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Viewing cable 06GEORGETOWN60, FRAUD SUMMARY - GEORGETOWN, GUYANA

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06GEORGETOWN60 2006-01-18 21:16 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Georgetown
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 07 GEORGETOWN 000060 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR CA/FPP; 
DEPT ALSO PASS TO KCC; 
POSTS FOR FRAUD PREVENTION AND HUMAN SMUGGLING AND 
TRAFFICKING CENTER, INL/HSTC. 
CARACAS ALSO FOR DHS AND LEGATT 
PORT OF SPAIN ALSO FOR DEA AND A/LEGATT 
BRIDGETOWN ALSO FOR ORA 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: KFRD CVIS CPAS CMGT ASEC KCRM GY
SUBJECT: FRAUD SUMMARY - GEORGETOWN, GUYANA 
 
Ref A) 2005 STATE 205073, 
B) 2005 GEORGETOWN 1043 
C) 2005 GEORGETOWN 1093 
 
1. SUMMARY: Economic and cultural pressure to migrate 
continues to motivate all forms of immigration fraud in 
Guyana.  Cooperation with elements of the Government of 
Guyana (GoG) and civil society enables post to detect and 
combat some types but corruption and cultural support for 
migration complicate the task.  Recent months have seen the 
emergence of new fraud trends, the continuation of old 
trends and the first visa scam fraud conviction in recent 
memory.  END SUMMARY. 
 
------------------ 
COUNTRY CONDITIONS 
------------------ 
 
2. Guyana is an impoverished South American country with a 
population of 751,223 (2002 census).  The population is 
primarily of African or East Indian descent with smaller 
groups of Chinese, Portuguese and Amerindians.  Nearly 90% 
of the population lives along the coast, the interior is 
largely unpopulated and undeveloped.  Guyana is English- 
speaking and culturally West Indian with few cultural or 
economic ties to the rest of South America.  Guyana has the 
second highest incidence of HIV/AIDS in the western 
hemisphere and is one of fifteen focus countries for the 
President's Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).  Guyana 
is democratic but voting is divided on ethnic lines and 
elections have been marred by post-election violence. 
 
3. Legal and illegal emigration from Guyana is very high. 
More than 400,000 Guyanese live in the U.S. and Canada; an 
additional 6800 legally immigrate to the U.S. each year 
(almost 1% of the total population).  Emigration to the UK 
and the rest of Caribbean are also significant.  A recent 
OECD study showed that 85% of Guyanese university graduates 
leave Guyana and that most high school students intend to 
leave.  Crime, poverty and political instability create 
strong push factors while the large overseas Guyanese 
community pulls.  Many Guyanese see emigration as the best 
and only chance for a brighter future. 
 
4. Fraudulent documents and legitimate documents obtained 
under false pretenses are easy to obtain.  Quality control 
and document security are low priorities, passport 
biographic information and amendments are hand-written.  The 
only security features in civil documents are a dry seal and 
signature.  Talented forgers in Guyana sell packages of 
false documents.  Corruption is also high.  Transparency 
International gives Guyana a rating of 2.5 out of 10, one of 
the lowest in the region.  The Thomas Carroll scandal in 
1999 fostered the perception of corruption in the Embassy. 
The procedures for issuing legitimate documents are not very 
secure.  Many births are late registered.  Post has seen 
individuals whose births were legitimately registered when 
they were 20 or older.   Community Health Workers are 
supposed to complete registration documents for births they 
assist but this is not done consistently.  National ID cards 
are issued by the Guyana Elections Commission and can be 
obtained with a birth certificate.  Name changes are quite 
common and can be achieved with little more than a sworn 
affidavit.  These can then be used as seed documents to 
obtain a legitimately issued Guyanese passport.  Post knows 
of at least one smuggler who obtained a legitimate passport 
under a false identity.  (See IV fraud for more details) 
 
--------- 
NIV Fraud 
--------- 
 
5. Continuing enhancements in secure visas lead more 
Guyanese to seek legitimate visas with false seed documents 
such as bank letters, employment letters, marriage 
certificates and property deeds.  The consular section has 
coordinated with several banks to standardize their bank 
letters and improve document security.  Banks are also 
encouraged to include 3 months of transactions with 
statements to guard against applicants who borrow money just 
before applying to inflate their assets.  FPU maintains 
numerous exemplars of genuine and false documents and each 
day verifies documents with the issuer. 
6. Travel histories are difficult to verify and immigration 
officials reportedly backdate reentry stamps for travelers 
who overstay on an NIV.  Informants have also stated that 
the Guyanese Consulate in New York will sell emergency 
certificates to allow Guyanese to return without a passport. 
The passport is then carried in a suitcase and backdated in 
Guyana.  Another tactic to mask an extended stay in the US 
is to apply for another passport claiming the original was 
lost or stolen.  This tactic is so common the Guyana 
Passport Office usually requires a 9 month wait to reissue 
lost or stolen passports.  These schemes allow Guyanese to 
conceal the fact they are staying and working in the US from 
both DHS and consular officers. 
 
7. Third country national applications are not frequent 
except for Chinese from the Guangdong province in southern 
China who immigrate to Guyana in large numbers.  Some come 
for businesses opportunities but others simply make Guyana a 
way stop on the long journey to the United States or Canada. 
Chinese applicants usually speak little English but often 
have business registrations and bank statements indicating 
they are successful entrepreneurs.  In some cases the assets 
exist but have been transferred on paper to visa applicants 
to make them seem qualified. 
 
8. Employment based applications are fairly rare although 
post does receive a significant number of H1B petitions from 
the NYC school system.  These are generally bona fide.  One 
trend recently detected has been to create a shell company 
in the United States and then apply for an L1 intracompany 
transfer visa which would allow them to work in the United 
States. 
 
-------- 
IV FRAUD 
-------- 
 
9. Almost all IV cases are family-based petitions and fraud 
is rampant.  Weak Guyanese civil institutions significantly 
complicate fraud prevention.  As noted above until recently 
birth and marriage certificates have been printed on various 
paper stocks with no security features other than a 
signature and a dry seal.  Recently there has been some 
effort to improve document security but the General 
Registrar reports that authentic birth certificates with 
false information were issued and continue to be issued. 
The General Registrar Office has been very cooperative in 
investigations, usually checking suspect documents within a 
few hours. 
 
10. Poor record keeping and cultural attitudes towards names 
make ordinarily relationship cases difficult.  Many Guyanese 
use nicknames unrelated to their legal names or informally 
adopt a different surname due to a common law relationship 
or birth out of wedlock.  Guyanese law allows people to 
change their names or re-register their births with little 
more than a sworn affidavit.  Consular officers are often 
presented with a pile of documents that try to establish how 
names and identities changed over time.  A surprising number 
of these cases turn out to be bona fide but many are also 
fraudulent. 
 
11. Rampant fraud and poor records have made it necessary to 
use DNA tests much more frequently to establish bona fides 
of claimed relationships.  Post expects to perform 750 tests 
this year, up from 120 two years ago. 
 
12. Marriage and engagement fraud remains the tool of choice 
for bringing extended relatives to the United States.  Post 
estimates that 50% to 75% of IR1, CR1, and K1 cases are 
nothing more than a business or family arrangement to bring 
relatives to the US.  Rampant fraud requires extensive 
review and investigation of nearly all marriage cases. 
Interviewing officers have become skilled at detecting the 
tell-tale signs of sham marriages such as love at first 
sight, whirlwind courtships and scant evidence of 
relationship.  In recent months we have seen marriages 
between siblings, aunts marrying nephews and teenage girls 
marrying first cousins strictly for immigration benefits. 
Post investigations have uncovered a marriage officer who 
sold marriage certificates to couples he had never seen. 
The General Registrar's Office has suspended him.  However, 
some cases involve several generations of cousins and in- 
laws marrying, divorcing and remarrying to bring the entire 
family to the United States.  Elaborate sham weddings are 
staged or applicants use pictures from another wedding or 
religious ceremony as evidence of their marriage. 
 
13. To combat fraud marriage based petitions are now pre- 
screened for fraud indicators.  Lexis/Nexis is a valuable 
tool to determine if petitioners are still living with ex- 
spouses or have family ties with the applicant (see reftel 
B).  Post requires applicants and petitioners to submit 
their parents' birth certificates to determine if a blood 
relationship exists.  Post offers IR-1 and CR-1 applicants 
the option of scheduling a joint interview initially to 
expedite the process since documentary evidence of 
relationship (EOR) is rarely conclusive. 
 
14. When interviews, documentary evidence, research and 
joint interviews are not enough Post conducts field 
investigations.  The number of investigations is increasing. 
Generally investigations have been productive.  Guyana is a 
small country with a very close-knit society.  Checks with 
several neighbors provide good information relating to the 
legitimacy of a marriage.  However some applicants attempt 
to confound these investigations by giving a friend or 
relative's address as their own or by only providing their 
name and village, confident any mail will eventually find 
them.  Once an applicant is located, investigators sometimes 
find neighbors were coached and give prepared answers.  On 
more than one occasion when investigators arrived in a 
neighborhood, phone calls and runners warned surrounding 
houses.  Although some neighbors are not willing to help 
sustain a fraud, Guyana's culture of emigration encourages 
some to help their friends get to America any way they can. 
 
15. Immigration fraud in Guyana is in its second generation. 
People who immigrated under false pretenses are now 
sponsoring other relatives.  Interviewing officers have 
found petitioners who immigrated with false birth 
certificates or who present false naturalization 
certificates.  During interviews and investigations, FPU 
frequently uncovers another sibling or family member who 
already entered into a business marriage to immigrate.  In 
one recent case the petitioner immigrated using a false 
birth certificate and obtained U.S. citizenship.  She then 
returned to Guyana and married her biological brother.  In 
each case post informs the Department of Homeland Security 
and Diplomatic Security for follow-up. 
 
16. IV applicants presenting false documents are usually in 
violation of Guyanese law as well as U.S. immigration law. 
With cooperation from the RSO, the consular section 
regularly refers cases to the Guyana Police Force for 
investigation.  In several cases violators have been 
arrested on the steps of the Embassy with full media 
coverage. The arrest case of the US citizen who fraudulently 
obtained immigration status and subsequently married her 
biological brother received extensive television coverage 
which noted that she is likely to lose her American 
citizenship in addition to being prosecuted for document 
fraud in Guyana.  Post believes prosecutions like this will 
have a deterrent affect on future petitioners and 
applicants. 
 
17. Post sees few employment-based IVs.  One emerging theme 
is L1 intracompany transfers.  Post is investigating several 
cases in which the US company may have been created solely 
for the purpose of applying for an L1 visa. 
 
-------- 
DV Fraud 
-------- 
 
18. Guyana is allocated five diversity visas per year.  We 
have found no significant fraud in DV applications.  Outside 
the Embassy Post has seen cases of companies that collect 
large fees for filling in the free application form.  Post 
routinely warns the public against these scams. 
 
---------------------- 
ACS and Passport Fraud 
---------------------- 
 
19. The theft or misuse of U.S. passports and permanent 
resident cards has grown more appealing since the 
introduction of biometric visa procedures.  Reports of lost 
or stolen travel documents are frequent.  Post believes 
thieves are targeting passports and green cards.  The number 
of lost or stolen passports reported yearly leads post to 
believe that individuals sell USC residency or citizenship 
documents.  In a few cases, where the individual has 
reported several lost/stolen passports we have been able to 
limit their replacement passport. In addition post has seen 
a trend of Guyanese children who have permanent residency or 
even U.S. citizenship being sent back to Guyana to live with 
relatives.  Their passports or permanent resident cards are 
then confiscated and held by the relatives or the parents in 
the U.S.  In these cases post makes every effort to persuade 
the relatives to return the documents.  When that fails the 
documents are reported stolen and new ones are issued. 
 
-------------- 
Adoption Fraud 
-------------- 
 
20. Guyanese have begun to see adoption as another means to 
help family members immigrate (see reftel C).  Post has 
found that many children do not meet the INA definition of 
orphan despite reports from the local adoption board to the 
contrary.  Under Guyanese law, parents relinquishing 
children for adoption must appear before adoption officials 
to do so.  However, in practice, Post has seen that many 
parents do not do so.  Local social workers are required to 
conduct home studies for the adoption board to determine the 
child's home situation.  These officials are vulnerable to 
bribery and some will, for a price, submit reports not 
consistent with a child's actually situation.  In addition, 
at least one adoption has been revoked by the Guyanese 
Supreme Court after the children emigrated to the U.S. 
 
21. The dramatic rise in the number of cases and percentage 
of bad cases led post to review all adoption cases by FPU 
before an interview.  Field investigations are conducted in 
most cases and often reveal the child is living with one or 
both biological parents who can and do provide for the 
child's needs.  In one recent case, two teenagers were 
adopted by an aunt after their father's death literally 
weeks before his immigrant visa interview.  According to the 
Guyanese Adoption Board report the children were living in 
extreme poverty.  A field investigation showed that their 
father's family is one of the richest in Guyana and they are 
living in a large luxurious house with their biological 
mother. 
 
22. Post has also seen cases in which Guyanese who have 
immigrated to the U.S. are interested in adopting a child. 
For cultural reasons they do not choose to adopt a child 
from a local orphanage, instead they locate an impoverished 
child and pay the family to relinquish the child for 
adoption.  Twenty-six out of fifty-three adoption cases 
(48%) were returned to DHS for review and possible 
revocation in FY 2005. 
 
---------------------------------- 
Asylum and other DHS benefit fraud 
---------------------------------- 
 
23. Guyana has few asylum claims.  Prior to FY2005, Post 
processed one family as Visas 93 while in FY2006 post has 
already received 7 Visas 93 cases, indicating that Guyanese 
applying for asylum after entering the U.S. with an NIV or 
attempting to enter with fraudulent travel documents in a 
growing trend.  To date, we have not see relationship fraud 
in Visas 93 cases.  Guyanese typically claim credible fear 
based on racial persecution, crime, or poverty.  Recently 
three Guyanese were granted asylum based on the ridicule 
they will face after being removed from the U.S. 
24.  Post typically processes several transportation letters 
each week for LPRs reporting their green cards lost or 
stolen after arrival in Guyana.  I-551s are a valuable 
commodity in Guyana and imposters frequently attempt to use 
stolen I-551s to enter the U.S. or Canada, usually 
transiting through Port of Spain first. 
 
-------------------------------------------- 
Cooperation with host government authorities 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
25.  Cooperation from Guyanese authorities has been mixed. 
The General Registrar's Office and the Immigration authority 
regularly verify or provide information to the consular 
section.  The Guyana Police Force has been very cooperative 
in pursuing fraud cases referred by the Embassy.  Media 
sources (including the government-owned media) have given 
excellent coverage to fraud warnings and arrests.  However 
at higher levels cooperation disappears.  Guyana is a small 
country with a close-knit society; the identities of most 
alien smugglers and narcotics traffickers are open secrets 
but they are rarely arrested and almost never convicted. 
Post has significant doubts about the validity and 
reliability of police certificates and often relies on media 
accounts to identify criminals.  While Post has reliable 
information that many IV and NIV visa applicants are 
involved in alien or narcotics smuggling, it is difficult in 
most cases to sustain 2C or 6E findings.  Local authorities 
do not want to provide information, even if it exists, about 
these individuals as they are often prominent members of 
society (including members of the police force and the 
government).  This is part of a much larger problem of 
Guyana's weak civil society and makes it very difficult to 
target the large, well established rings. 
 
--------------------------- 
AREAS OF PARTICULAR CONCERN 
--------------------------- 
 
26. Guyana is a transshipment point for narcotics to enter 
the United States and the influence of narcotic traffickers 
is growing in society.  In two recent cases, the 
relationship was legitimate but the applicants were 
suspected narcotics traffickers who have never been 
arrested.  There was not enough evidence to sustain a 2C 
refusal on them.  In one case the suspected trafficker was 
arrested in Barbados on drug trafficking charges prior to 
issuance.  In the other case the Guyana Police Force has 
offered to investigate and inform us if they find any hard 
evidence.  In another case post learned that a suspected 
narcotics trafficker and death squad member is a permanent 
resident of the United States.  Post has been unable to find 
sufficient evidence of his complicity in drug trafficking or 
murders to permit DHS to revoke his status.  These examples 
clearly show how Guyana's combination of a high emigration 
and weak law enforcement pose a threat to national security. 
 
27. Due to a deeply held belief that all government 
officials are corrupt and that anything can be bought, 
Guyanese are frequently victims of various visa scams.  This 
belief is reinforced by the Thomas Carroll visa-selling 
scandal and a recent case of Canadian passports being sold 
by a corrupt local employee at the Canadian high commission. 
Embassy officers from the Ambassador on down are routinely 
told by Guyanese that someone in the Embassy is selling 
visas though no one is ever able to provide specific 
examples.  Consular officers have reported no significant 
attempts to bribe or coerce them. 
 
28. Clever con men have used the names of legitimate Embassy 
personnel to convince others they can provide visas. 
Recently a Guyanese con man was arrested for impersonating a 
U.S. Embassy official and persuading people to pay thousands 
of dollars in `security deposits' for immigrant visas.  He 
used photocopies of Embassy letter head and on at least one 
occasion told his victims to wait on the Embassy steps for 
him to come with their visas.  In December he was convicted 
of 20 counts of fraud.  Despite this success just a week 
after his arrest the Embassy learned of another group asking 
applicants to pay hundreds of dollars for medical tests. 
The Guyana Police Force was notified and is investigating. 
Soon afterwards a woman contacted a consular section FSN 
fraud investigator about selling visas.  The woman was 
identified and her visa was revoked.  Meanwhile the sister- 
in-law of an FSN from the budget section claimed she could 
provide visas with his assistance.  The FSN was unaware of 
his name was being used in this the scam.  When the victims 
received nothing disgruntled customers threatened the 
oblivious staff member, who reported the case to the RSO and 
local police.  An investigation led to the arrest of his 
sister-in-law. 
 
29. Post regularly advises the public of scams and reminds 
them that legitimate visas can only be obtained at the U.S. 
Embassy.  In order to better educate the public about policy 
and legitimate fees post is launching a weekly question and 
answer column in a local paper. 
 
--------------------- 
STAFFING AND TRAINING 
--------------------- 
 
30. With the addition of a new consular officer position 
under the Consular Associate Replacement Program (CARP) a 
Fraud Prevention/American Citizen Services rotation was 
created.  This officer has responsibility for two FSNs in 
the Fraud Prevention Unit and fraud investigations.  This 
October the Consul completed the Fraud Prevention Manager 
course at FSI and most consular officers have taken the 
advanced name-checking course.  Post is requesting the 
addition of an FS-03 full-time fraud prevention manager and 
an additional FSN fraud investigator. 
 
31. The FPU Manager is the Consular Section Chief but the 
FPU Staff consists of a rotational ACS/FPU officer: 
 
Alexander McLaren (July 2005 to December 2005) 
FSO - Vice Consul 
Training:  DHS - Detection of Fraudulent Documents and 
Imposters (at post), Canadian Immigration - Detection of 
Fraudulent Documents (at post) 
 
Christine Meyer (January 2006 to June 2006) 
FSO - Vice Consul 
Training: Advanced Name Checking (FSI) 
 
Rhonda Wells (July 2005 to December 2006) 
FSO - Vice Consul 
Training: Antifraud orientation (at post), Advanced Name 
Checking (FSI, April 2006) 
 
There are also two full-time local staff: 
 
Marcia Dehnert 
FSN - Senior Fraud Investigator 
Training: FPU Workshop (Ft. Lauderdale) 
 
Adepemo Peters 
FSN - Fraud Investigator 
 
32. In May of 2005 two DHS officers visited post and 
conducted fraudulent document and imposter training for 
immigration and airline officials.  For many of them this 
was the first and only training they had received on this 
subject.  Post requests another visit by DHS or CA/FPP and 
PowerPoint presentations and exemplars that can be used to 
train local officials. 
 
----------- 
CONCLUSIONS 
----------- 
 
33. High levels of legal and illegal migration and weak 
civil society make Guyana a very challenging consular 
environment.  However cooperation from certain aspects of 
the GoG and new consular tools have allowed for considerable 
progress in combating fraud.  The addition of a full-time FS- 
03 fraud officer, expanded access to Lexis/Nexis to more 
than one officer will better prepare Post to combat fraud. 
BULLEN