On April 10, 2024, an Army soldier named Samuel J. Meeks stood beneath a gazebo in Green Cove Springs, Florida, smiling for wedding photographs with a Chinese national he had just married. Four days later, federal prosecutors suggested the ceremony was less a union than a $35,000 security breach.
Meeks, an active-duty soldier then-stationed at Fort Campbell, was a prize recruit for a Jacksonville-based ring led by Anny Chen, Yafeng Deng, and Hailing Feng.
Between 2023 and early 2024, this trio didn’t just facilitate green cards; they functioned as a boutique concierge for foreign nationals seeking high-level access. Investigators recovered a “tactical manual” from the group — bilingual instructions detailing how to structure payments across multiple bank accounts to evade federal triggers and how to rehearse for a “staged” domestic life.
The ambition of the Chen network was unique in its focus on the Department of Defense. While Meeks was their Army mark, the group had already successfully processed four former Navy members who pleaded guilty prior to the larger indictment.
They specialized in exploiting the “presumption of trust” afforded to the military. By securing Defense Department identification cards for Chinese nationals, they weren’t just bypassing the border; they were providing keys to base access and secure installations.
Jacksonville is an autopsy of a national security collapse: When the state treats a uniform as a walking testimonial of character, it creates a vulnerability that can be reverse-engineered for the price of a used Camry.
The scale of this industry is no longer speculative. In Houston, Ashley Yen Nguyen — known as “Tyra” — ran a marriage-fraud machine that processed over 500 sham marriages, with Vietnamese nationals paying between $50,000 and $70,000.
In Boston, Marcialito Biol Benitez operated an “agency” in Brick, NJ, that arranged 600 marriages. Benitez was the architect of the “VAWA Pivot.” When a spouse became uncooperative, Benitez coached migrants to file domestic-abuse claims under the Violence Against Women Act, knowing that a trauma-based claim effectively shields an applicant from aggressive interrogation.
The network expanded into Maryland and NYC under Ella Zuran, Tatiana Sigal, and Alexandra Tkach. In April 2025, federal agents dismantled their operation, which paired migrants with citizens across state lines to dilute the paper trail. These brokers realized that certain claims — identity-based and trauma-based — are functionally shielded from cross-examination by a bureaucracy terrified of being insensitive.
The logical conclusion of this “politeness trap” is playing out in the United Kingdom. On April 15, a BBC undercover investigation exposed a black market in fake same-sex asylum claims. For £7,000, “advisers” provided identity starter packs-staged club photos and fake partner letters. The most revealing moment occurred at a support meeting in East London, where an attendee was caught on tape laughing: “Nobody is gay here. Not even 0.01 percent.”
The data confirms the surrender. In Britain, Pakistani nationals accounted for 42% of all sexuality-based asylum claims in 2023. Nearly two-thirds were approved at the first stage. Canada provides a parallel: The spousal category now accounts for one-quarter of all family-class admissions.
In Ontario, the rise of “ghost consultants” has turned “marriages of convenience” into an openly advertised commodity.
Modern vetting has drifted toward claims that depend on feelings rather than facts. A military spouse is harder to question; a domestic-abuse allegation is harder to interrogate; a manufactured romance in a Toronto suburb is harder to disprove than a visa overstay. The brokers know that even a lazy judge frequently overlooks bizarre, improvised scripts, provided the performance is delivered with enough practiced conviction.
We are told that compassion requires us to be less judgmental. But when compassion is divorced from discernment, it becomes a subsidy for fraud and a green light for foreign subversion. Every staged romance and invented tragedy devalues the currency of truth and leaves the state vulnerable to those who view our empathy as a market inefficiency to be exploited.
The greatest threat to a liberal immigration system isn’t the outsider breaking the rules; it’s the insider who has turned the rules into a farce. Confidence is not restored by better paperwork- it is restored by the courage to stop treating a business receipt like a vow.
Kevin Cohen is CEO of RealEye, Head of Cyber Intelligence at Trident Group America, and a regular contributor to The Wall Street Journal, The Telegraph, The Spectator.
This story originally appeared on NYPost
