The Los Angeles Movie College is on the heart of a whistleblower lawsuit from two former executives who allege the establishment unlawfully collected authorities funds in an elaborate accreditation scheme.
Dave Phillips and Ben Chaib, the varsity’s former VP of profession improvement and VP of admissions, respectively, allege in a federal lawsuit that the L.A. Movie College violated federal employment necessities and accrediting requirements. The lawsuit additionally names LAFS’ Florida counterpart Full Sail College, its foremost proprietor James Heavener and two different enterprise companions as defendants.
The lawsuit, initially filed in L.A. federal courtroom in June 2024, was just lately unsealed after the Division of Justice opted to not examine.
Representatives of LAFS couldn’t be instantly reached for remark however have beforehand denied the claims.
In assertion to Selection final week the varsity’s attorneys mentioned that Phillips and Chaib try “to resuscitate time-barred and erroneous allegations, which were already thoroughly investigated and settled by the Department of Education.”
For a college to be accredited and obtain federal funding, the accreditation standards state {that a} faculty should efficiently instruct 70% of its college students to land and maintain jobs for which they’re educated. The plaintiffs argue that graduates from the movie faculty are unable to obtain entry-level positions, citing an inner report which exhibits that almost all graduates earn $5,000 or much less of their area of research. Solely 20% of scholars have been capable of finding work, the go well with alleges.
LAFS receives over $85 million a 12 months in federal monetary help, together with about $60 million in federal scholar loans, and greater than $19 million in veterans’ monetary help funds. The Winter Park, Fla.-located Full Sail College, which teaches curriculum in entertainment-adjacent fields, additionally will get over $377 million per 12 months in federal monetary help, in response to the criticism.
“For at least the last ten years, nearly all federal funds bestowed upon and taken in resulted from fraud with the institution using taxpayer funds to finance and facilitate multiple, temporary employment positions for LAFS graduates,” the lawsuit states.
Looking for to proceed amassing authorities funds, the college is alleged to have spent almost $1 million (between 2010 and 2017) to offer non permanent employment from nonprofits and paid-off distributors. These jobs would often final two days; LAFS would decide who can be employed, their schedule and wage. College students have been led to imagine these alternatives have been “in-house production opportunities” and “post-graduate apprenticeships,” however as an alternative, they have been schemes deliberate and paid for by the varsity to stay an accredited college, in response to the lawsuit.
Federal legislation prohibits larger training from “provid[ing] any commission, bonus, or other incentive payment based directly or indirectly on success in securing enrollments.” When LAFS was audited in 2017, the plaintiffs additional allege that the varsity misled the Division of Schooling auditors, denied the existence of the motivation compensation system and did not disclose their connection to distributors.
Past amassing these federal funds, the previous executives argue that the varsity misled college students and potential enrollees by overstating the supply of jobs and making unfaithful or deceptive statements associated to employment.
LAFS was created in 1999 and is situated on Sundown Boulevard in Hollywood. It gives quite a lot of bachelor’s and affiliate levels in areas together with movie, movie manufacturing and animation, with tuition ranging between $40,000 and $80,000.
Each plaintiffs, Phillips and Chaib, labored on the movie faculty for 12 years and have been members of the senior govt workforce. Phillips’ contract was not renewed in 2022.
The Accrediting Fee of Profession Colleges and Faculties just lately renewed the varsity’s accreditation in 2023 for a five-year interval.

