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Heard around the West

Paper busts buyers of bogus degrees

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Betsy Marston | Aug 04, 2008 04:50 PM

The Spokesman-Review has begun outing people who bought bogus degrees from a diploma mill based in Spokane, Wash. The Justice Department, meanwhile, refuses to release the list of almost 10,000 buyers to the public. A source familiar with the list says, “There are people in high places with these degrees, and only one of them has been charged with a crime.”

The paper has done a preliminary analysis of degree buyers, and so far 135 have ties to the military, 39 work for educational institutions, and 17 workfor the federal government. Some examples of higher-ups in government and industry making over their resumes: William R. Church, a senior military advisor who works in the White House, bought a phony master’s degree in business administration. Duwayne Huss, an employee of Nuclear Management Co., which runs two nuclear plants in Minnesota, bought his degree in nuclear engineering. NASA employee Timothy Francis Gorman bought a fake degree in electrical engineering, and over at the U.S. Department of Health, oncology expert Frank S. Govern bought a doctorate in health care administration. 

Eight people who operated the diploma mill have been indicted and convicted of federal crimes, and the ring leader, Dixie Ellen Randock, a 58-year-old high school dropout, was sentenced to three years in prison. Compared to the real thing that takes years of hard work and can cost well over $100,000,the bogus degrees were delivered fast and cheap. Bonita E. Broyles, author of books about prescription dosages and nursing care, bought her doctorate in education for just $2,225; Brett C. Jarmin, who worked as a police chief in Edgemont, S.D., bought his bachelor of science degree in criminology for $1, 041. There was also a school district superintendent who bought a fake doctorate in Columbus, Ohio, and a Saudi Arabian who bought several degrees in gynecology and obstetrics. The Saudi Arabian is Remah Moustafa Ahmed Kamel, 42, and he may be practicing medicine in his home country. One buyer apparently became addicted to ersatz higher education, buying the most gold-edged certificates so far: Anthony McGugan of Barnegat, N.J., spent $24, 088 on 16 different degrees that range from Christian education to addiction and youth counseling.

Here’s a tip for employers: If a job applicant presents a resume boasting adegree from “A+ Technical Institute” or a bachelor of science from “Berkeley Professional University,” you might want to give the slacker a pass and call Homeland Security. The federal agency is now in charge of investigating the buyers of fake degrees.

Bogus Degrees
Richard Cardella
Richard Cardella
Aug 08, 2008 03:39 PM
It doesn't surprise me that there haven't been more arrests in this scam. People in high places will just evoke "Executive Privilege", and refuse to be indicted!
Bogus Degrees
J D
J D
Aug 22, 2008 11:20 AM
And here I thought the only diploma mill in the Spokane area was Eastern Washington. (A fun nudge from a U of MT alum).
Bogus Degrees
Bernadine
Bernadine
Oct 02, 2008 09:51 AM
This is in regards to DuWayne Huss, a nuclear engineer. I believe it is prudent for the world to know about a lack of poor judgment affecting decisions possibly associated with public safety at the Kewaunee Nuclear Power Plant, Kewaunee, WI. Two months ago, various online blogs, picked up by the Journal Sentinel Online, Milwaukee, WI, reported a story regarding the purchasing of degrees from a diploma mill in Spokane, WA. There was much speculation and distortion within these blogs and within the subsequent articles. The complete information was never reported factually and thus resulted in public outcry and negative press for the corporation and industry associated with the story, not to mention the individual involved. It is my belief that solely because of this poor publicity, the corporation's hand was forced into termination of employment of a 19-year veteran in the industry (19 years in that very plant), with a safe operating history; a man that, while showing severe naivet'e in trying to get something for just a bit more than nothing, never put the public's safety at risk. But, what was he trying to get for only a bit more than nothing? The degrees were not used to deceive his employers to get a job or keep his position. The nuclear industry has its own intensive testing for those purposes. Instead, the "degrees" were a way for him to get recognition of the expertise he has gained after 19 years in the industry in addition to the six years spent serving our country's Navy in the same field of study. 25 years in nuclear power. 25 years of safe ooperation. 25 years of experience completely dismissed by the press, the bloggers, the corporation. Simply put, the purchased "degrees" did not in any way affect whether this man was qualified to do his job, nor did it affect the way he performed on the job. Yet, due to prosecution by the media and bloggers, he will never be in that industry again. The real criminals only received 3 years this individual is serving a life sentence.

On the other hand of this corporation that threw away such experience and performance, however, is a nuclear reactor operator, also in charge of making decisions and taking actions that can put the public's safety at risk; a nuclear reactor operator who, four hours after the beginning of his shift, had a blood alcohol level of 0.056, more than half the legal limit for driving. Now, consider that this man had already been on the job for four hours, had driven into work that morning, all with an elevated blood alcohol level. How high was it when he drove in to work? We know what a vehicle can do in the hands of somone under the influence. Imagine the potential of nuclear power plant driven by an operator under the influence. Yet this man, who has a history of alcohol abuse shown by his two previous DUI's still is employed as an operator at the plant, still is allowed to enter the control room and still is in a position that affects public safety. Granted, his "operator's license" was revoked as a disciplinary measure, but he is still in the plant, monitoring vital measurements, taking actions base on these measurements; measurements which I'm not convinced are not still blurry from the night before, and actions which may or may not be justified.

Are the choices being made at Kewaunee Nuclear Power Plant in the best interest of the surrounding communities or are they in the best interest of the corporation's reputation? I wonder, if the stories were reversed in the media, who would be employed and who would be out the door.

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