NAAS-NEWS Correspondent Abraham Levi reports:
It has been at least over eight years since a federal criminal complaint was filed against Joshua Centor for conduct and acts he committed against an affiliate of National Academy of American Scholars, and others. Federal records indicate that Josh Centor did not formally refute or deny criminal allegations that included claims that he submitted a false, fraudulent, and incomplete financial-aid application, and that he violated numerous NAAS EAS/N2 Rules, Joshua Centor
Upset, bitter, and disgruntled because he was passed over by superior applicants in a merit-based competition, federal records indicate that Josh Centor then sought to use federal agencies and U.S. tax money as his personal piggy bank. Instead of seeking the services of a private attorney, and using his own funds, a federal complaint alleges that Josh Centor instead sought to corruptly influence federal authorities with false, deceptive, untrue, and misleading statements.
On January 19th, 2009, a person referring to themselves as 'Larry Centor' was caught posting a series of false and deceptive statements on a perverse website. The same person named 'Larry Centor' was subsequently determined to be associated with a series of other criminal websites, and each one included references to the name of 'Josh Centor.'
NAAS has now published an UnOfficial Criminal Websites guide for consumers.
http://www.naas.org/facts.php
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