US citizen allegedly got paid to marry African women for papers

A Massachusetts man married six African women over a decade — but not for love, federal officials say.

Worcester resident Peter Hicks, 57, wed a series of women from sub-Saharan Africa between 2003 and 2013 to help them obtain legal status in the United States, federal prosecutors said.

Hicks was charged with one count of marriage fraud this week, according to a criminal complaint unsealed by the US attorney’s office Tuesday. It alleges that things started unraveling in 2014, when federal law enforcement agents uncovered evidence that Hicks married six foreign national women, and filed for immigration benefits for four of them.

“During a routine interview as part of his application for benefits for a non-citizen spouse, Hicks admitted to marrying three of the women solely to obtain immigration benefits for them,” the complaint alleges.

After his confession, Hicks had another interview with immigration officials in January 2015, and allegedly confessed to making money from the fraudulent marriages, according to the complaint.

“Hicks admitted that he was involved in marriage fraud for approximately 13 years, and that he received payments to marry undocumented African women and to find willing United States citizens to marry illegal aliens for the purpose of allowing the women to establish legal status in the United States,” the complaint alleges.

In one of the incidents, the complaint alleges, Hicks was still married to one woman at the time of his marriage to another one.

“Hicks also fraudulently claimed on an immigration form submitted on behalf of one of his spouses, that he had only one former spouse and that he had only petitioned for immigration benefits for the one former spouse, when, in fact, Hicks had actually been married five times and submitted requests for immigration benefits for a number of his former spouses,” the complaint states.

Hicks made his initial appearance in federal court in Worcester on Tuesday. If found guilty, he faces up to five years in prison.

Information on his attorney was not immediately available.

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