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  • Tie to illegal degrees doesn't block school licensing

    billingsgazette.com
    March 11, 2005
    Last modified March 11, 2005 - 8:28 am

    Tie to illegal degrees doesn't block school licensing
    By MEAD GRUVER
    Associated Press

    CHEYENNE -- Wyoming licensed a Laramie-based online school last year even as
    its owner helped direct a Hawaii online school that was offering illegal
    medical degrees and was later shut down by a judge.

    The owner of American Central University, Adalat Khan, was the Malaysian
    regional director for American University of Hawaii, a fact that Wyoming
    education officials concede they overlooked in the documents Khan provided
    on his background.

    As a result, nearly eight months into an ultimately successful lawsuit filed
    by Hawaii's Office of Consumer Protection to get American University of
    Hawaii shut down, the Wyoming officials offered no objection when the
    Wyoming Board of Education unanimously licensed American Central in April.


    And American Central has been an Education Department headache ever since.

    For not having even one qualified instructor in Wyoming, the agency prepared
    last fall to pull the school's license -- only to have the process bog down
    while state attorneys deliberate how to do that.

    "The whole thing is in legal turmoil," said Phil Kautz, the department's
    private school licensing manager, of American Central's status now.

    Khan and an employee of the school in Laramie, Marcia Edwards, declined to
    comment.

    Khan runs a school in Perak, Malaysia, called the Mina Management Institute.
    For a time, American Central and American University of Hawaii were listed
    next to each other on the Mina Management Institute Web site as
    "distinguished partners" of the institute.

    Hawaii's Office of Consumer Protection sued American University of Hawaii in
    August 2003, alleging it illegally offered medical degrees. A judge ordered
    the school shut down in January.

    Because Wyoming requires private schools to disclose whether any of their
    officials has ever had a license suspended, revoked or not renewed,
    Education Department officials say Khan may have been required to tell them
    he worked for American University of Hawaii.

    Khan was certainly required to open up about his work with American
    University of Hawaii after the judge closed the school in January, according
    to Fred Hansen, the department's finance director and another of its private
    school licensing officials.

    "He should have disclosed," he said.

    But while Khan didn't mention American University of Hawaii in the
    department's licensing forms, he did say he was the school's Malaysian
    regional director in the third sentence of a career summary he provided to
    the department.

    "I'm not sure we caught that sentence," Hansen said.

    Khan also provided a copy of his 1999 doctorate in business administration
    from American University of Hawaii. Although Hansen knew American University
    of Hawaii was unaccredited, that was not enough of a stain on Khan's record
    to prevent licensing.

    The nonaccreditation may have seemed relatively insignificant compared with
    the charges that the school offered illegal degrees.

    The medical degree was offered through Yerevan State Medical University in
    Armenia. In Hawaii, it's illegal for a school that's unrecognized by the
    American Medical Association to offer medical degrees.

    The lawsuit also accused American University of Hawaii of two other
    violations of Hawaii law: offering law degrees despite no American Bar
    Association accreditation and not maintaining enrollment of 25 students in
    Hawaii.

    District Judge Shackley F. Raffetto not only ordered American University of
    Hawaii to quit doing business and shut down its Web site, he ordered it to
    pay the state $500,000.

    "It was such an easy case because the promotional materials and documents
    spoke for themselves," said Jeffrey Brunton, a Hawaii Office of Consumer
    Protection attorney.

    He said it was one of the larger schools of its kind in Hawaii, enrolling
    and graduating thousands of students, mainly from other countries.

    The school's Web site shut down last month. It briefly resurfaced with an
    address in Clinton, Miss., but as of Thursday wasn't active.

    Hansen said he would bring up Khan's work with American University of Hawaii
    at the Wyoming Board of Education's next meeting, in Saratoga in May, and
    said it could be grounds for pulling American Central's license.

    Department spokeswoman Deborah Hinckley said the department wants to require
    accreditation for all Wyoming schools. Lawmakers in January briefly
    discussed requiring accreditation but set the issue aside for study over the
    interim.
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