In 2022, the Polish
Newsweek started to publish reports on Collegium Humanum functioning as a
degree mill. The C.H. sued the magazine multiple times, prompting Newsweek to seek redress. While first investigations started in late 2022, large scale prosecution by
CBA took place in February 2024, with seven management cadres, among them provost
Paweł Czarnecki, being arrested as a suspect
criminal association. Czarnecki was released in mid November. In the meantime, more officials involved in C.H. and/or other suspect organizations had been arrested. Among these are three rectors of private universities, accreditation agency cadres, former C.H. and other university staff and board members of several public companies, such as airports. The former provost faces, as of late autumn 2024, approximately 100 charges, among them
sexual harassment of employees. His alleged uncle
Ryszard Czarnecki and his wife are inquired for furthering the machinations of C.H. within various Polish departments for material gains. Among the graduates of C.H. are hundreds of public servants and politicians, many of them being aligned to the
PiS party, which ruled Poland until
late 2023 and the
PO party, which has been part of the
governing coalition since December 2023. Due to a legal change in 2017, candidates for board membership in
public sector companies had to come up with a
MBA, in many cases issued by the newly established C.H within just a few month period of enrollment and for a fraction of the usual cost. In 2018,
accreditation rules for
postgraduate studies had been eased significantly, doing away with the compulsory review process. In late March 2024, the council for public companies ruled that C.H. MBA titles are no longer perceived as a form of qualification. The Ministry for Higher Education is working on an examination process, with false degrees being annulled. A clause is effective whereby mere clients of C.H. won't face charges. In
Wrocław and
Poznań, key figures within the PO party dominated city authorities hold C.H. degrees, such as
Jacek Sutryk. Collegium Humanum is reported to have functioned in an international network of private educational institutions of dubious repute, while maintaining branches in Austria as well as in
Post-communist countries, among them Czechia, Slovakia and Uzbekistan. The university awarded numerous distinctions to well-known figures in show business such as the singer
Doda and Irena Santor as a marketing scheme. Additionally, the university honored politician
Tomasz Misiak, who is known for his involvement in numerous scandals and is facing criminal charges in Wrocław, with a Medal of Success. Misiak was actively involved in the university's life and remained associated with the institution by giving lectures, interviews, and speeches on its behalf. Among international media, the British
Spectator came up with an early comment on the issues concerning the C.H. scandal:"The example of Collegium Humanum looks extreme in its naked opportunism, but it would seem to point to a broader problem of over-reliance on credentials as a proxy for skill, and the blurring of the lines between academic accreditation (useful as that can be) and business acumen. Only the truly skilled will be able to find a way out of this crisis."Later, another scandal arose in Indonesia, when the
Indonesian Constitutional Court published that
Arsul Sani, one of their judges, is an alumnus of Collegium Humanum's
Jakarta branch. Indonesian media contested his doctoral degree. == Bachelor's and Master's degree programmes ==