The US Homeland Security agency has created bogus ‘schools’ in sting operations designed to snare foreign students who allegedly flout US immigration laws to illegally work and extend their US stays. The government says it’s fighting criminal organizations that exploit US travel, trade, financial and immigration laws. But some Chinese students say they’re the unwitting victims of discriminatory federal practices aimed at foreign students who study at American universities.
On the early morning of April 5th, two FBI agents walked into Zhao Yu’s house and arrested her.
Like a lot of Chinese students, Zhao
Yu came to the US for further studies after attaining her undergraduate degree
in China. In 2014, she landed a job in a financial company after graduating from
Illinois Institute of Technology. She didn’t get a H-1B visa until this year,
which was the first step towards a longer stay in the US. But her hopes were
soon dashed.
The H-1B visa is also known as a Specialty Occupations/Temporary Worker Visa, which is issued to foreign workers in specialty occupations. It is a non-immigrant visa. The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) usually assigns the visas in the order that the applications were made. If the applications outnumber the quota by a large margin, USCIS will run a lottery to assign visas.
Another foreign woman was arrested
along with Zhao. She worked at Capital One Financial Corp. as a software
engineer, and was waiting for the H-1B visa to turn into a full-time employee.
Why were they arrested? It was due
to their common status as foreign students at an institution called the
University of Northern New Jersey (UNNJ). UNNJ was a fake school created
by Homeland Security Investigation (HSI), the investigative arm of the
Department of Homeland Security. HSI operates under the US Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency. Its ostensible purpose is to combat criminal
organizations that illegally exploit US travel, trade, financial and immigration
systems.
What happened to the two women
underscores a dilemma facing many foreign students who study in the US.
According to the US State Department, 1 million international students were
studying at American universities during the 2014-2015 academic year. This
represented a 10% increase from the prior year. Of these students, 45% came
from China and India. The latest statistics also show that the grant ratio of
H-1B for masters degree candidate students fell from 70% to 60%, while the
percentage for undergraduate students fell to 30% or lower.
Visa
applicant rat maze
Zhao had been in the US under Optional Practical Training (OPT). OPT is a work permission given to
international students with a student F-1 visa, which allows the student to do
a job that’s related to his/her major for 1 year. There is another designation
called Curricular Practical Training (CPT) that allows
international students with a F-1 status to do an internship related to his or
her major. It requires the approval of the teaching staff and the university’s
international student office, and it cannot exceed 20 working hours each week.
For those who fail to secure H-1B visas, the
easiest way to stay in the US is to go back to school and use CPT to extend
their legal time in the US while waiting for the next round of the H-1B
lottery.
One year after graduation, Zhao’s OPT expired,
and she failed to receive an H-1B visa. In order to stay in the US, she
enrolled in UNNJ under CPT. But she has never attended any classes after
enrollment.
Zhao said her understanding was that
CPT required her to enroll in a course with credits, but that not attending
classes under this arrangement was not weird. She had been working since her
enrollment. Nothing happened, so she had no suspicions or doubts.
After her arrest, Zhao received a
subpoena from the government and had to stop working. She cried that the
government had ruined her future as a foreign student in the US.
Bogus
school games
UNNJ was a fake school founded by
the Homeland Security Investigations under ICE in September, 2013.
FBI agents played administration
staff of the school and trapped 21 education agents, who were charged with
helping foreigners receive visas through fraudulent activities. It was a total
trolling operation.
More than 1,000 international
students enrolled at the school were snared in the investigation. Most were
from China and India. US officials informed the students that they were under
investigation and their student visas would be nullified. They were told they
might be deported but wouldn’t be charged.
UNNJ had all the trappings of a legitimate
school. Its Web address ends with edu. Its Facebook page
updates the status of the school and carries photos of the school buildings. It
is authenticated by an NGO called the Accrediting Commission of
Career Schools and Colleges (ACCSC). It can also be found
on the Study in the States page on the website of the US Department of Homeland
Security.
Students say such information showed
that the school legally existed, and that whether they offered classes should
not be a test of its authenticity.
Luo Di wanted to study digital
marketing after working for one year in the states. She said that UNNJ’s
tuition was much lower than other schools. This is why she chose to enroll in
UNNJ.
A friend introduced an education
agency called Kaisi to Luo. The person who contacted Luo assured her that UNNJ
had distance education, and that there was a campus located near Luo’s
residence. But these promises failed to materialize.
Luo tried to contact the school
several times, but was never put through to anyone. She could only stay put. In
the meantime, she occasionally made some art pieces to sell to make ends meet.
Luo
finally found out that the school was fake when the news was announced
publicly. She called the Kaisi education agency, figuring that the agency was
conned too. Later, she got a phone call from ICE asking her to come by and have
a talk at their office.
ICE Age
dragnet
When questioned about her case, Luo
felt that ICE agents knew nothing about immigration issues. They even asked her
what CPT and OPT were. She said their low working efficiency was appalling. The
agents spent hours to copying her materials, collecting her fingerprints, and
printing out her subpoena. One agent even said that with a subpoena she could
still go back to China, or find another school in the US where she could study,
which was the exact opposite to what an immigration lawyer told Luo.
After her processing, Luo never
heard from ICE again. She joined a WeChat group with 200 victims of UNNJ. Some
members of this group were able to go on with their lives, others were arrested
and jailed.
Qiu Huiyue, a member of the New York
branch of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) told Initium that
the way US law enforcement deals with foreign students varies by region. ICE
has branches in many highly-populated states. Each state unit has a different
approach.
Luo wonders where the tuition money
paid out by the students went. Qiu believes that the tuition was partly given
to the education agencies as commissions. In usual practice, the government
forces these agencies to return the money. The rest of the tuition money
collected from students under the sting operation is in the university’s bank
account, which is now controlled by ICE. Qiu says the US government should be
pressed to address the issue, otherwise the students’ money might be
appropriated.
Li Fan, another student, told
Initium that education agencies serve as outsourced admission offices. New
schools or schools that can’t attract good students tend to establish such
relationships with education agencies.
Since the UNNJ incident, CPT
services are no longer listed in the ads made by these education agencies.
The education agencies involved in the UNNJ
caper have plenty to worry about. Zong Jie, an immigration
policy researcher told Initium that the affected UNNJ students may take their
case to court. But until the matter is legally resolved, they cannot work. This
subjects them to great economic hardship.
Lawyer Huang Ziqian suggested that
the students form a UNNJ victims’ organization to attract public attention and
force the US government to properly deal with the issue.
(All student names are pseudonyms)
This
article was originally published on June 8, 2016 by The
Initium Media, a Hong Kong-based digital media company. Asia Times has
translated it with permission with editing for brevity and clarity.
Translated by Jiawen Guo for Asia Times
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