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To: scion who wrote (88098)11/18/2004 4:41:26 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
HYPERDYNAMICS CORP, DOWN BY THE OLD DIPLOMA MILL STREAM.

Mr. Lumar received a degree in Economics and a Masters of Business Administration from the University of Devonshire (London, England).

HYPERDYNAMICS CORP
Form: 10KSB Filing Date: 10/15/2001

Darren-Anthony Lumar, age 31, became Executive Vice President of Hyperdynamics Corporation on November 2, 2000. Lumar has a wealth of experience in investor relations, capital formation, relationship management, and due diligence compliance. As Vice President of Capital Acquisition for First Financial Services, LLC, Lumar successfully managed to secure financing of over $30,000,000. Lumar also served as Vice President of Capital Management for the Economic Planning and Development Council. Lumar assisted in establishing financial management standards and practices for new venture start-ups as well as emerging growth companies. Most recently as President of Lumar Worldwide Consulting, Lumar assisted small to mid-sized companies in developing relationships necessary for proper capital formation and core business development. Mr. Lumar received a degree in Economics and a Masters of Business Administration from the University of Devonshire (London, England). Lumar is a member of the following organizations: American Bar Association, Christian Business Leaders of America, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, and Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity American Management Association International Investor Relations Society (London, England). Lumar is also an active and a proud member of Quail Valley Church in Stafford TX.

=========================================

Down by the Diploma Mills Stream

By Kendra Mayfield |
02:00 AM Aug. 28, 2002 PT

Welcome to Harrington University (also known as the University of San Moritz, University of Palmers Green and University of Devonshire, among others), where anyone can purchase a bachelor's or master's degree -- no tests or coursework required -- for the bargain price of several thousand dollars.

never settle. The "university," owned by an American resident in Romania, uses mail-drop addresses in the United Kingdom, printing services in Jerusalem and banking options in Cyprus. The operation has sold 70,000 diplomas in the United States alone, raking in over $100 million, according to diploma mill expert John Bear.

"No country seems willing or able to do anything," said Bear, founder of Degree.net.

While Harrington may be the world's largest diploma mill, it's just one of hundreds of operations on the Web offering degrees that are seemingly legitimate, but often worthless on paper.

The onslaught of spam, online advertising and overnight electronic payment services has made it even more difficult to distinguish between legitimate distance-learning institutions and diploma mills.

"The problem has worsened, owing to the ease of advertising via the Internet and the ability of diploma mills to operate from offshore and still get payment from U.S. users," said Alan Contreras, administrator of Oregon's Office of Degree Authorization.

"Where it used to be some obviously fraudulent operators offering academic degrees in exchange for money and minimal amount of paperwork, it has morphed into a more sophisticated model, where the degree mill offers tutoring and all the trappings of an academic program, but in fact it is still an avenue to getting a degree quickly," said Michael Lambert, executive director of the Distance Education and Training Council.

Not all unaccredited colleges are necessarily degree mills. In the United States, an accrediting agency must be recognized by either the Department of Education or the Council on Higher Education Accreditation.

"Unfortunately, the degree mill operators have seized on the use of the word 'accreditation,' and there are several dozen unrecognized and probably worthless accrediting agencies being used to provide legitimacy," Lambert said. "So there is an accreditation mill problem as well now."

In the United States, individual states must decide whether or not to permit diploma mills to operate within their borders.

States have made some headway in regulating diploma mills over the past few years.

"Although the level of enforcement varies from state to state, I think that there has been great progress made across the board," Lambert said. "States like Louisiana, Hawaii and South Dakota -- all once known as degree-mill havens -- have adopted laws that now require recognized accreditation for any institution in their state wishing to offer a degree."

Oregon and New Jersey disallow use of degrees from institutions that are not accredited by an agency recognized by the U.S. Department of Education or approved by the state's authorization agency.

While Oregon's policy is among the strictest in the nation, other states, like Wyoming and Montana, permit unaccredited universities as long as they have a physical presence in the state.

The constitutional protection afforded by the Interstate Commerce Clause makes it difficult for states to regulate virtual schools. When a state passes legislation requiring accreditation, some diploma mills simply change zip codes.

"Even when a school uses an address in a state, and even when they are sued, and even when the state wins, which they always do, there is absolutely no enforcement," Bear said.

Recently, several colleges demanded that fakedegrees.com remove their names from its website. Despite these cease-and-desist requests, the company still allows anyone to purchase "authentic looking" diplomas from hundreds of other institutions.

It's also seemingly impossible for countries to shut down diploma mills outside of their jurisdiction borders.

Diploma mills often market worthless "U.S. degrees" to people in the developing world, especially Southeast Asia. Counterfeit degrees are rampant on the streets in China.

"Only by prohibiting use of their degrees as credentials can public safety and the value of degrees be adequately protected," Contreras said. "Do we really want people working in bridge design, airport security and other sensitive occupations getting jobs with degrees they bought over the Internet for $500?"

But while the Internet has allowed diploma mills to thrive, it has also made it easier for individuals to check the legitimacy of institutions, Lambert said.

Applicants should watch for "red flags" to spot diploma mills, such as degrees sold for a single fee (rather than credit), available in weeks (instead of years) and offered for massive amounts of experiential learning.

"All unaccredited institutions in the U.S. should be considered substandard unless an appropriate external agency ... has determined that the school has adequate academic standards," Contreras said. "Many states have very limited ability to make such determinations, so even a state-approved school should be examined with great care.

The number of fake schools significantly diminished as a result of the FBI's diploma-mill task force "DipScam" in the 1980s. Although DipScam is no longer active, the FBI and postal inspectors continue to work to keep fake schools from operating.

The FTC could also play a greater role in cracking down on diploma mills by exercising its powers to regulate the word "accreditation," Bear said.

"The FTC could stop that in an instant," Bear said.

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More stories written by Kendra Mayfield



To: scion who wrote (88098)11/18/2004 4:49:25 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Diamond Diploma Mills are forever: ERAN GOLDSHMID, DAG MEDIA INC DIRECTOR AND THE RAIDED DIPLOMA MILL DEGREE. ERAN ALSO PRESIDENT OF NEW YORK DIAMOND EXCHANGE. LOL
=================================

DAG MEDIA INC
Form: DEF 14A Filing Date: 6/11/2003


Eran Goldshmid, 36, has been a member of our Board of Directors since March
1999. Mr. Goldshmid received certification as a financial consultant in
February 1993 from the school for Investment Consultants, Tel Aviv, Israel,
and a BA in business administration from the University of Humberside,
England in December 1998.
From December 1998 until July 2001, he has been
the general manager of the Carmiel Shopping Center in Carmiel, Israel.
Since August 2001, he is the president of the New
York Diamond Center, New York, NY.
=============================================

from todays Bloomberg

Police probe university's fake degrees

2004-01-22 12:42 (New York)
LONDON, Jan. 22 (UPI) -- Israeli police are investigating a British university
that issued fake degrees to 5,500 Israeli government employees, the Times of
London reported Thursday.
Teachers, police, army officers and senior civil servants were among those who
paid for fictitious qualifications from the University of Humberside, which has
changed its name numerous times and is now known as the University of Lincoln.
Police spokesman Yehuda Maman said the university opened franchises around
Israel.

"Anywhere that was big enough to hold a desk and a chair, including in one case
a gas station, became a branch of the University of Humberside," Maman said.

Four managers of the university's operation in Israel have been arrested and
the country's fraud squad officers said at least one member of the staff in
Britain was involved in the fraud.
The university has franchises in 26 countries across Europe, the Middle East
and South East Asia.
The university ended its Israeli enrolment program in July 1999, when concerns
were voiced about the validity of the degrees.

--
Copyright 2004 by United Press International
All rights reserved.
--
-0- ( ) Jan/22/2004 17:42 GMT



To: scion who wrote (88098)11/18/2004 4:54:19 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
PUBLICLY TRADED DIPLOMA MILL CENUCO (ICU) OWNED BARRINGTON UNIVERSITY. BARRINGTON IS CURRENTLY UNDER INVESTIGATION BY THE GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE. LOL

Title: FEE FOR CERTIFICATE
Source: New York Post
URL Source: nypost.com
Published: Jun 7, 2004
Author: CHRISTOPHER BYRON
Post Date: 2004-06-07 04:39:07 by sarcasm1

June 7, 2004 -- A plague of fishy sheepskins is spreading through Corporate America.

That's the startling finding from a Post investigation that has uncovered more than 80 public companies in which members of the brass have dressed up their resumes with degrees from so-called diploma mill universities.

The term "diploma mill" has no specific meaning under law. But according to Webster's dictionary, it describes any institution that grants relatively worthless degrees and diplomas for a fee.

The embarrassing love affair with these academically suspect pieces of parchment also puts the spotlight on an American Stock Exchange-listed company called Cenuco Inc., which sells the degrees to the public through a subsidiary called "Barrington University."

The Post investigation, based on a computerized search of filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, uncovered 15 different chairmen and CEOs, 29 corporate board members and 40 other top officials of public companies who have burnished their resumes with diplomas and degrees from Barrington U. and 17 similar operations.

Though they bear tweedy names like Columbia State University and Kensington University, none are recognized as authentic institutions of higher learning by any legitimate U.S. accrediting body.

Yet business is booming anyway, because actually providing an education is not the point of these outfits. Their real purpose is merely to provide the sort of convincing-looking credentials that help someone pretend to be a graduate of a prestigious institution of higher learning.



Since no federal laws set standards for institutions purporting to grant college and graduate-level degrees, and since regulation at the state level is haphazard, it is easy enough for credential-hungry CEOs to lift themselves from obscurity by dressing up their resumes with a convincing-sounding advanced degree.

All 18 of the "universities" unearthed in the Post investigation are already banned from operating in Oregon and Michigan, which have some of the nation's strictest laws against the use of diploma-mill certificates and degrees. But regulation is almost non-existent in Louisiana, Alabama, Wyoming and several other states, which many diploma mills now call home. Thanks to the growth of the Internet, other mills have simply moved abroad, to places like Liberia, St. Kitts and the Seychelles.

THE Post investigation found diploma mill certificates on the re sumes of fake eggheads in top positions at a total of 84 separate companies. They ranged from computer software giant PeopleSoft Inc., which trades on the Nasdaq, to little-known Cenuco Inc., which bore the name Virtual Academies.com Inc. until 2003.

Cenuco, which last month moved up from the OTC Bulletin Board to a listing on the American Stock Exchange, is headquartered in Boca Raton, Fla., but its "Barrington University" subsidiary operates out of an office in Alabama.

The father/son team that founded Barrington, Robert and Steven Bettinger, have had run-ins with regulators for nearly a decade. Depending upon which SEC filing one relies on, Barrington itself was founded either in 1991 or 1993. In either case, the two Bettingers were fined by the State of Vermont in 1995 for deceptively advertising that Barrington was an "internationally accredited" institution whose degrees could boost a graduate's lifetime earnings by more than $1 million.

To deal with the accreditation problem, Bettinger Sr. got together with another man in the diploma game, Angel L. Fernandez, and in 1998 they set up an accrediting service, the International Association of Universities and Schools Inc. Both men then promoted it as an accrediting agency for their separate "universities."

For further credentialing, the two men turned next to an individual named Donald Grunewald of Wilton, Conn., who runs his own diploma mill called the "Adam Smith University of America." The mill uses a mailing address and telephone answering service in South Dakota and an Internet server in Liberia.

Grunewald agreed to become the Association's "chairman" and signed his name to an official-looking document by which the Association purported to grant "full accreditation" to Barrington U. Bettinger then posted the credential on the university's Web site while Fernandez placed similar claims of accreditation on the site of his own operation, the so-called American University of Asturias, Spain.

A year later, Spanish authorities shut down Fernandez's operation for issuing degrees illegally under Spanish law. So he packed up his bags and moved to New York, where he began operating all over again, this time under the name InterAmerican University.

By that time, Florida officials had shut down Bettinger and Fernandez's Boca Raton-based Association as well, for failure to pay annual taxes and other fees. Almost immediately thereafter, the Association reopened in Geneva and was back in business.

Last week Grunewald said he hadn't had any dealing with Bettinger or Fernandez in "many, many years." Efforts to locate Fernandez for a comment were unsuccessful, since telephone service to all his known addresses has been terminated.

For his part, Robert Bettinger has been busying himself by marketing Barrington to potential students in China and other Third World nations. His son Steven, 41, heads up Barrington's Amex-listed parent company, Cenuco — which he claims, oddly enough, to be steering into the homeland security business. He did not return a phone call to be interviewed for this story.

OTHER companies in the Post probe include Utah's Ecom Corp., whose chairman and CEO, Craig Cummings, is described in a 2002 SEC filing as possessing a Ph.D. in Electronics and Aeronautical Engineering from Columbia State University.

In fact, Louisiana-based Columbia State, which also turned up on the resumes of board members at three other companies, was actually a diploma mill run by a performing hypnotist named Ronald Pellar, who pleaded guilty in April in Los Angeles to nine counts of federal mail fraud in connection with the school.

The Post probe also found 15 companies with top corporate officials claiming degrees from an entity calling itself "Pacific Western University." One holder of a Pacific Western sheepskin (for a doctorate in "security management") is a retired New York City detective named Anthony Luizzo, who sits on the board of a company called Accufacts Pre-Employment Screening Inc., which conducts security screenings for job applicants. Luizzo says he worked hard for his degree, which took him roughly 18 months of home study to earn.

Yet when it comes to at least the appearance of hard work, he's got nothing on a Clifton, N.J. man named Gene Foley, the CEO of a start-up called Bodyguard Records.com Inc. A 2002 filing describes Foley as possessing a master's and a Ph.D. in political science from "Pacific Western University," and a juris doctor from "Kensington University," all three of which were earned within a year of each other in 1993 and 1994. The Post probe turned up six different companies with top officials boasting diplomas from Kensington U. on their resumes.

The Post investigation also turned up three companies with top officials claiming degrees from "Harrington University." Four SEC reports — filed during a four-month period in 2000 — describe the chairman and CEO of a Tacoma, Wash., software firm called InsynQ, Inc., John P. Gorst, as holding an undergraduate degree from Harrington while pursuing a MBA from the same institution.

Last week, Gorst said he actually had no degrees of any sort, from Harrington or anywhere else, and insisted that he had "no idea at all" how the name of Harrington U. got into InsynQ's SEC filings. "I guess we'll just have to correct it," he said.

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