Following high-end investigations, the Texas Board of Nursing, United States, has announced that it has charged no fewer than 75 nurses in court over issues bordering on falsification of certificates.
On the list on the board’s website, 43 of the names were identified as nurses of Nigerian origin.
The PUNCH reported in February that 18 Nigerian nurses in the US were charged with certificate forgery.
The US authorities had said that the list would be updated continuously as the board received additional information about “the fraudulent diploma/transcript scheme.”
Checks by our correspondent revealed that the list had grown longer, with the number of Nigerians rising from 18 to 43.
The investigation, tagged ‘Operation Nightingale,’ was described as a multi-state coordinated law enforcement action involving the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General and was launched on January 25, 2023, to arrest individuals engaged in a scheme to sell false and fraudulent nursing degree diplomas and transcripts.
Commenting on the matter, the board said, “The board has filed formal charges against the following nurses for fraudulently obtaining educational credentials. The board is authorised to file formal charges against a nurse if probable cause exists that the nurse has committed an act listed in Tex. Occ. Code §301.452(b) or that violates other laws. See Tex. Occ. Code §301.458. Further, formal charges are publicly available. See Tex. Occ. Code §301.466(b).
“Please note that formal charges are not a final disciplinary action, and a nurse is permitted to work, as a nurse, while formal charges are pending.
The PUNCH reports that the Texas Board of Nursing charged the health workers in the District Court for the Southern District of Florida, saying they allegedly participated in a wire fraud scheme that created an illegal licensing and employment shortcut for aspiring nurses.
According to the charge documents, the scheme fraudulently sells nursing degree diplomas and transcripts from accredited Florida-based nursing schools to individuals seeking licences and jobs as registered nurses and licensed practical/vocational nurses.
Omar Aybar, the special agent in charge of the investigations, said the alleged selling and purchasing of nursing diplomas and transcripts to willing but unqualified individuals is a crime that potentially endangers patients’ health and safety and insults the honourable nursing profession.
The overall scheme involved the distribution of more than 7,600 fake nursing diplomas issued by three South Florida-based nursing schools: Siena College in Broward County, Fl; Palm Beach School of Nursing in Palm Beach County, Fl; Sacred Heart International Institute in Broward County.