proverbial ‘little guy.'” Gregg writes: “The truth, however, is rather plex. One factor at work is economic globalization. Businesses fed up with unions who think that their industry should be immune petition are now in a position to...
DCI John Luther: Secular Authority
John Luther is pierced for Jenny's transgressions.An essay of mine on the wonderful and difficult BBC series “Luther” is up over at the Comment magazine website, “Get Your Hands Dirty: The Vocational Theology of Luther.” In this piece I reflect on DCI John Luther’s “overriding need to protect other people from injustice and harm, and even sometimes the consequences of their own sin and guilt,” and how that fits in with the Christian (and particularly Lutheran) doctrine of vocation. Indeed,...
How Junk Bonds Killed the Three Martini Lunch
A recent editorial in the New York Times claims that during the 1980s leveraged buyouts “contributed significantly to the growth of the e gap, moving wealth from the middle class to the top end.” First Things editor R.R. Reno explains why the real story is plicated, more interesting, and explains much more than e inequality: The upper middle class world responded to the leveraged buyout revolution by upping mitments to education and economically oriented self-discipline. The old white-collar social contract...
Review: Can One Kill ‘For Greater Glory’?
Immediately after watching For Greater Glory, I found myself struggling to appreciate the myriad good intentions, talents and the $40 million that went into making it. Unlike the Cristeros who fought against the Mexican government, however, my efforts ultimately were unsuccessful. The film opened on a relatively limited 757 screens this past weekend, grossing $1.8 million and earning the No. 10 position of all films currently in theatrical release. Additionally, the film reportedly has been doing boffo at the Mexican...
The Dangers of Democratic Tyranny
In the context mentary on protests like those in Quebec and the Occupy movement more broadly, it’s worth reflecting on the dangers of democratic tyranny. The “people” can be tyrannical just as an individual sovereign or an oligarchy might. That’s why Aristotle considered democracy a defective form of government, because it too easily enshrines the will of the majority into an insuperable law. As Lord Acton put it, “It is bad to be oppressed by a minority, but it is...
Samuel Gregg: A Necessary Symbiosis
Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg reviews America’s Spiritual Capital by Nicholas Capaldi and T. R. Malloch (St Augustine’s Press, 2012) for The University Bookman. … Capaldi and Malloch are—refreshingly—unabashed American exceptionalists. One of this book’s strengths is the way that it brings to light a critical element of that exceptionalism through the medium of spiritual capital. Part of the American experiment is mitment to modernity—but a modernity several times removed from that pioneered by the likes of the French revolutionaries,...
Samuel Gregg: Why Austerity Isn’t Enough
Writing on The American Spectator website, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg looks at the strange notion of European fiscal “austerity” even as more old continent economies veer toward the abyss. Is America far behind? Needless to say, Greece is Europe’s poster child for reform-failure. Throughout 2011, the Greek parliament passed reforms that diminished regulations that applied to many professions in the economy’s service sector. But as two Wall Street Journal journalists demonstrated one year later, “despite the change in the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved