New Website Documents Fraud & Corruption from EB-5 Immigration Program

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Aug. 2, 2018 – Today, Cause of Action Institute (“CoA Institute”) launched a new website www.EndEB5.org, documenting  questionable investments and investigations relating to the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program (“EB-5”) and the Regional Center Program. As the Cause of Action’s website reveals, the EB-5 program is ripe for fraud, corruption, can pose a national security threat, and provide questionable value to taxpayers and the U.S. economy. The website launched with more than a dozen examples of questionable investment. The organization has identified more than 50 examples and will release more troubling investments over the next two weeks.

CoA Institute created the website in response to Sen. Diane Feinstein asking the director of the program for a list of “shady programs.” The director didn’t have a list of “shady programs,” so CoA Institute put one together. As Congress weighs whether to extend or allow the Regional Center Program component of the EB-5 program to expire, CoA Institute urges Congress to review this website and recognize the severe flaws in the EB-5 program and let it expire on Sept. 30.

John J. Vecchione, president and CEO of CoA Institute, issued the following statement:

“The EB-5 Program faces legitimate scrutiny due to allegations that it’s become ripe for fraud and corruption and become a pay-to-play scheme. As our research illustrates, EB-5 and the Regional Center Program amounts to a pay-to-play scheme that enriches questionable actors who defraud investors and visa seekers and poses a threat to national security. We urge Congress to review the cases we have identified and allow this program to expire.”

BACKGROUND & HOW IT WORKS:

  • The Immigration Act of 1990 created EB-5 and permits foreign nationals to apply for a conditional visa by making a $1,000,000 investment in an American business that creates at least 10 jobs.
  • Alternatively, a visa-seeker can invest $500,000 in a “targeted employment area” (rural or area of high unemployment) to satisfy the visa requirement.
  • In 1992, the “Regional Center Program” was created to allow pre-approved third parties to pool EB-5 investments from foreign nationals toward American development projects.
  • The Regional Center Program is a source of much of the fraud in EB-5 Immigrant Investor program.
  • CoA Institute has found numerous cases where individuals who controlled a pre-approved Regional Center Program, use the program to collect huge sums in “investments” and fees from individuals seeking a visa, only to use the funds not to create jobs in the U.S. but to fund their lavish lifestyle.

On June 19, 2018, the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary held a hearing on EB-5 with Lee Francis Cissna, Director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”), the agency responsible for the program. In this hearing, when Senator Feinstein asked Director Cissna for a list of “shady investments” the agency has found while investigating fraud in this program, Cissna stated he was unable to produce one.

In response, CoA has begun tracking and identifying examples of fraud or other questionable investments made through the EB-5 program. The website includes 13 examples and CoA Institute expects to release as many as 50 examples of questionable investments under the EB-5 project files page, detailing projects that have been proven to be fraudulent and failed to provide the proposed economic benefit.

The countless documented instances of fraud and corruption developed through this program have pushed the EB-5 program far beyond the point of corrective legislative reform. CoA Institute will continue to publish findings on this website as Congress decides whether to allow the program to expire on September 30.

About Cause of Action Institute

Cause of Action Institute is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, dedicated to providing government oversight, transparency and advocating for economic freedom and individual opportunity advanced by honest, accountable, and limited government.

Media Contact:

Matt Frendewey
matt.frendewey@causeofaction.org
202-499-4231

Pitfalls of Politicization

Disregard of legal standards that apply to everyone to achieve immediate political goals is never good. Politicization tends towards pernicious, unpredictable results.  It is particularly erosive when it infects the administration of justice.  Developments in Texas v. United States, a federal case testing the limits of the President’s and Congress’s authority to set immigration policy, demonstrate just how—and how much—politicization can undermine the rule of law.

Back in May 2016, Judge Andrew Hanen of the Southern District of Texas found that lawyers representing the United States made a series of misstatements to the court and the 26 plaintiff States and that those lawyers knew the truth when they spoke. In 2014 and 2015 those lawyers misrepresented, among other things, timing under an executive order that expanded an immigration program to millions of additional persons, most of whom were parents of children born here as citizens, for whom permissible work periods were expanded to three years. Arising from the interplay of immigration, constitutional, and administrative law, the legal issues in Texas v. United States were complex.

But the problematic misrepresentations by the Justice Department’s lawyers were straightforward. The lawyers for the United States said that the immigration authorities wouldn’t start implementing the program before February 2015.  That led the court and 26 States to forego extraordinary proceedings for emergency relief that might have resulted in a restraining order expressly preventing implementation by the federal government.  The same lawyers also misrepresented how many three-year extensions were at issue, and the government granted over 100,000 before the truth came out in court. “[T]he Justice Department lawyers knew the true facts and misrepresented those facts to the citizens of the 26 Plaintiff States, their lawyers and this Court on multiple occasions.”   The misrepresentations enabled the government to do broadly what could have been expressly restrained.

The court, quite reasonably, asked Why? The DOJ gave several reasons, none sufficient.   The scores of government lawyers working on the case “lost focus” on the facts which had “receded in memory or awareness.”  That excuse gives away the cake:  it admits a breach of every lawyer’s duty of competence.  The government’s other excuse was that many lawyers were responsible for the case, spread across multiple agencies.  The government’s disingenuous conclusion was that any remedy should only apply to the handful of lawyers who appeared in court.  Two weeks ago, on the last full day of the Obama administration, the government lost.  The court ruled, “[a]t the very least, the Justice Department should, in an organized manner, require its attorneys to review and understand each state’s ethical rules before those attorneys appear in that state. This is a minimum requirement.”

Indeed, the court’s requirement is, if anything, too minimal and the Justice Department escaped by the skin of its teeth the Court’s more fulsome wrath from May. Commentators who previously administered Justice in prior Republican and Democratic administrations, however, suggest a more plausible, but still insufficient, reason for the misconduct:  politicization at the Department of Justice.   That should trouble everyone, regardless of party affiliation.

The federal government’s omission of facts that have “receded” or “lost focus” in the service of a legal victory for its current political masters must never be acceptable, minimized, or considered “normal” mistakes, regardless of their complexity. Current events show why.  The most troubling aspects of Texas v. United States arose during the Obama administration.  But headlines during the first weeks of the Trump administration reveal the political staying power of at least four horsemen: Executive Orders, judicial review, immigration, and administration representations. Politicization will undermine the validity of them all.

Mike Geske is counsel at Cause of Action Institute