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Wednesday, 7 September 2011

False Circles School Has Attracted The Attention Of A Teenager From Overseas, Are Blocked

False Circles School Has Attracted The Attention Of A Teenager From Overseas, Are Blocked
Although unemployment is rising and the sky high credit card debt for many Americans, the "American dream" is still alive and kicking. Although I believe in careers possible in this country between the sometimes wavering, the chance to be rewarded with a lot of hard work still strikes a strong response by the hope of immigrants, especially those who harbor dreams of a future in professional sports.
Unfortunately, a handful of foreign prospects and some of the closest to the house served a slice of American Pie sale by a South Charleston, West Virginia, the academy, who claimed to be a runway of basketball talent. Many officials are now saying that West Virginia Prep Academy, which was to open Tuesday after the authorization was filed by former College basketball player Daniel Hicks, who is shown at right, was nothing more than fraudulent activities that take designed to create a quick buck for Hicks himself.

As first studied by the Charleston Gazette, the school alleged, West Virginia Prep Academy, received fees of $ 500 from just seven students, but 20 were found to coexist in a small apartment for three rooms in South Charleston, where officials discovered them. At the time, said South Charleston Mayor Frank Mullens, students living in cramped conditions, with no mattress and had not been fed for at least two days.
"When they arrived we had to stay in the triangle, but we had been promised to bed, get fed three times a day, our clothes washed," Baltimore teenager Corey Saunders, the first player in school to speak publicly, said the meeting preparation. "Nobody has taken place. We left the gym three hours a day, was to get food for themselves.
"Many of the players, not much money. We had to spend our own money for food. It was just horrible. Once we arrived we discovered more about his past. He went to prison for fraud, drugs. He brought coaches thought that the earth was a great player, but he was saying something about the fraud. "
After the teens were found in the flat, adolescents have been established at the Ramada near you see below after city officials approached the owner of the hotel and explained the situation to the players was in Basketball

"We're trying to take care of these kids here, even abroad - France and Africa - are under the impression that they are going to an academy to prepare for an education and play basketball," Mullens said the Gazette.
Although all 20 children who were related to the program has now left the South in Charleston, West Virginia Research Prep Academy is just the beginning. Gazette and the Associated Press reported that local police and the FBI were opening up to the Hicks investigation.
"This is a very complicated and we just break the iceberg is a lot of it," South Charleston Police Chief Brad Rinehart told the Journal. "We talked about the on-call prosecutor. This could be a thing or a thing of the Federal State, and this is something we are trying to find out.
".'re Good kids I have about seven of them on the bus last night and a couple of them hugged me goodbye felt cheated since they started and drop -. put their trust in [Hicks]."
For his part, Hicks continues to insist that his goal was always to bring new, positive, and the academic setting of basketball in South Charleston. Rather, the director of the new school has been argued that the majority of students in the apartment had not paid her tuition, and the Academy were simply determined by a coach of Oklahoma, who planned to coach basketball teams of the upcoming school.
"Some of them are children 20 years of age who do not have a birth certificate," said Hicks, who played college basketball at New Mexico State and Concord. "As I put them in my school?"
Regardless of where the students went home, it is clear that Hicks was still in compliance with such planning, which is needed for the new school's basketball team, let alone the whole school. Matthew Moyer, who coordinates the events in Lexington, Ky.-based Rally Prep Sports BLEID source said Hicks at him with great interest to enter four teams in his school BLEID tournaments run throughout the academic year 2010-11.
"I ‪ called and asked me to put his four teams [three men, one of the women] as many games as possible," the source said Moyer Prep Rally through Facebook. "We have put together 20 of the Agreement, we will present the game. He told me he was the parish, who supports his team and he would send a cashier's check. Never heard of him. I guess he used the program to promote ' Recruitment of games wrong. ‬
‪ "He called me through our website and dropped some names of former British players for me. He told me to stop using a team practice on my way back to Durham, NC I ' I stopped in the gym when he wanted and he was going Zumba. The gym manager laughed when I asked where was the current practice. It was the last time I even tried to contact him . "‬
It is clear that federal authorities want to talk at length with Hicks today, as the parents of a teen, tricked 20 trips to West Virginia to join a basketball academy that has never been and never would be.
"Not just the basketball players, on average," said Carlton South Charleston City Manager Lee the Gazette. "I saw them play and the children of France and Africa are important NBA.
"[The French player's mother] is broken, because she had to decide whether to send his son coach Oklahoma or the flight back to France."

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