Friday, May 21, 2010

Adam Wheeler Catches Harvard With Elaborate Con

When Adam Wheeler strolled the halls of Harvard, he no doubt felt like he was important. Grades looked great and his list of activities were top-notch. Unfortunately, Mr. Wheeler was spinning quite a tall tale. The prince charming Adam Wheeler faked his entire educational career, according to ABC News. He gained admittance to Harvard University and was able to fool grant agencies into giving him a lot more than $ 45,000 in grants, scholarships and other forms of financial aid, maybe even including short term loans. Now he awaits arraignment on more than 20 charges, among them identity fraud, larceny and forgery.

Resource for this article: Intercollegiate faker Adam Wheeler scams Ivy League schools By Personal Money Store

Adam Wheeler had the con down in his sleep

Wheeler led the Harvard administration on like a confectioner leading a candy addict on a leash. The cash register sounds in their minds drowned out the thought of verifying his documents and claims. Could it be that Adam Wheeler was that smooth a criminal? Whatever the case, administrators in charge of the Rhodes and Fulbright scholarships really paid attention and started to uncover work samples Wheeler claimed were his own. Mr. Wheeler could not spin out of this one; his work was red-flagged as being plagiarized. One lie found led to one more, and then the house of cards began to fall.

Wheeler’s ruse was a tangled web, indeed

Adam Wheeler's game was much like that, as outlined by Middlesex County DA Gerry Leone. Adam Wheeler had all the right lies, from exclusive prep school and perfect SATs, all the way to Harvard. To change it up a bit, he’d also applied at Brown ,Yale and other Ivy League schools for transfers (or simply to escape capture). Little did he know that his reality of average SATs and being kicked out of a small college in Maine would rise to the surface.

How did this guy go as far as he did, many wondered

”What are these achievements if they’re not something that you kind of have done yourself?” asked a stunned fellow Harvardite. College life and whether students get real value for their money is one potential scam, but Wheeler rises to the top as the scam king here. On the other hand, maybe college might be said to have real value, even if bachelor’s degrees aren’t as valuable as they used to be.

Discover a lot more info on this topic

ABC News

http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/adam-wheeler-accused-faking-harvard-university-scholarships/story?id=10674294



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