Oof. I couldn't force myself to read much past this:
"You'd probe to find a weakness," said Brian Klein, a former admissions employee who worked for three years at Argosy University Online, one of four major colleges operated by EDMC. "You basically take all that failure and all those bad decisions, and you spin it around and put it right back in their face as guilt, to go to this ****ty university and run up all of this debt."
		
		
	 
Yeah, it's definitely a big lengthy... here are some highlights I found particularly disturbing:
"The so-called 50 percent rule, which required half of all students to  be at a ground campus in order for a school to be eligible for federal  aid, had been put in place to discourage dubious distance education  programs that offered subpar learning. Boehner helped to nix the rule in  a budget agreement that took effect in early 2006, allowing schools to  expand enrollments -- and revenues -- without having to invest in  additional ground campuses."
"The company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission at the  time laid out some of the attractive aspects of investing in higher  education: 'Given the advanced payment of tuition and fees which is  customary for the post-secondary education industry, our working capital  is on average a source of cash,' the filings argued. The expansion of  online programs also offered 'an attractive avenue for growth that  utilizes many of our existing education curricula while requiring less  capital expenditures relative to campus-based expansion.'" (Goldman Sachs is one of the three private equity firms to buy their stocks up, by the way)
It then goes into how Todd S. Nelson, the former president of the University of Phoenix company(their big rival), started running Ed. Management Corp.  Under his management, UoPhoenix had to pay a $9.8 million settlement with the government for predatory practices.
"Employees who had worked at the company prior to Nelson's arrival noticed a distinct shift once he came on board.
  'It was an absolute feeding frenzy,' said Kathie Bittel, who worked  as a recruiter at Argosy University the first year after the company  went private under Goldman, when Nelson came on board. 'They were on us  every minute of the day. We had managers and directors who were just  literally circling the pods, listening to every word that was spoken. I  swear I thought they were going to wear out the carpeting.'"
"A current admissions employee at South University online, who declined  to be identified for fear of retribution, recalled a single mother who  was worried about taking out student loans, since she was barely able to  pay her utility bills. He figured she wasn't prepared for classes, but  his manager told him to turn the situation around on the recruit, asking  if she always wanted to be struggling to make ends meet, and implying  that a college degree could change things.
All admissions employees interviewed by The Huffington Post described  the widely used method of "finding the pain" in prospective students, a  tactic employees said was meant to exploit recruits' past failures in  careers or education.
  A sales call handout obtained by The Huffington Post describes the first three steps when  talking to a new sales lead: '1. Build em up! ... 2. Break Em Down! Find  the PAIN! ... 3. Build em Up!'"
"The scales are so tipped; these people have no way of possibly  making a good decision," Lawrence said. "It was like we were used car  salesmen. We would basically psychologically manipulate people into  doing this. My master's was in clinical psychology, and it was like I  was using my powers for evil."
  Even recruiters' job titles were intended to be misleading, employees  said. An entry-level admissions employee was known as an "assistant  director of admissions," a title that lent authority to someone trying  to close a sales deal.
  "Remember, they don't know you're in a call center," said Klein, the  former Argosy admissions adviser. "They think you're at a college, up in  an ivory tower, sitting back in a tweed vest with a pipe."
"They're wolves; they're hunters," said the current employee. "They have  one objective: They're there to make money and get students."
How the recruiters get paid: 
An updated copy of the matrix from 2010, which was developed after Nelson arrived and provided to The  Huffington Post, shows a chart with the number of students on the left  side, and corresponding salary ranges to the right, based on "quality  factors" ranging from "unsatisfactory" to "outstanding." The vast  majority of the salary increases come from student enrollment numbers.
  For example, a recruiter who enrolled a low number of students could  only make up to $35,000, even with an "outstanding" quality rating. Yet  someone who enrolled the highest range of students but received an  "unsatisfactory" quality rating could receive a $73,000 salary; an  "outstanding" rating would net the same employee a salary above  $114,000.
About their current lawsuit: 
"We will not train or coach our staff to 'dig for the pain' or to  manipulate the student's previous misfortune," the document reads.  "Instead of dwelling on a past that the student can't change, we train  our admissions representatives to facilitate a conversation that  considers the Consequence of moving forward without the education."
  Instead of "overcoming objections," the new term is "resolving  student concerns"; instead of making a "close" on a sales call, a  recruiter is now "gaining commitment."
  The Justice Department lawsuit could have grave consequences for the  future of EDMC. The false claims suit argues that because EDMC violated  the recruiter compensation ban, the company unlawfully took funds from  the federal government.
False claims suits can technically recover three times the amount of  fraudulent claims made to the government. The complaint notes that EDMC  has claimed $11 billion in federal money since 2003, meaning that if all  $11 billion were found to be fraudulently claimed, the government could  recover up to $33 billion, plus additional penalties of up to $11,000  for each government claim, according to the Justice Department.
And... their reaction: "This notion that somehow private equity folks acquired the company and  changed the culture and turned it into a boiler-room mentality is just  nonsense," Leeds said. "We're people who take this stuff really  seriously. We have two former secretaries of education on my board of  advisers. Do you think they would be associated with people who would  ever think about or be capable of creating a boiler room? It's nuts."
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"The Company's focus has always been on student success, including under  Mr. Nelson's leadership," a spokeswoman said in a prepared statement.  "Certainly, the Company does not condone unethical recruitment  practices. If any such activity were brought to our attention of our  organization, immediate corrective action (up to and including  termination of violating employee) would be taken, as per our Code of  Business Ethics and Conduct."
......
Sorry, this is still a lot of info, but I thought it gives more context into just how problematic the for-profit school system is... we can argue it as much as we want.  The facts are clear that they care ONLY about money.  Even if the brick and mortar schools had some redeeming qualities, one can only assume that as they continue to focus on the more profitable online alternatives, those places will diminish in quality even more.  The author of this article guesses that they will settle this lawsuit out of court, since more claims of this nature never amount to much, so I think the real risk to the company is pretty low.  It's really just sickening... they have the perfect scheme here... get students to take all the risk, since the federal loan money goes directly to the school, and then let the student take the fall for it when they can't get a job to pay for them!  UGH!  I think it's been stated before, but the rates of students at these school who default on their loans is increasing...  Truly horrific!