The indictment, filed in the District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, said the students knew the scheme was illegal. The "campus" was an office at a business park in a Detroit suburb. It also had a fake Facebook page with a calendar of events.īut court papers released last week showed that the employees of the University of Farmington were undercover agents for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE). It advertised tuition for undergraduates at $8,500 (£6,500) a year and $11,000 a year for graduate students. The fake university was set up in 2015 to try to catch foreign nationals who had initially travelled to the US on student visas and wanted to stay in the country, US media reported.Ī website for the University of Farmington showed pictures of students in classes and libraries, or relaxing around a grassy campus. "Our concern over the dignity and wellbeing of the detained students and the need for immediate consular access for Indian officials to the detainees was reiterated," the ministry said. On Saturday, the Indian Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) issued the protest to the US embassy in Delhi, expressing concern over the arrests and demanding consular access to those detained. However, Indian officials say the students may have been duped. Prosecutors say those who enrolled knew that the facility would be illegal. The University of Farmington, advertised as based in Michigan state, was run by undercover agents from the Department of Homeland Security to expose "pay-to-stay" immigration fraud.
India has made a diplomatic protest to the US after 129 Indian students were arrested for enrolling in a fake university.