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Former Trump University student recalls aha moment: 'This is a joke’ 

paying a $25 million settlement to students who claimed that they were duped.

lawsuit, the experience is a distant but vivid memory.” data-reactid=”20″>For Sherri Simpson, one of the two former students who filed the lawsuit, the experience is a distant but vivid memory.

“I listened to what Trump said, they put him up on video, ‘Oh, you’re going to get the best of the best,’” Simpson, a bankruptcy lawyer in Florida, recalled in an interview with Yahoo Finance’s Illegal Tender. “You have the same language he’s been using for the last three and a half years here in the country: ‘It’s the top of the what’s at the top. It’s the best. It’s the most beautiful, it’s whatever.’”

operating primarily for financial gain.

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Then-Real estate mogul Donald Trump (R) speaks as university president Michael Sexton (L) looks on during a news conference announcing the establishment of Trump University May 23, 2005 in New York City. (PHOTO: Mario Tama/Getty Images)

‘This is a joke. There’s nothing there.’

free seminars as a way to attract students.” data-reactid=”44″>Trump University, designed to help people and train them to become real estate experts, launched in 2005 and began offering free seminars as a way to attract students.

“It was an upscale hotel, I believe in Coral Gables,” recalled Simpson, who attended his program in Florida in 2010. “And they had a big six-foot thing of Trump there, and they had materials and they gave you, and they had a lecturer.”

his father’s empire.” data-reactid=”46″>The promise of the program was plausible, given that Trump made millions in the industry after taking over his father’s empire.

“My thought process — which turned out to be totally wrong — but my thought process at the time was here’s a guy, big name person,” Simpson said. “Father was a real estate investor, has a lot of money, I knew he had filed bankruptcy, but being in the bankruptcy field, I also knew this was not an abnormal way of handling failed businesses.”

Listen to the episode here.” data-reactid=”48″>This is the third part of Yahoo Finance’s Illegal Tender podcast series on for-profit colleges. Listen to the episode here.

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Students enter a Holiday Inn hotel to take the free intro class taught by the professors of Trump University, as in Donald Trump’s University. (PHOTO: Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

After being told “about Trump University and how wonderful it is,” Simpson said, attendees were nudged to buy into training programs that cost as much as $35,000. Simpson and a friend signed up for a three-day seminar, called the Apprenticeship Program, at the cost of $1,495.

“Immediately I went online, I was very excited to get started, and I went into the course and I started looking around and they had a bunch of videos,” she recalled. “Some of the videos were five years old, many of the videos only related to New York.” 

Very quickly, she knew something was off. 

“I realized: ‘This is a joke,’” she said. “‘There’s nothing there.’” 

The videos were old, they weren’t about investing in Florida, and as she went through more of them, she was surprised at how little use they were to her as a bankruptcy lawyer. And then her mentor for the three days disappeared.

“It was about a year later,” Simpson said. “I think I heard from him. And he said that he never got paid by Trump.”

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Steve Goff, a speaker/insrtuctor, talks to the students during the free 90 minute presentation at Trump University. (PHOTO: Sarah L. Voisin/The The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Fast Train, ITT Tech, and other defunct for-profit schools, Trump University wasn’t an accredited institution. That meant that students couldn’t be put in the position of borrowing thousands of dollars in federal student loans for a phony education certificate or degree, and then struggle to repay.

“Thank goodness that Trump University was not using federal student loans because many more students would have enrolled,” Bob Shireman, an education expert at the Century Foundation, told Illegal Tender. “And Trump University would have filed a lawsuit to keep getting federal student loans. I mean, it really would have been awful.”

Trump University shut down after multiple investigations, complaints, and ultimately, three lawsuits: Two class action suits and one civil complaint by the New York Attorney General.

Trump initially defended the school, vowing to not settle. He quickly reversed that position after becoming the president of the United States.

While Trump University is now defunct, its rise and fall serves as another example of how predatory for-profit schools can thrive in America.

Trump University’s 2010 playbook, which mapped out a graph of emotions that potential students or “clients” go through while being pitched.” data-reactid=”110″>The legal discovery process yielded illuminating documents such as Trump University’s 2010 playbook, which mapped out a graph of emotions that potential students or “clients” go through while being pitched.

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Screenshots from court filings in Cohen v. Trump.

investigation by the Associated Press found that some of the “hand-picked” instructors had some “checkered pasts,” from being convicted of cocaine trafficking to child molestation.)” data-reactid=”131″>The playbook also provided instructors with advice on how to convince reluctant students, including those who were concerned about taking on credit card debt to pay for enrollment. (In 2016, an investigation by the Associated Press found that some of the “hand-picked” instructors had some “checkered pasts,” from being convicted of cocaine trafficking to child molestation.)

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Screenshots from court filings in Cohen v. Trump.

 @aarthiswami. If you attended or worked at a for-profit college and would like to share your experience, reach out to her at [email protected] ” data-reactid=”156″>Aarthi is a reporter for Yahoo Finance covering consumer finance and education. Follow her on Twitter @aarthiswami. If you attended or worked at a for-profit college and would like to share your experience, reach out to her at [email protected] 

 Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, SmartNews, LinkedIn,YouTube, and reddit.” data-reactid=”164″>Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, SmartNews, LinkedIn,YouTube, and reddit.

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