Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
DOJ: Government grants induced Christians to commit fraud
DOJ: Government grants induced Christians to commit fraud
Dec 7, 2025 9:52 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
Anti-GMO Activists: ‘Heartless, Callous and Cruel’
Former Indiana Governor and current Purdue University President Mitch DanielsIf it seems your writer is obsessing over genetically modified organisms in this space, it’s only because the progressive side of the equation won’t let it go. Team Anti-GMO includes the radicalized religious shareholder activists of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility and As You Sow. Whether it’s misrepresenting the science or ignoring pletely, these groups celebrate every GMO labeling initiative and perform handstands every time a mits to producing organic...
When the American Colonists Experimented with Socialism
Do you remember the story about colonial Americans experimenting with socialism? Probably not. It’s a tale that rarely finds its way into the textbooks of high school and college students. Indeed, I had been out of school nearly 20 years when I first heard about it. If your not familiar with this part of American history, this short video by Larry Schweikart will fill you in on explains what happened when the early settlers who arrived at Plymouth and Jamestown...
Work Is Not About You: How Theology Can Save Us from Trade Protectionism
It’s e rather predictable to hear progressives promote protectionist rhetoric on trade and globalization. What’s surprising is when it spills from the lips of the leading Republican candidate. Donald Trump has made opposition to free trade a hallmark of his campaign, a holethat petitors have been slow to exploit. Inthemost recent CNN debate, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, and John Kasich eachechoed their own agreement in varying degrees, voicing slight critiques ontariffs but mostlyaffirmingTrump’s ambiguous platitudesabout trade that is“free but fair.”...
The FAQs: Religious Liberty and the Little Sisters of the Poor
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments todayin a casefrom religious nonprofit groups challenging thefederal government’s contraceptive/abortifacient mandate. Here is what you should knowabout that case. What is this case, and what’s it about? The case the Supreme Court will hear, Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged v. bines seven challenges to the Health and Human Services’ (HHS) contraceptive/abortifacient mandate. To fulfill the requirements of the Affordable Healthcare Act (aka ObamaCare) the federal government passed a regulation...
Rev. Sirico: When politicians want your money
In the Detroit News, Rev. Robert A. Sirico, co-founder and president of the Acton Institute, offers mentary on the two-year battle with the city of Grand Rapids over the institute’s exempt status under state property tax law (see the March 15 Acton news release, “Acton Institute Prevails in Property Tax Dispute with City of Grand Rapids” for background). In his opinion piece, Rev. Sirico writes: We were assured earlier from then-City Attorney Catherine Mish that it all wasn’t political, but...
Not a nanoparticle of science in this shareholder resolution
Sometimes clearer heads prevail, but at considerable costs to individual stock portfolios and corporations who have to mount a defense against uninformed, nuisance shareholder resolutions. Last week the Securities and Exchange Commission slowed the progressive roll of religious activist group As You Sow by denying an AYS proxy resolution seeking a detailed nanoparticle risk assessment by Mondelēz International Foodservice. Mondelēz successfully convinced the SEC that its use of food whitener titanium dioxide (TiO2) in its Dentyne Ice chewing gum does...
Video & Audio: Todd Huizinga On The New Totalitarian Temptation
Acton’s Director of International Outreach Todd Huizinga has been quite busy since therelease of his bookThe New Totalitarian Temptation: Global Governance and the Crisis of Democracy in Europe.Last week Thursday, he continued to talk about this topic in an Acton Lecture Series address that we’re pleased to share with you today on the PowerBlog. Additionally, we’ve posted audio of Todd’s hour-long appearance last night on WBZ Boston’s “Nightside” show with host Dan Rea after the jump. ...
Little Sisters of the Poor to the Obama Administration: Don’t Force Us to Violate Our Conscience
The Little Sisters of the Poor,an international congregation of Catholic women religious who serve the elderly poor in over 30 countries around the world, have been given a difficult choice: violate your conscience or pay $70 million a year in fines. For the past few years the Obama administration has been attempting to force the Little Sisters — and other nonprofit religious organizations — to help provide their employees with free access to abortion-inducing drugs, sterilizations, and contraceptives. But on...
Rev. Sirico to appear on America’s News HQ on Easter Sunday
On Sunday, March 27, Acton’s President and Co-founder, Rev. Robert Sirico will join Shannon Bream and Leland Vittert on Fox News’ America’s News HQ. He will offer an Easter reflection ment on any significant breaking news. You can catch him between 1 and 2PM Eastern. America’s News HQ on Fox News Channel reports the latest national and world news. It reports expert insight on health, politics and military matters. ...
The EU: Global Judicial Despotism and the International Criminal Court
“Americans’ instinctively refuse to recognize as legitimate any international organization, law or treaty that claims any authority over Americans above the U.S. Constitution,” says Todd Huizinga in this week’s Acton Commentary, “particularly if that organization, law or treaty contradicts the Constitution or violates Americans’ constitutional rights.” In the American system, it is because sovereignty rests in the people that the U.S. government does not have a right to transfer sovereignty to any other organization, government or group of governments. But...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved