Hamilton University

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This institution is not to be confused with the fully-accredited Hamilton College in Clinton, New York.

Hamilton University was an unaccredited institution with a small campus based in Evanston, Wyoming, USA. It has since been closed by court order in Wyoming and has relocated to the Bahamas under the name Richardson University.

Contents

[edit] History

Since it had no real students and no faculty, and was housed in buildings which had once been a Motel 6, Hamilton was widely thought to be a diploma mill.[1] The school issued degrees based on "life experiences." Candidates for a degree were required to answer a few questions and write a small project of 2,000 words (about four typed pages). The school issued Bachelors, Masters and even PhDs. The presence of a small church built in the parking lot had served to make the activity tax-free due to federal and state laws, even though the church building had no pews and people in Evanston had never seen services there.[1]

The website used the .edu domain because until recently unaccredited institutions were allowed to use such domains.

[edit] Academics and accreditation

Hamilton was "accredited" by the American Council of Private Colleges and Universities (ACPCU).[1] ACPCU, which was "set up by Hamilton, for Hamilton"[1] has no authorization from the United States Department of Education nor from the Council for Higher Education Accreditation. Former FBI consultant John Bear called it a "fake accrediting agency set up by the Wyoming-based diploma mill, Hamilton University."[2]

[edit] Criticism and controversy

An investigation by the TV news program 60 Minutes revealed that some people in positions of power actually held phony degrees issued by Hamilton University, such as Cessna Aircraft Co. CEO Jack Pelton.[1] A statement by the company did not deny the allegations, asserting that Mr. Pelton was chosen for his field experience more than for his academic achievement.

The most notable "graduate" of Hamilton University was former Clinton Administration appointee Laura Callahan, a key figure in the "Project X" email scandal involving the disappearance of thousands of White House emails which had been subpoenaed by Congress. [2] Callahan's diplomas from HU had enabled her to get a high position in the United States Department of Homeland Security. A probe of her claims evolved into an investigation by the Government Accountability Office of Federal employees who had paid diploma mills with taxpayer funds.

When the CBS 60 Minutes video crew visited the campus, there was no evidence of any students or faculty. It appears that the entire staff consisted of three people.[1]

As of May 2006, and apparently ever since June 3, 2005, right after the 60 Minutes report aired, the web site of Hamilton University consists solely of a link to a record-keeping company which purportedly has been contracted to maintain information about the school's former students such as their transcripts. According to the CBS News website, the state of Wyoming recently changed its education laws, forcing Hamilton University to stop selling "degrees based on life experience".

[edit] People with Hamilton degrees

[edit] Connected institutions

  • American State University (Moved to Wyoming and renamed Hamilton University)
  • Richardson University (Bahamas) (Hamilton University, renamed and relocated again after Wyoming shut the operation down)

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Diplomas for Sale, CBS News, 60 Minutes (2004-11-10)
  2. ^ Diploma Mills Are Easily Created and Some Have Issued Bogus Degrees to Federal Employees at Government Expense, Statement of Robert J. Cramer, Managing Director, Office of Special Investigations, United States Government Accountability Office, Before the Subcommittee on 21st Century Competitiveness, Committee on Education and the Workforce, U.S. House of Representatives (2004-09-23

[edit] External links

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