A major fraud investigation in India has uncovered a network of universities selling counterfeit degrees, many of which were allegedly used to obtain U.S. H-1B visas, a high-skilled worker program.
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Indian law enforcement says the network spans at least 28 universities, with fake certificates and seals recovered across the medical, nursing, and engineering fields. One school alone is accused of issuing more than 36,000 fake degrees. Roughly 100,000 counterfeit certificates have been seized so far.
The price of entry was low. A fraudulent degree costs as little as $1,400, a fraction of the salary premium an H-1B job commands.
The fraud matters technically because the H-1B program is built on credentials. Under INA §214(i), an H-1B "specialty occupation" requires a U.S. bachelor's degree or its foreign equivalent. A counterfeit degree doesn't just pad a resume, it fabricates the legal basis of the visa itself, invalidating the petition USCIS approved and the Labor Condition Application the employer certified.
One widely shared claim, that nearly 90% of Indian H-1B applications contain fraudulent information, traces back to a former consular officer's account of adjudications in 2005–2007, not to this investigation. The current bust's verified numbers are striking enough on their own.
Skill levels are also under scrutiny: reporting cited in the viral coverage claims 83% of H-1B hires during the Biden years landed in junior or entry-level positions, undercutting the program's "high-skilled" premise.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is reportedly pursuing the issue at the state level.
The Economic Ripple
The crackdown is already hitting markets. Bloomberg reports that the H-1B clampdown on Indian workers in Texas is spoiling a local housing boom, visa-dependent buyers are a significant source of demand in tech-heavy metros, and uncertainty over status is freezing purchases.
The bottom line: a credential-fraud bust in India, a pipeline-killing bill in Congress, and a cooling Texas housing market, three fronts converging on the same program in the same week.
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