Charlotte's scamming diploma mill set to reopen Jan 17
Because there's still tons of money to be made:
Charlotte School of Law battling lawsuits from students, a federal cutoff of student loans and financial problems told students Friday night that it would reopen for the spring semester. We are very pleased to announce that after extensive discussions with our regulators, we will be starting classes as scheduled, the school told students in an email.
CSL told students at mid-week that it was trying to make arrangements with Florida Coastal School of Law in Jacksonville a sister institution in the three-school InfiLaw chain for students to complete their studies and receive an ABA-accredited degree.
I believe even struggling students should have a chance to succeed in life, and I'm all for taking (some) alternative routes for professional degrees. But that's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about a degree that isn't worth the faux-sheepskin it's printed on, and a crippling student debt that even a real lawyer can't help you figure out. Here's some more background, if you have the stomach for it:
Florida Coastal is one of three law schools owned by the InfiLaw System, a corporate entity created in 2004 by Sterling Partners, a Chicago-based private-equity firm. InfiLaw purchased Florida Coastal in 2004, and then established Arizona Summit Law School (originally known as Phoenix School of Law) in 2005 and Charlotte School of Law in 2006.
Read more:
http://www.bluenc.com/content/lawyers-r-us-charlottes-scamming-diploma-mill-set-reopen-jan-17