The Trump administration announced a new financial aid tool projected to save taxpayers $1 billion by stopping ghost student fraud, as The College Fix reported.
Ghost students are online scammers who enroll in classes to fraudulently obtain financial aid money. The problem has been particularly severe in California community colleges, though Minnesota universities have also grappled with the issue.
Under the new initiative, high risk applicants will be asked to provide government issued identification before accessing federal student aid, including Pell Grants and loans, when applying through the Free Application for Federal Student Aid portal, Fox News reported.
The Education Department estimates its efforts will save taxpayers over $1 billion during this year’s FAFSA cycle. The tool had already screened 50,000 applications as of Monday afternoon.
A spokesperson for Vice President JD Vance sent a statement to The College Fix about the initiative. “Instead of student aid and education grants going to students who deserve it, corrupt Democrats and the inept bureaucrat class of the Biden Administration allowed it to flow straight into the pockets of fraudsters for years.”
Secretary of Education Linda McMahon commented to Fox News. “This new fraud detection tool will stop fraud at the start of the process, before money goes out the door, strengthening the integrity of our programs and expanding opportunity for students who depend on these resources to finance their postsecondary education.”
The Trump administration blamed President Joe Biden for failing to stop the problem. The Biden Department of Education “removed key verification safeguards, diverted resources away from fraud prevention, and required less than one percent of students to verify their identity following the submission of the FAFSA,” the administration stated.
“These policies led to institutions across the country coming under siege by highly sophisticated fraud rings, ‘ghost students,’ and AI bots,” the Department of Education added.
California community college professor Kim Rich has been at the forefront of sounding the alarm about this problem. The Pierce College criminal justice scholar identified that 24 students in her 40 student class were fake, as The Fix previously reported.
The ghost student scandal is just one symptom of the rot that has infected American higher education, where billions in taxpayer dollars flow to institutions with little accountability and even less oversight. Clamping down on fraud is a necessary first step, but the deeper problem is a system that treats federal financial aid as an entitlement rather than an investment in American human capital.
Until Congress fundamentally restructures how higher education is funded and holds colleges accountable for outcomes rather than enrollment numbers, scammers and grifters will continue to exploit the system at the expense of hardworking American taxpayers and students who actually deserve the aid.
