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False Certification
If you received a Federal Direct or a FFEL Program
Loan on or after January 1, 1986, you may qualify for a False
Certification discharge if you (or the student for whom a
parent received a PLUS loan) to receive the loan was falsely
certified by an eligible school. Your eligibility to borrow
is considered to have been falsely certified if the school--
Admitted you on the basis of ability to benefit
from its training and you did not meet the applicable
requirements for admission on the basis of ability to
benefit;
or signed your name without your authorization
on the loan application or promissory note. In order
to permit a student to borrow a Federal Direct or FFEL
Program Loan, schools are required to certify that student
borrowers who lack a high school diploma or GED have
the ability to benefit from the training offered by
the institution.
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False certification of a student borrower's
eligibility occurs, for example, if the school failed
to test such a student's ability to benefit or conducted
testing in an improper manner. Schools may satisfy the
ability to benefit requirements, for example, by testing
students or offering courses in remedial education.
Student borrowers who have a physical, mental, or legal
status or condition at the time of enrollment that would
legally bar employment in their field of study may also
be eligible for False Certification loan discharge.
Misrepresentations, by the school, on the other hand,
regarding the school's educational program or its financial
or administrative capability, including the school's
placement services or the quality of the school's facilities,
faculty, or equipment are not part of the process of
"certification" of the student's eligibility
to borrow and do not entitle the borrower to False Certification
loan discharge.
If your loan is discharged, you will not owe
any more payments on the loan, and you will get a refund of
payments you have made in the past. Also, if the loan is discharged,
the servicing agency will tell credit reporting agencies that
the loan was discharged, and any adverse credit history resulting
from nonpayment of the discharged loan will be deleted. In
addition, your discharged loan will not prevent you from applying
for federal student financial aid.
The full criteria by which borrowers may qualify
for such a discharge are set forth in Department of Education
regulations 34 C.F.R. 682.402(e) (1994).
You may request an "Application to Discharge
Loan--Student's Ability to Benefit from Training" by
clicking here or by contacting us.
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