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Report: #470622

Complaint Review: American Intercontinental University, American College Of Applied Arts - LOS ANGELES California

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  • Reported By: Southern Colorado Colorado
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  • American Intercontinental University, American College Of Applied Arts 12655 West Jefferson Blvd LOS ANGELES, California U.S.A.

American Intercontinental University, American College Of Applied Arts AIU - Long History of Records Fraud, and Misappropriation of Student Loan Funds LOS ANGELES California

*Consumer Suggestion: Explanation of Charges/Refunds

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Note: AIU (American Intercontinental University), formerly known as American College of Applied Arts in Los Angeles, CA. has a long history of problems and negative reports by former students, employees, and investors. All this was news to me from a recent online search of the school. I thought I was alone in my dealings with them until it popped into my head to see if others also had similar problems. The following is a detailed description of my account with them.

I do not know how else to write this report other than to give it in order as I remember it. Please forgive me if it does not read easily. In short, I believe that AIU/ACAA did not process my withdrawal from the school in order to keep my student loan money, the grant money, and to fraudulently boost their student attendance records.

My problem started many years ago when it was called the American College of Applied Arts, located in Westwood, CA. I did my first year of a Fashion Design degree program at FIDM in Downtown Los Angeles. When I moved to Westwood I decided to transfer to AIU/ACAA. I had no reason to think I would not receive an education equal to what I received at FIDM. I attended the first few weeks of their fashion design degree program and found I was unhappy with the quality of the education I was receiving. While in class there, an announcement was made concerning the deadline for dropping classes. It was then I decided to drop the school entirely. This was a few days after I received my student loan which I had signed over to the school to cash ( yes they also charged a hefty transaction fee). They gave me the cash (minus their transaction fee) which I had planned to use for school materials and transportation. My tuition at that point had already been covered by grants and my own cash payments. When they found out that I had dropped all my classes they called my mothers home in LA and told her it was imperative that I return the student loan money. The tone of their call scared my mom. I had to assure my mom that since I did not spend any of the money it was not a problem to return. I did so a day later. The financial aid person seemed very relieved that I had come back with all the money. I had received a receipt and was told that it would be returned (minus their processing fee) to the agency that I had received it from. I was also very happy and relieved to be done with the school once and for all.

My problem with them I did not discover until many years later. My student loans from the one year I attended FIDM I had lost track of and had gone into default. They had been sold and resold a few times over while I had gone through several addresses and several jobs. The amount seemed to double and triple. I had consolidated them into one payment. Some years later when the Federal Student Aid agency put all student loan information online I realized that grouped in with the loans I had from FIDM was the loan I had returned to AIU/ACAA. I could not believe it. They had given me such a problem to return the money, and then in turn did not forward it to the student loan agency they said they would return it to on my behalf. I was angry, and mad, but felt I could not to anything about it.

I never stopped feeling upset over this so I thought if I could get my transcript from AIU/ACAA it would help me prove my point to the Federal Student Aid agency by showing I had dropped out of classes there around the same time the loan had come in. I was shocked to find out that they never withdrew me from my courses and I had received all Fs. This was an absolute outrage. What could I do to after all the years that passed and I no longer had a copy of the withdrawal slips or cash receipt.

The reason I am putting this report out is I hope that other former students with similar problems might find it.

Ann
Southern Colorado, Colorado
U.S.A.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 07/17/2009 12:42 AM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/american-intercontinental-university-american-college-of-applied-arts/los-angeles-california-90066/american-intercontinental-university-american-college-of-applied-arts-aiu-long-history-470622. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

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#1 Consumer Suggestion

Explanation of Charges/Refunds

AUTHOR: Ben - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Sunday, October 11, 2009

Ann:

The online system that tracks federal loans is called NSLDS. It tracks all federal student loans and grants that a student has received. You can access this at www.nslds.ed.gov using your PIN. I have worked in student finance for over 8 years for several for-profit  universities and believe I know exactly what happened here. If you attend a school past the first week, they will charge you for classes and depending on how long you attend, it may be the full amount. This is the policy of any school you choose and is typically spelled out in their catalog. If you drop early in the process, you may not be entitled to ANY financial aid and could owe the school hundreds (or even thousands) of dollars.  Secondly, any loans must be certified before your official last date of attenance.  If your last date of attendance was BEFORE the loans were certified, the loans have to be returned to the lender in full (but you will still be charged for the classes). The financial aid refund schedule and the school's tuition refund policies are not the same, and that is key.               

      Finally, schools must issue a refund to a student within 14 days of receiving federal funds (title IV). However, if you drop out early in the term, drop before the loan certification date, or drop below 6 credit hours, you may not be entitled to these funds. Since there is usally a processing delay between the time the funds are received and any drops entered, you could receive a refund even though you are not entitled to it. This is why the financial aid advisor called you so urgently. It necessary for you to return the funds to cover your tuition charges and/or the portion they need to return to the lender (if any).  The transaction fee you are referring to is the origination fee the lender charges (not the school). It sounds like in the end the school did not withdraw you from school, instead giving you the F's which may have been a better option if the other option was to have you owing hundreds or thousands of dollars by returning all the funds to the lender. This may not have been the correct thing to do on their part, but you could be on the hook if they had dropped you early on.

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