<http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/07/11/probe_find
s_churches146_visa_program_riddled_with_fraud/>
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/07/11/probe_finds
_churches146_visa_program_riddled_with_fraud/


 


Probe finds churches' visa program riddled with fraud


By Charlie Savage, Globe Staff  |  July 11, 2006

WASHINGTON -- A special visa program that allows churches to bring thousands
of foreign religious workers into the country each year is riddled with
fraud, an investigation by the Department of Homeland Security investigation
has found.

The probe found numerous instances in which groups in the United States
falsely claimed to be churches, and visa applicants lied about their
religious vocations in order to get into the country . More than a third of
the visas examined by investigators were based on fraudulent information.

A report on the investigation, obtained by the Globe, said that instances of
fraud were particularly high among applicants from predominantly Muslim
countries, and the report raised concerns about potential terrorism risks.

Homeland Security auditors who reviewed an application for a 33-year-old
Pakistani man, for example, could not locate the alleged religious group
listed on the petition as his sponsor, and when investigators went to the
group's address they found an apartment complex.

In addition, the investigators found that an address listed on the form
``has been used by an individual suspected of membership with a terrorist
organization." The report does not say whether the address was in Pakistan
or the United States.

In another case, investigators found that an Egyptian man working for a
religious group in the United States had filed ``at least 82 petitions with
many fraud indicators" in an attempt to obtain visas for dozens of alleged
religious workers.

Under the program, churches, synagogues, and mosques can ask the government
to grant visas to foreigners to fill vacant positions. The sponsoring group
or the foreigner may file the application.

Applicants must include letters from their sponsor attesting that they have
been a member of its denomination for at least two years, that they will
fill a specific religious position, and that they are qualified for the job.
The application must also provide evidence that the sponsor is a bonafide
religious organization that qualifies for non-profit tax status.

The US government issues several thousand religious worker visas each year.
There are two types: temporary three-year visas, and ``green cards" that
allow foreigners to become permanent residents. The Homeland Security study
looked only at petitions for green cards, but the report noted that the
three-year visa program faces identical fraud risks.

The program dates back to 1990, and it has primarily been used by the
Catholic Church. The State Department said that statistics breaking down
recipients by faith are not available, but the majority do not come from
predominantly Muslim countries. In fiscal year 2006, the top five countries
of origin for religious worker visa recipients were India, Mexico, South
Korea, Brazil, and Colombia.

The program has long been suspected of being susceptible to fraud. In 1999,
for example, the General Accounting Office found that many applicants for
temporary religious worker visas were unqualified for the positions they
were coming to fill.

Such concerns have grown since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. In
September 2004, a Pakistani man living in Brooklyn was convicted of visa
fraud for helping more than 200 illegal immigrants falsely obtain religious
worker visas. The man had declared himself to be an imam and the basement of
his store to be a mosque.

The Brooklyn case helped prompt Homeland Security, which had inherited the
religious worker visa program from the old Immigration and Naturalization
Services, to conduct an audit. The internal investigation was completed in
August 2005, but it has not been made public. The Globe obtained a a
redacted version with several pages missing.

Stewart Baker, assistant secretary of homeland security for policy, said in
an interview that the department is still wrestling with how to crack down
on fraud in the program without hurting the benefits it provides to
legitimate churches.

``There is way too much fraud in this program," Baker said. ``One of the
things we need to do is go there more often and actually check that it is a
real institution, because unfortunately one form of fraud is to say `I have
a storefront church,' and when you go to that address there is a store, not
a church."

Baker said the department is significantly increasing the number ``fraud
detection and national security investigative officers." There were only a
``negligible" number of such agents before 2005, he said. Last year the
department trained 160, and this year it is adding 220 more.

The new agents will be charged with investigating the claims of all visa
applicants, including checking up on the sponsoring group after they have
arrived in the country.

In the 2005 investigation, Homeland Security agents subjected a random
sample of 220 religious worker petitions to more intense scrutiny than they
normally receive. On 78 of the applications, they discovered such problems
as ``paper" churches, described in the report as ``offices with no
indication of religious functions"; petitions that overstated workers'
experience and qualifications; and immigrant workers who did not end up
working for their sponsor religious organization.

The probe found a particularly high fraud rate among applicants from
countries the government deemed to pose a security risk, such as Egypt,
Algeria, Pakistan, Syria and Iraq, the report found. There were 11
applications for people from special-risk countries among the 220 petitions
that were audited -- and 8 of those 11 were fraudulent, it said.

Some immigration watchdogs say that the program should be seriously
curtailed because, even in cases where the applications are legitimate, the
visas could bring radical clerics into the country.

Last year, for example, the FBI arrested three Pakistani men associated with
a mosque in Lodi, California. All had entered on religious-worker visas. Two
were accused of ties to a terrorist training camp in Pakistan before coming
to the United States, and the third, an imam, allegedly delivered sermons
endorsing violence against non-Muslims before he came to America. All three
were deported for having overstayed their visas, but were not accused of
obtaining them fraudulently.

Calling for sharply increased scrutiny to be placed on the program, the
Federation for American Immigration Reform, an anti-immigration group, said
that the government must spend more to police the program.

``We're living In a post-9/11 environment where any loophole that can be
leveraged to aid and abet any potential terrorist cannot be tolerated," said
Susan Wysocki, a FAIR spokesperson. ``If something is being abused, it needs
to be stopped, it needs to be reworked, and it needs to be implemented
properly."

Baker agreed that the potential for terrorists to use the program to enter
the country has been a concern, but he said that the program needs to be
preserved because it has provided ``real value" to ``a lot of legitimate
religious organizations that are well established."

The Catholic Church, for example, needs the program because not enough
Americans are choosing a religious vocation. Margaret Perron, director of
religious immigration services for the Catholic Legal Immigration Network,
said that there are 100,000 fewer nuns in the United States than there were
40 years ago, and one in ten parishes is without a resident priest.

Perron said she did not know how many priests, nuns, and brothers the
Catholic Church had in the United States on religious worker visas, but that
her operation alone was currently working on more than 850 open cases for
foreign Catholic workers who are seeking visas.

``I would urge [the government] to exercise caution in terms of totally
eliminating the program," Perron said. ``I think in the Catholic Church it
certainly serves a purpose, and there are other religions who also make
legitimate use of it. You should not throw out the baby with the bathwater
because of some abuses by some people."

Baker said he was sensitive to such concerns, acknowledging that ``there has
been a little bit of alarm at the prospect that the program will be changed
radically." But, he said, ``the kinds of things we're looking at won't
interfere with the ability of the Catholic Church to bring in priests if
they need to bring in priests from abroad."

Nonetheless, Kevin Appleby, director of migration and refugee policy for the
US Conference of Catholic Bishops, said Homeland Security officials have
told him they are considering a plan to require churches to show that any
visa applicant will have defined duties and wages, as well as proof of a
place abroad to which the applicant will return.

Appleby said he worried that such requirements would not fit the lifestyle
of Catholic nuns and brothers, who often receive no wages, perform different
tasks from day to day, and move about from home to home within their order.

``What we're concerned about is that they are going to put such strict
regulations in place that it will limit us being able to bring in certain
kinds of religious people," Appleby said.
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