Detroit Woman Guilty of $2.5M Student Aid Fraud

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Department of Justice

Key Points

Michelle Denise Hill, 48, of Detroit pleaded guilty to wire fraud after running a decade-long scheme that stole approximately $2.53 million in federal student aid through more than 80 fake student identities.Hill purchased high school diplomas from a Florida-based online “fast-track” school, submitted fraudulent FAFSA applications, completed online coursework for multiple fake students simultaneously, and split the proceeds with the individuals whose names she used.The case is the latest example of a growing wave of “ghost student” fraud targeting federal financial aid - a problem the Department of Education says has already cost taxpayers more than $1 billion in attempted theft in 2025 alone.

A Detroit woman has admitted to stealing more than $2.5 million in federal financial aid over a 10-year period by creating a network of fake college students - the latest high-profile case in a growing epidemic of “ghost student” fraud that is draining billions from taxpayers and blocking real students from the courses and aid they need.

Michelle Denise Hill, 48, pleaded guilty to wire fraud on March 23, 2026, in federal court before United States District Judge Brandy R. McMillion, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Michigan. Hill faces up to 20 years in prison and has agreed to pay $2,530,854 in restitution to the U.S. Department of Education. Sentencing is scheduled for August 3, 2026.

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How The Financial Aid Fraud Scheme Worked

According to court records, Hill ran the fraud from at least July 2015 through July 2025. Over that decade, she submitted fraudulent Federal Student Aid applications (for Pell Grants and Direct Student Loans) on behalf of more than 80 individuals who were listed as eligible students at Wayne County Community College (WCCC) in Detroit. None of those individuals had any intention of pursuing a degree.

The goal was to obtain a "FAFSA refund" of excess funds that they could pocket.

To make this happen, Hill obtained high school diplomas for her fake students, many from the same Florida-based online “fast-track” school. She then completed WCCC’s online coursework on their behalf to create the appearance of academic progress and extend their eligibility for aid across multiple semesters. She then split the stolen money with the individuals whose names appeared on the applications.

The total damage: Hill’s scheme caused more than $3 million in federal student aid to be awarded, with approximately $2,530,854 actually disbursed on the fraudulent claims.

Part Of A Much Bigger Problem

This story comes at a time when ghost student fraud (the practice of using fake or stolen identities to enroll in college and collect federal aid) is surging nationwide. As The College Investor reported earlier this week, the problem has reached staggering proportions.

In California alone, 31.4% of all community college applications in 2024 were identified as fraudulent: roughly 1.2 million fake applications across the state’s 116 community colleges. And the Department of Education says it prevented more than $1 billion in attempted student aid fraud in 2025.

Hill’s case illustrates how ghost student fraud isn’t limited to large-scale bot-driven operations. While many recent cases involve AI-powered fraud rings submitting thousands of applications in seconds, Hill’s scheme was a one-woman operation that relied on old-fashioned identity manipulation, purchased credentials, and manual coursework completion.

The common thread is the same: exploit open-access enrollment and federal aid disbursement systems to steal money meant for legitimate students.

What This Means For Students And Taxpayers

Every dollar stolen through ghost student fraud is a dollar that doesn’t reach a legitimate student. Federal Pell Grants (designed to help low-income students afford college) are a primary target. When that money goes to fake enrollees, the students who actually need help lose out.

Ghost students also fill seats in online courses, pushing real students onto waitlists. At California’s Pierce College, enrollment dropped by nearly 36% after ghost students were removed from the rolls.

For taxpayers, the math is straightforward. The federal government funds student aid with tax revenue, and when that money is stolen, it’s a direct loss. Schools that disburse aid to fraudulent students may also be required to repay the Department of Education, creating additional financial strain on institutions already operating on tight margins.

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Editor: Colin Graves

The post Detroit Woman Guilty of $2.5M Student Aid Fraud appeared first on The College Investor.

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