"Feds investigate after USA TODAY report on massage school accused of ties to prostitution”
The Education Department plans to review an accrediting agency that approved a college with suspected ties to sex trafficking, after a USA TODAY investigation showed links between massage schools and illicit spas.
The American Academy of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine remains accredited, which means its students can take out federal student loans or Pell grants. The Accreditation Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine has approved the college's ability to receive federal money.
That's despite a finding last year by the Minnesota Office of Higher Education that the Roseville, Minnesota, for-profit college had a “theme of prostitution and/or human trafficking.” The state agency quickly ordered the school to close or to find a new owner. The college chose the latter and is preparing to start its fall semester. Its new owner disputes the findings of the Minnesota regulators.
The news of the federal government's pending inquiry came Wednesday at a meeting of an advisory committee that was reviewing the accreditor.
The Education Department's staff had already recommended the agency keep its accreditation power for another year while addressing some shortcomings in bureaucratic processes. The government didn't mention the American Academy of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine or its alleged ties to human trafficking in its recommendation.
A majority of the advisory committee voted in favor of the department's suggested action. But five members of the group abstained from voting. (The committee sends its recommendations to the Education Department, but a senior department official decides whether accreditors will keep their power.)
Some of the committee members had wanted to include more discussion of a report from the Seldin / Haring-Smith Foundation, a group whose work first highlighted the American Academy of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine and other oversight problems of massage schools. And some committee members wondered why the accreditor had continued the school's approval.
Read the full piece on USA Today.