Get Gephardt: Company offers to do homework for students; punishment for cheating varies


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OREM — James Blaylock doesn't need help with his homework. He is an accountant who graduated from BYU a long time ago. Still, when he got a flyer from a company called The Write Choice Docs, he knew it was something that he could not just throw away. Its offer is not subtle: "We do homework for college students!"

"I was very concerned," he said. "That is so brazen, and I'm so disturbed by it."

Aside from cheating being, you know, wrong, Blaylock is also concerned about what this could mean for a young person's future if they get busted.

"Somebody's going to get caught," he said. "Their life is going to be ruined."

He asked KSL Investigators to take a look.

KSL Investigators' first thought was, "This is probably just a scam trying to steal your credit card number." But, using investigative reporter skills that Gephardt learned in school by actually doing the work, he was able to get past the anonymous website domain and to track down where The Write Choice Docs, LLC is located: Hampton, Georgia. Turns out, it is an actual business registered with that state.

KSL Investigators reached out to the company through its online chat. KSL-TV got a call back from someone who refused to give his or her name, but the caller ID closely matches the name on the business registration. The caller wanted to know when the story would air so they could "be ready for the influx of orders." Then the person hung up before KSL Investigators could get a question out.

"I think it's crazy," said Scott Trotter, a senior director of communications at Utah Valley University. "We bring students here so they can succeed, they can learn how to succeed. We teach them they can do that without cheating. They have the ability to do it. And here you have a company that's encouraging them to do it. I was shocked, actually."

Trotter says punishments for cheating can vary, but worst case, a student could get booted from school.

The Write Choice Docs seems to know that people who use its service could get into trouble because, buried in the terms and conditions, it talks about how its papers are merely meant to be used for "reference and/or learning purposes." And it does "not condone the act of using our products to achieve higher marks within educational institutions, nor do we vouch for the results."

"If we don't follow rules in our society, things break down," said Blaylock, who says The Write Choice Docs is offering students the wrong choice.

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Matt Gephardt, KSL-TVMatt Gephardt
Matt Gephardt has worked in television news for more than 20 years, and as a reporter since 2010. He is now a consumer investigative reporter for KSL TV. You can find Matt on X at @KSLmatt or email him at matt@ksl.com.
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