It’s ok to take a shortcut if you’re running behind on time and need to get to a destination quickly. It’s not ok to take a shortcut to circumvent U.S. immigration law. (Chances are if you disobey the government’s system for legal entry and citizenship, you’ll never get to where you wanted to go in the first place.) An article published by the Chicago Sun-Times tells about two unrelated cases of two Chicago-area residents who got in trouble for arranging sham marriages to help foreign nationals gain U.S. citizenship.
The story reveals that in the first case, a naturalized citizen from the Philippines who owned an immigration consulting business arranged at least 33 fraudulent marriages over a seven-year period of time. She charged her Filipino clients between $8,000 and $17,000 and paid their willing spouses, who were U.S. citizens, $5,000 each for taking part in the ruse.
The 62-year-old sham marriage arranger pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit marriage fraud and was sentenced to 36 months in prison. A co-conspirator received a one year prison sentence for his part in the scheme.
The second case involved a naturalized citizen from Nigeria, who allegedly arranged four sham marriages between Nigerian nationals and U.S. citizens, who were each paid between $1,000 and $3,000 for their part. The 36-year-old fraudster pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting visa fraud in regards to petitions filed in conjunction with the sham marriages and was sentenced to 3 months in prison.
Foreign nationals can lawfully become permanent residents as long as they are not marrying to bypass U.S. immigration laws. These two cases are perfect examples of what happens when fraudsters try to get around the law. Both shortcuts led straight to jail.
The post Shortcut to Jail appeared first on Fraud of the Day.