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...Home ... Editorial ... News ..News Story Tuesday: July 12, 2011


Federal Probe Targets ITT Tech


3/2/2004 -- Classes are back to normal at ITT Technical Institute campuses across the country after federal agents raided the company's headquarters and 10 of its campuses last week in response to grand jury subpoenas and search warrants seeking various enrollment data.

Last Wednesday, agents searched ITT's Indianapolis, Indiana headquarters and 10 schools, including campuses in California, Nevada, Texas, Florida, Oregon and Louisiana. The grand jury subpoenas that triggered the searches were issued by a U.S. District Court in Houston, and sought data on student placement, retention, attendance and grades, along with recruitment and admissions materials, graduate salaries, and transfers of credits to other schools.

Classes were cancelled for the day at the targeted campuses, and students, faculty and staff were questioned. In a statement, a U.S. attorney in Houston did not give a reason for the raids. No charges have been brought against the company.

ITT spokeswoman Nancy Brown said today that the probe won't affect current ITT students, and will have no effect on anyone holding a degree from any ITT Tech school. "All the colleges are open and functioning perfectly normally," she added.

At an investor conference call this morning, ITT's chairman and CEO, Rene R. Champagne said he believes the company has had strong internal controls and that the investigation "will show that we're in compliance." Analysts who focus on the education market said the probe might be related to Title IV, a federal regulation that requires education companies to report certain student data related to federal low-income grants to states. According to company regulatory filings, about 68 percent of ITT's 2003 revenue came from federal education aid programs.

The federal raids immediately affected the company's stock, which fell from last week's high in the mid-50s to a low of $34.50 last Thursday. ITT Educational Services Inc. trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "ESI." News of the probe also affected the entire for-profit education sector, whose shares tend to fluctuate as a group. ITT was trading around $35 a share by mid-week this week, and the remaining stocks in the sector had largely returned to their pre-probe numbers. "In light of the pending federal grand jury investigation of the company and resulting shareholder class action lawsuits," Champagne said during Wednesday's conference call with shareholders, "the company is not able to confirm the internal goals and other projections for the Company's 2004 fiscal year that were previously disclosed by the company."

The dramatic drop in stock prices triggered several class action lawsuits by investors late last week - a common practice when a stock price drops substantially. The lawsuits claim the company artificially maintained or inflated its stock price by issuing false facts or omitting other pertinent ones.

ITT, with some 75 locations in 30 states, is the largest operator in the U.S. of post-secondary school technical education. It offers technology-based associate, bachelor and masters degrees in a variety of subjects, including computer programming, Web development, and engineering, to over 37,000 students. It also offers online education. According to the U.S. Department of Education, ITT granted nearly 15 percent of the total number of associate and bachelor degrees awarded in the U.S. in electronics and electronics-related programs in the 2000-2001 school year, the largest percentage of any single institution.  -Linda Briggs



There are 635 CertCities.com user Comments for “Federal Probe Targets ITT Tech”
Page 45 of 64
8/16/07: Anonymous says: HAS ANYONE BEEN TOLD THAT THE ITT THAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT GOING TO IS BOTH REGOINALLY AND NATIONALY ACREDDITED AND HAD IT TURN OUT THAT THEY ONLY HELD A NATIONAL ACCREDIDATION?
8/16/07: Anonymous says: ITT F@KING SUCKS
8/16/07: Anonymous teacher from SoCal says: The latest outrage for my students and I is this Virtual Library crap. Now the "Learning Resource Attendant" woman forces her way into ALL of our academic classes and actually pulls students out to do stupid surveys. She also forces students to waste time, paper, ink and energy by printing out EVERY FREAKING WEEK a "Virtual Library" profile page. She did this because the students were lying about using the Virtual Library. As a teacher down here, I could give a rat's ass if the students use their Virtual Library. It's their library, and if they want to use, then fine. But to be forced? C'mon... The "dean" forces this mere attendant, who is a glorified clerk, to TELL teachers with up to Ph.D's to do this horse shit. God, I tell you I have had enough of this crap.
8/16/07: Anonymous says: It is time for the FBI to raid more campuses. Check for grade changes from management and focus especially on the San Bernardino, California campus.
8/17/07: doniker says: On Monday, I have my Math 2 final exam at ITT. I am finishing my 3rd semester. I basically cheated my way through the course and mantained a D average and learned next to nothing. The teacher gives 15% of the total grade for "participation" with boosts me up to a C and I figured out that I only have to get 6 out of 50 questions correct on final to pass with a D; if I get over 25 question correct I will receive a C...and I learned nothing. I really don't learn much in any of the classes and I get A's and B's. I am basically just buying a degree.
8/18/07: Amanda from ohio says: I have just enrolled, for their multi media program, anyone take this program???? what do you think??? should I find another school???
8/19/07: doniker says: hey Amanda, I'm in Ohio...which ITT did you enroll at? I am in CNS and don't know much about the multi media program; I know it's not that popular at ITT, I only know 1 or 2 students that take it.
8/28/07: Happy with ITT says: I attended three different schools to get my bachelors degree and I can say good and bad things about each of them. The best was my local community college. They had a very strong program and everything had to be perfect. They established a good foundation, but didn't offer the degree I wanted. I took a few courses to get them out of the way at a lower price than at a university. I chose a state college with excellent scores for PE in Electronics Engineering. After two years, I could write an essay and identify art, but could not measure current/voltage without blowing the fuses a couple times (and neither could anyone in my lab class). They did not hire respectable instructors for the lab classes, but rather graduate students who may not have been studying the same subject. Even though I couldn't complete a single lab, I had a 3.8GPA. Also, the class sizes were huge (200+). Even the math classes were held in auditoriums so there was absolutely no instructor interaction. I couldn't afford to stay in school so I moved back home. I attended ITT for two years and graduated with my bachelors in Communications and Engineering Technology in 2005. We had small class size (7 graduated in my program), good computers, and some advanced software, but I will admit a lot of the books had errors. Fortunately, they also had good information which I still reference. I learned how to do the hands-on applications and I learned a lot about telecommunications. Some instructors do care about their students. I had some great ones who would spend extra time teaching me the skills I had missed. I would have never had that interaction at a university. ITT helped me find a full-time job immediately. I tested cell-phone tower battery back-up units. It didn't pay that much but I needed to work and it gave me good hands-on skills. ITT called me within two months of graduating regarding an interview they set up for me with a major cell-phone company who was local. I was hired by the company and started out at $18 hr (twice as much as any job I had found by myself). My experience with the battery back-up units was why I got the job over other applicants. My credits may not have transferred to a University, but that is okay. I am happy with the job ITT tech helped me get. Any college has its bad parts and good parts. It all depends on what you do with the resources given to you. If you feel you are buying a degree, then you are not putting enough effort into studying to earn it.
9/4/07: get real says: to Anon There is no way they can go for regional accreditation. ITT Tech pays dearly for the national accreditation and owns board members at ACICS. ITT Tech would also have to get working lab equipment, a real library, and have a real curriculum, real books (not written and printed in India), and have credentialed instructors. We all know none of this is going to happen at ITT Tech.
9/8/07: RNR DAMNATION says: To "Happy with ITT": your post is bogus; "...could not measure current/voltage without blowing the fuses a couple times (and neither could anyone in my lab class). " I've never seen this level of student incompetence at my university and community college, and most modern lab equipment power supplies do not use fuses to limit current output.
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