A survey that lasted over six months reportedly discovered immigration scams that included an Australian kicker who attended US schools and played in the NCAA program.
The seven-month project reported that there were at least several kickers and punters playing college football who should not have received a scholarship at least and would not have qualified for a student visa.
Fox San Antonio competes to determine whether Australian punters and kickers have submitted fraudulent stories and transcripts to obtain scholarships at American schools. I spoke to kicker school.
“The fraud is that there are Australian and international players, American players doing it the right way, American players who have legitimate transcripts doing it the right way. “The university coach told the outlet anonymously.
The same coach claimed that one Australian player is qualified for four years and revealed that he is considered to be hired by the NCAA. The Australian academy claims that the player has never gone to college, but the coach has discovered through his own research that the player has only qualified for three years.
Using Cyber Investigators – Kengamble, Chairman of IFW International – San Antonio Exit I discovered another athlete whose transcript was misrepresented. Although the Australian player's authentic transcripts showed impairment to grade, the report allegedly claimed that another transcript was submitted to the NCAA, which showed a significantly higher grade that was modified to meet exercise criteria.
The report said it was another anonymous source, this time an Australian trainer and recruiter. He said he received a doctor's transcript from Kick Academy, which changes the player's grades from “C” to “B.”
“His GPA wasn't high enough from high school, so they did it over and he sent it to me. c?'” The recruitment expert reportedly asked.
Another scenario describes an Australian student who mistakenly revealed that he had attended school before and lied about his eligibility.
“There was a child who actually kicked him out,” the anonymous trainer recalled. “They sat down. He sat down with his advisor and said, 'Oh, I need to take these classes and these classes.' And he was like, “No, no, I already took it in college.” And they said, “What?” They did some research.
Gamble said the students he investigated were already attending the university full-time, and he and his team “doesn't believe” this fact was revealed.
The Australian Kick Academy did not reply to a request for comment from the local outlet.
Gambling said the responsibility for investigating international students' transcriptions falls at American universities, but NCAA sources reportedly told the outlet that the investigation was a rather challenging effort.
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