<p>From what your write, it is pretty clear that you do not know what fraud is.</p>
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<p>In your case omission was intentional and it is what makes it fraud. If your story is discovered, nobody is going to believe in selective amnesia about dropping out of CSUF with 1.3 GPA. As to “violation of your FERPA rights”, that would be a question for the courts to decide, that is if you have enough money to sue after NYU finds out and withdraws the offer of admission.</p>
<p>USC, like many private universities, has rules that students must obey if they wish to remain students there. By submitting your application, you knowingly lied to the admission office about your past, and no court of law or judge is going to force USC to keep you as a student. You don’t have the right to interpret the rules of admittance at USC when they are written in black and white. Admittance to a private university is a privilege, not a right. You can talk until you are blue in the face about your “right” to block information that USC and NYU demand as part of a student application. Sorry, but in this instance no lawyer or judge would have any sympathy for a student who made the choice to lie.</p>
<p>I guess that would consitute as fraud, if they catch me. You finally got me on this one with all your countlesss interrogations. But I can clearly say that at a deadline I accidently omitted the information and before I could be able to retract that application I was unable to. When trying to contact the admissions again about this mishap, I forgot. But that isn’t what’s going to save me. What really is going to save me is how they violated my FERPA rights which will no doubtedly come first.</p>
<p>But if they’re smart they would drop it because since they violated my FERPA rights that would make fraud invalid of evidence. Since you need to prove evidence before evidence can be processed. And the only way to prove that evidence is to violate my rights.</p>
<p>Private universities do have rules by what I just did was abide to rules and it didn’t hurt me in anyway. They like every other school have a time limit (40 days I believe) viewing my academic record in which has already expired. No court will force any private institution to remain me in their school after I have academic dishonesty. But for them to violate my rights to gain that information or to validate it would probably let me stay at their college.</p>
<p>This is the reason why my FERPA Block/Restriction works!</p>
<p>Also if there is any court hearing about this and is made in anyway public, I can call for public defamantion when trying to transfer to other colleges.</p>
<p>“But I can clearly say that at a deadline I accidently omitted the information and before I could be able to retract that application I was unable to. When trying to contact the admissions again about this mishap, I forgot.”
These are nothing but lame excuses , and that is all they will be seen as being- excuses made up in an attempt to cover up your lie.</p>
<p>An “accidental” omission that obiously got me into a univeristy where I want to be.</p>
<p>Once again, I recommend all those who have a bad past academic record to exercise their right for FERPA Block/Restriction on their academic record for the school they wish to put in the past. This will give you a second chance upon transferring. Also it is legal in everyway upon the institution you attend and governement.</p>
<p>“They like every other school have a time limit (40 days I believe) viewing my academic record in which has already expired.”
More wishful thinking. There is no time limit.</p>
<p>They can either kick me out or they can suffer a lot from the law of the US. Government Education. The thought that they would actually want to lose any more money after this financial recession is idiotic, it would just be a loss cause.</p>
<p>you are a textbook example of someone who has deluded himself into thinking you know what the “law” is. They is no “law” that will protect someone who knowingly commits Fraud. Bernie Madoff anyone?
but please, dream on if you wish…</p>
<p>Yes, Bernie Madoff is just one example who didn’t cover his tracks well. But really how long did that take for them to spot it? There are various others who’ve gotten’ away with fraud, the media just won’t publicize it.</p>
<p>Don’t you have something better to do menloparkmom? Like tend for your children or work? Or are you one of those indivudals who are pretending to be a “mom” poster to actually have meaning in their lives’. I’m a student on summer vacation break, so I have excuse.</p>
<p>If you really have nothing to do, go and research more about this topic and I’ll debunk you at that.</p>
<p>Okay, I don’t understand why everyone is making such a huge deal about this. Why does it matter to you that (by your standards) someone’s “moral compass” is wrong? Cutting corners and hiding things is how stuff gets done - in the world in general. Think business deals.
Obviously the whole point of TRANSFERRING is to fix a mistake and have another chance of starting over… this isn’t someone who lied about saving babies in Africa in their first time college application.
It disgusts me that so many of you are making this your problem - you aren’t going to save the world playing bad-cop. So why don’t you worry about your own lies and stop being that tattle tale nobody likes.</p>
<p>I “quit” College Confidential because it just turned into a gigantic rumor mill. But seeing this other “TrojanTransfer” (someone who thinks he can get away with fraud) using the “FERPA BLOCK!!!” line is probably the funniest thread I’ve seen on an Internet forum.</p>
<p>I want to keep reading these “FERPA BLOCK debunks,” as well as the “LIFE card,” and then see the guy’s admissions decisions rescinded (which will happen… soon).</p>
<p>i think u should reread all the FERPA rights that you have been reading. you have different block rights with each college u attend, so right now, if you blocked ur CC record thats fine. but as soon as u trnasfer to USC, they will have access to all your records agaain. and then, if during ur enrollment at USC, you want to block ur CSU record, then whoever requests your record through USC won’t be able to see it… BUT usc will. </p>
<p>"Thanks for your support. Not too many people realize that I’ve sacrificed more of my time to retake courses, community service and school again to replace my past. I just did what I had to do to get ahead. And I’m trying to pay it forward to help those that were like myself who want a second chance.</p>
<p>It’s actually none of those universities I will be attending. I’m not even a business major. When I first posted the thread, I just created a fabricated SN I saw to propose my question just to get feedback. As soon as I found out that there was a National Student Clearinghouse and someone else said FERPA block in a past discussion thread. I realized that there was indeed a real loophole. I just needed to verify with lawyers, government education department, my current community college, past state university and etc. So far it has worked, I’m headed to a great university (but I can’t tell you where) this fall.</p>
<p>I’m on my summer vacation house, just responding to the responses that are saying it doesn’t work. But it actuality it does. I have a feeling these responders just want to hide the truth that there is indeed a crack in the system they see. I want to show those that there is a second chance and it can be achievable if they try the route I have taken.</p>
<p>These people cannot realize that what they see on the internet may indeed be fake. They don’t understand how much I laugh at their anger and their distress about trying to report an applicant that doesn’t even has those stats and background. It gets even funnier when they pester the deans of admissions because they never had that sort of applicant.</p>
<p>I have currently assisted 36 people with the same problem. Still assisting more with PM’s.</p>
<p>This is all the truth (what I’m telling you). The truth will be given to those like yourself who listen and comply gracefully. It feels liberating to finally tell the truth. Thank you. Peace!"</p>