Fellow Nurses Africa | Lagos, Nigeria | 20 December, 2025

Three former operators of now-defunct nursing schools in South Florida have pleaded guilty in federal court to charges linked to selling fake nursing diplomas, transcripts, and school records, marking one of the latest developments in a years-long crackdown on nursing diploma fraud in the United States.
Federal prosecutors say the defendants knowingly ran fraudulent nursing education programs, issuing counterfeit academic documents to individuals who never completed required coursework or clinical training.
These falsified records were then used to qualify buyers to sit for nursing licensure exams and, in some cases, secure jobs in healthcare facilities.
How the scheme worked
According to court filings, the operators: ▪️ Sold fake diplomas, transcripts, and enrollment records
▪️ Charged buyers thousands to tens of thousands of dollars
▪️ Bypassed required nursing education and clinical hours
▪️ Enabled unqualified individuals to pursue licensure
The schools involved operated as “diploma mills,” offering credentials rather than education, prosecutors said .
Part of a larger federal investigation
The guilty pleas are part of an ongoing federal investigation widely known as Operation Nightingale, which has targeted multiple South Florida nursing schools over several years.
Authorities estimate that thousands of fraudulent nursing credentials were sold nationwide through interconnected schemes linked to Florida-based institutions .
Earlier phases of the investigation resulted in:
▪️ Dozens of arrests and indictments
▪️ Closure of multiple nursing schools
▪️ Revocation and review of nursing licenses across several states
Potential sentencing
The three former operators pleaded guilty to wire fraud and conspiracy-related charges and now face significant federal prison sentences, along with financial penalties. Sentencing dates are expected in the coming months.
Why this matters
Federal officials say the case highlights serious patient safety and public trust concerns, as fraudulent credentials undermine the integrity of the nursing profession and place patients at risk.
Regulators have since tightened oversight of nursing schools, credential verification, and licensure pathways, particularly for internationally educated and private-school applicants.
What happens next
Authorities say investigations are ongoing, and additional enforcement actions, including license reviews and civil penalties may follow as regulators continue auditing credentials tied to the scheme.
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