"They manipulated the job placement rates by counting students working in a job that they did not need the degree for," Sobek told ABC News. "In my opinion, it's a wretched fraud."
Before he left EDMC, a publicly traded for-profit corporation that operates such colleges as the Art Institutes, Brown Mackie College, Argosy University and South University Online, Sobek downloaded a trove of data and documents, which, he alleges, support his claims.
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Sobek claims the data reveal a pattern of fraudulently counting students as landing great jobs to create a false impression for future students.
"It is intentional. It's the business model," he says.
Sarah Fisher, a graduate of EDMC's business management program at Brown Mackie College in South Bend, Ind., says she believes the school made her false promises.
"They told me I'd be making $35,000 to $40,000 a year," she says.
To help pay her way through school, Fisher, a single mother, took a job at Walmart making $16,000 a year. She took the job long before she graduated, but Brown Mackie College still counted that customer service job as "related" to her business management degree.
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