This article originally appeared on WND.com
Guest via post by Bob Unruh
‘Zero results. Not even one. Not one’
It was all over the news just months ago, when the Joe Biden administration sued Grand Canyon University, the nation’s largest Christian school, as part of what school officials described as a coordinated attack by Biden .
It was the Federal Trade Commission that filed a lawsuit against the school, alleging that it failed to disclose how long it would take doctoral students to complete its accelerated program and that it presented itself as a nonprofit organization.
The Department of Education, previously calling out misinformation about the doctoral program, announced a $37.7 million fine against the school.
Now a report from the Georgia Star News confirms that a state investigation has confirmed there is no evidence of any wrongdoing by the school.
So the federal agencies decided to pursue their agenda against the Christian organization anyway.
The report revealed that a state auditor review, through the Arizona State Approving Agency, found that the risks identified by Biden’s allegations “could not be substantiated, meaning private nonprofit students they can still use GI funding to pay tuition.”
The report states that University President Brian Mueller told KSTAR: “They said, ‘Zero results. Not even one. Not one.'”
School spokesman Bob Romantic said in an interview with The College Fix that the audit covered all three allegations made by Biden regulators.
But he said the school is still “targeted” by “systemic attacks … against GCU that we believe are retaliation for filing a lawsuit against the DOE.”
The school sued after the Department of Education released a list of its complaints and announced a $37.7 million fine.
The FTC subsequently filed a lawsuit, alleging telemarketing and marketing violations, concerns that have now been addressed by the state investigation.
Mueller suggested that Biden was “maliciously targeting” the school, the report explains.
Although the FTC claims that the school misrepresented its costs, the report states that “a degree calculator function on their website currently indicates the average number of continuation courses required for alumni for each doctoral program in clear, red characters above the program’s price lists.”
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