Warren Blasts Dept of Ed. for 'Hounding' Students Defrauded by For-Profit School

October 2, 2020 Off By HotelSalesCareers

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is taking a stand for the tens of thousands of students who, first, were defrauded by the now-defunct, for-profit Corinthian College system and now, according to an investigation by her own staff, are being “hounded” by the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) to pay off those debts.

In a searing letter (pdf) to DOE secretary John King on Thursday, Warren said that the department’s student loan bank is pushing nearly 80,000 former Corinthian College students into some form of debt collection, despite assurances that they would be eligible for loan discharges.

“It is unconscionable that instead of helping these borrowers, vast numbers of Corinthian victims are currently being hounded by the Department’s debt collectors,” she wrote, “many having their credit slammed, their tax refunds seized, their Social Security and Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) payments reduced, or their wages garnished—all to pay fraudulent debts that, under federal law and the Department’s own policies, are likely eligible for discharge that thus, invalid.”

The for-profit education system—which included Everest Institute, Everest College, WyoTech and Heald colleges—was forced to shut down last year after the DOE announced it would fine the institution $30 million for duping students into signing up for loans to pay for an essentially worthless degree. 

A number of former Corinthian students had launched a student debt strike against the fraudulent scheme, in particular, and the “untenable system of debt-financed higher education,” more broadly.

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT