Wed 11 Nov 2009
From the Acting United States Attorney for the District of Columbia
Posted by wslack under Bernard Moore, Faculty at 3:02 pm
Previous Ephblog coverage and Williams Record Coverage.
U.S. Department of Justice
CHANNING D. PHILLIPS
Acting United States Attorney for the
District of ColumbiaFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE For Information Contact:
Monday, November 9, 2009 Public Affairs
(202) 514-6933http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/dc/Press_Releases/index.html
Williams College Professor and Policy Advisor Pleads Guilty to Multiple Fraud Schemes
WASHINGTON – Ernest Bernard Moore, an assistant professor at Williams College, visiting researcher at Yale Law School, and senior policy fellow for a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives, has pled guilty to one count each of Student Aid Fraud, Bank Fraud, and Social Security Representative Fraud, Acting U.S. Attorney Channing D. Phillips, Mary Mitchelson, Acting Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Education (“DOED”), Jeffrey W. Irvine, Special Agent in Charge (“SAC”) of the Washington Field Office of the U.S. Secret Service (“USSS”), Patrick O’Carroll, Inspector General for the Social Security Administration (“SSA”), Michael McGill, SAC, Philadelphia Field Division, Office of Investigations, Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”), and Phillip D. Morse, Chief of the U.S. Capitol Police, announced today.
Moore, 51, of Washington, D.C. and Williamstown, Massachusetts, entered his guilty plea earlier today in U.S. District Court before the Honorable Ricardo M. Urbina. Moore is scheduled to be sentenced on February 17, 2010, and could face up to 41 months in prison under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines as a result of the guilty plea. According to the factual proffer agreed to by Moore, in 1985, Moore enrolled at the University of Southern California under the name Ernest Bouvier-Moore, an alias. Using this false name and a Social Security number that was assigned to an associate of Moore, “KM,” Moore applied for and received approximately $8,000 in federal student loan funds from the U.S. Department of Education. However, Moore defaulted on those loans and, to date, Moore has never repaid any part of those funds as he was required to do by the terms of the promissory note for that loan.
In 1993, Moore created a new identity for himself by obtaining a California driver’s license and a new Social Security number in the name of “Bernard Glenn-Moore.” In 2002, Moore used this false name and Social Security number to apply successfully for admission to Claremont Graduate University (“CGU”) in California to pursue a Master’s degree in Public Policy. Also using this false name and Social Security number, Moore applied for and received federal student aid in four disbursements totaling $37,000 for the 2002-2003 and 2003-2004 school years. In addition, Moore used this alias to apply for and receive four private student loans from Chase Bank USA, N.A. and Citibank USA, N.A. (“Citibank”) totaling $79,777 in the same years. During the same time period, Moore also used the alias “Bernard Moore” and the same false Social Security number to open with the Stanford Federal Credit Union two Echecking Accounts and a Student Savings Account and to apply for and receive two loans totaling $7,000. In applying for admission to CGU, Moore falsely stated, among other things, that he had received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1970 from the University of Puget Sound under the name KM (when, in fact, Moore’s associate KM had earned that degree and Moore has never received any undergraduate degree) and that “Tracy Cannady” was a reference (when, infact, that was another alias of Moore’s). In his applications for federal student aid, Moore falsely stated, among other things, that he had children he supported and that he had not previously defaulted on any federal student loan. In August 2004, Moore graduated from CGU, under his alias, with a Master of Arts degree in Politics.
There’s much more below. Total loss at least: $821,977.97.
Print • EmailThereafter, again using the false name Bernard Glenn-Moore and the Social Security number he had obtained in that name, Moore was accepted into a graduate program at Howard University to pursue a Ph.D. in Political Science, and he enrolled there in the Fall of 2004. Again using this false name and Social Security number, Moore applied for and received federal student aid in seven disbursements totaling $51,351 for the 2004-2005, 2005-2006, and 2006-2007 school years. As before, in his applications for federal student aid, Moore falsely stated, among other things, that he had an undergraduate degree, had children he supported, and had not previously defaulted on any federal student loan. Using the alias Bernard Moore and the associated Social Security number, Moore also applied for and received a student loan from Citibank in 2008 totaling $9,000. In May 2009, Moore graduated from Howard University, under his alias, with a Ph.D. in Political Science.
In 1994, Moore had created another new identity for himself by obtaining a California identification card and a new Social Security number in the name “Tracy Glenn Cannady.” In the summer of 2005, Moore used this false identity to apply successfully for enrollment at George Washington University (“GWU”) as a non-degree student. Using the same alias, Moore also applied for and received six private student loans from Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase Bank totaling $109,000 in 2006 and 2007. Moore completed no credit hours at GWU under any name.
Also in 2005, while attending Howard University, Moore began working for a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives, first as a congressional fellow and later as a legislative
assistant and senior policy fellow. For purposes of his employment with Congress, Moore used his alias Bernard Glenn-Moore and the Social Security number he had obtained in that name. In September 2005, Moore used this false identity to open a checking account with the Wright Patman Congressional Federal Credit Union (“WPCFCU”). Also in September 2005, Moore used a different alias, Tracy Cannady, and the Social Security number he had obtained in that name to open another checking account with WPCFCU. Moore falsely stated on the application for Cannady’s account that Bernard Glenn-Moore was Cannady’s “spouse” and sponsor. Using the alias Tracy Cannady, Moore also applied for and received two loans related to Tracy Cannady’s account at WPCFCU in 2005 and 2006 totaling $4,600.From 2003 to 2009, Moore opened more than ninety credit card accounts using the aliases Tracy Cannady or Bernard Moore and the Social Security numbers he had obtained in those names. Total purchases made were at least $502,992.97, and the outstanding balances total approximately $469,099.52. On October 23, 2001, WB, an associate of Moore’s, initially applied for Social Security Administration (“SSA”) Disability benefits at the SSA District Office in Inglewood, California. On the same date, Moore, using the name Bernard Glenn Moore and the associated Social Security number, requested to become the Representative Payee for WB and was selected as WB’s Representative Payee. Both WB and Moore were living in California at this time. In June 2002, WB moved from California to Virginia, and in approximately September 2002, WB began working again, although he needed a lot of time off in 2003 and 2004. A couple of months after WB returned to work, Moore informed WB that his benefits would terminate in December 2002 due to his working. Unbeknownst to WB, Moore failed to notify SSA promptly that WB had returned to work and that WB was no longer in Moore’s care and custody. In fact, Moore continued to receive benefits checks on WB’s behalf, but did not forward them to WB after December 2002. SSA determined that during the period January 2003 through September 2004, Moore received $13,257 in benefits on WB’s behalf, but WB received no benefit from these payments.
The total loss from the aforementioned frauds is at least $821,977.97. In announcing the guilty plea, Acting U.S. Attorney Phillips, DOED Acting Inspector General Mitchelson, USSS SAC Irvine, SSA SAC McGill, and U.S. Capitol Police Chief Morris praised the hard work of DOED OIG Special Agent Carrie Jackson, USSS Special Agents Eric
A. Traceski and Kevin Rydalch, SSA OIG Special Agent Adrienne C. Messer, SSA District Office Claims Representative Judy Bura, and U.S. Capitol Police Special Agent Dennis Holland. Finally, they commended Assistant U.S. Attorney Laurel Loomis Rimon (formerly of DC, now of EDCA), who initiated the investigation, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Ellen Chubin Epstein, who is prosecuting this matter.
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41 Responses to “From the Acting United States Attorney for the District of Columbia”
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Aidan says:
sounds like credulity knew no bounds!
Dick Swart says:
Snag the rights!
This is better than Tony Curtis in The Great Imposter!
Aidan says:
Well, between Yale, Williams, and the House of Reps, there was a real paucity of scrutiny.
Ronit says:
Thanks, Will.
Not really directly relevant to this post, but I think the Williams website, or at least parts of it, are being scrubbed clean of references to Moore.
If you do a search for Moore on the williams.edu site, you get a number of results, one of which is a short piece in “Faculty Notes” about a previous event Moore organized on federal sentencing reform. Google Cache here. Text follows:
The page that the search result points to is now empty.
We try not to do that memory hole stuff here on EphBlog. I’ve gone back through the archives and tried to categorize all previous posts relating to Moore, either directly via the post or in comments, under the “Ernest Bernard Moore” category:
http://www.ephblog.com/category/faculty/bernard-moore/
It must be said, he made some pretty incredible contributions to the campus in the last year or so.
eph says:
I hope that this story does not make too much noise nationally, since it would make the Williams people look like a bunch of bozos.
Winston Smith '84 says:
@Ronit:
‘Who controls the past’ ran the Party slogan, ‘controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.’”
Ronit says:
Just an incredible press release. Who uses an alias to get a masters/Ph.D in political science? Come on! There are so many more profitable uses for an alias.
Unless, maybe, Bernard Madoff is another one of his aliases.
JeffZ says:
Eph, I wouldn’t sweat it too much, memories of stories of these type may be long on Ephblog, but they are far shorter nationally. For example, is probably news to most students who graduated Williams in recent years that there was an even bigger legal scandal during my time at Williams, an outside group who were guest speakers in many classes and who recruited students on campus, who turned out to be a cult with a NYC indoctrination center (their name escapes me even, and I was there at the time).
frank uible says:
eph: The Williams people are in fact a bunch of bozos. Why unforthrightly hide it?
Ronit says:
@JeffZ: you’re right. EphBlog never forgets. (I had Samson too! Went to South Africa with him. Great guy!)
PTC says:
so… what is this dudes real name again? lol.
ephling says:
When you read it its not so bad. Those private student loan companies are crooks themselves, 3 month libor + 12%. Sort of a Robin Hood story. He took from the rich and did good deeds. Not bad at all.
jeffz says:
… except that Robin Hood took from the rich and gave to the poor, as opposed to Moore, who took from the (arguably) rich and gave to himself …
eph says:
Frank: yes, we are, but why advertise that?
rory says:
@Winston Smith ‘84: you, good sir, are why nerdy college blogs are worth it.
frank uible says:
eph: Transparency – it is misleading not to advertise it.
ephling says:
I think he understood that to hobnob with the powerful in this country you need some serious coin and credentials. They may identify with the wretched refuse but they live high on the hog. Like has been noted…
“It must be said, he made some pretty incredible contributions to the campus in the last year or so.”
and he did get the Second Chance Act passed. The ends justify the means. I just want to know are they going to adjust everybody else’s gpa up that missed the gravy train.
hwc says:
Here’s a question to ponder. Why is Williams College hiring a Professor who hasn’t even completed his PhD at Howard University? I can’t believe the applicant pool for positions at Williams is that thin.
rory says:
cmon hwc, you know better than to make bad bait like that. he was filling a unique visiting professorship role*. had he been on a tenure track, there’d be a scandal to be seen. but that’s not the case.
*the type of visiting professorship reserved often for people who have not fulfilled the original academic qualifications but provide a unique and intimate knowledge of a subject. in this case, fraud and (more importantly) the legislative process of the US.
Dick Swart says:
Bozos: Befuddled but beloved.
http://1956ephs.blogspot.com/2009/11/bozos-love-company.html
[imaged added by Ronit]
hwc says:
These types of “special” visiting professorships typically have candidates with more experience than a congressional staffer/PhD candidate and they are brought to campus to teach specific courses dealing with their area of expertise, not sections of Poli Sci 101.
This guy appears to have been hired to teach routine courses in the political science department. Williams is one of the top colleges in the United States. I know that they attract a top-shelf applicant pool and can do better than this.
Will Slack '11 says:
Moore’s course this fall was not routine, nor were his planned courses for Winter Study or Spring. I continue to think that his legal studies project was the best class event in my three years here.
David says:
Will: Can you explain what this “legal studies project” was and why you found it so valuable? What did your classmates think? We need to record the good things that Moore brought to Williams. Probably deserves a post of its own.
rory says:
@hwc: hwc, the schuman fellowship has been used for a variety of scholars. Hiring a former congressional staffer who is also well advanced in his ph.d process is not unsurprising. Considering his location on his career trajectory i’m not surprised if he also taught the occasional basic course as that’s generally given to academics with less tenure in the academy.
it’s also not unusual to give a visiting professorship to a unique ph.d candidate who is ABD. Having him teach a section or two of 101 on top of otherwise unique offerings is not why he was hired, but using him like a department almost always uses a visiting assistant professor.
David says:
Rory: Do you think Williams would have hired Moore if he had been white? Assume that he had the same congressional connections, similar quality academic work and so on.
Ronit says:
@David: Williams has hired white visiting professors with far less in the way of qualifications/teaching capabilities/knowledge of their subject than Moore. Trust me, I’ve had classes with one or two of them.
hwc says:
rory says:
@David: really? what a meaningless attempt at a “gotcha” question.
did anything in my last comment look racially specific? for f*cks sake.
David says:
Ronit: Really? Specific examples would be helpful.
rory says:
@David: that seems horribly unseemly to post names of underqualified former visiting professors just to satiate your curiosity.
hwc says:
It is suprising to me, but I’m familiar with the people who have held a similar endowed visiting professor seat over the last 25 years at another liberal arts college.
For example, Dennis Haliday only had a Masters from Trinity University in Dublin, but had made international headlines when he resigned his 30 UN career.
I’m still trying to pin down some more of the Schuman Visiting Professors at Williams.
Aidan says:
Moore, if that was his real name, had no educational degrees at all.
rory says:
@hwc: hwc, the w. ford schumann professorship is a unique one in that it’s goal was not to just necessarily get “big names” but people with unique experiences/viewpoints. I was there when the fund was first established (but not for a visiting professor specifically) and it was and has always been more interested in getting interesting people more than just a “big name”.
I believe the only two truly visiting professors have been rickey hill and bernard fraud moore.
in other words, it isn’t a traditional endowed visiting professorship.
ephling says:
It is hard to believe that anyone less qualified could have taught at Williams, he has no real credentials at all. You can’t get a graduate degree without an undergrad, unless its honorary. And I doubt the school of hard knocks is an accredited institution.
rory says:
@ephling: well, yes, that’s true but i’m arguing from the hypothetical of “were he not a fraud and had these credentials, would he have been a good hire?”
as a teacher, it sounds like now. as a CV, quite possibly.
Ronit says:
@ephling: @Aidan: Williams has hired some truly terrible visiting professors over the years (and a few good ones!)
Even after reading the student feedback on him in the other thread and on WSO, I’d be surprised if he made the top 3 of all time worst visiting profs.
wslack says:
@David: Yes.
@Aidan: False. He had two real degrees with fake names.
@ephling: He did just that, and fooled the school that gave him a Master’s.
@Ronit: His quality as a Prof is neither here nor there, when it comes to this matter.
If he was the best prof ever, do you really think it would help him at all?
Ronit says:
@wslack: Yeah, I think so. I think there’d be a hell of a lot more sympathy for him on campus if he was a great prof who had forged something in his resume many years ago…
hwc says:
I’m not comparing it to visiting prof’s seat to get “big names”, but to one specifically endowed to bring experts in a variety of social justice fields to a campus. The endowed seat attempts to fill a role as it moves around from department to department with (typically) one year appointments, bringing specific experitise to the students, often in non-academic fields. It appears to be a similar type of program, in that it focuses heavily on minority issues and so forth.
Here’s a partial list. I can’t find anyone on this list with “Bernie Moore’s” lack of qualifications or his lack of teaching credentials.
Some of these people are extraordinary teachers. For example, George Lakey is way too left-wing for me, off of my political charts. I heard him speak and he had several hundred people in tears. I would practically kill to take a course from him.
Forget the convicted felon part. Williams College can and should do so much better than a guy whose only accomplishment is serving as a staffer or a relatively obscure Congressman. I would really like to know who decided to hire this guy, again putting aside the convicted felon part.
ephling says:
wslack, just my opinion, as you do your investigation read up on fraud statutes. Something obtained fraudulently, once adjudicated, is fraudulent on its face. You seem to think he has a degree because he fooled them into giving him one, or because he completed the requirements and therefore the fraud is rendered moot. That is not how it works. He, as in the real he, does not have any degrees.
wslack says:
@ephling: Gotcha. But they did verify that whatever his name, he did complete the requirements.