It allegedly induced students in some of the state's poorest neighbourhoods to sign forms they could not read by offering them free laptops. In October, Fairfax Media also revealed that students had been paid cash to unwittingly sign up to tens of thousands of dollars worth of debt. The house bought by Unique International College and its owner Amarjhit Khela. In an interview with Indian newspaper Jagbani, Mr Khela, the owner of the college above Silly Willy's $2 shop in Granville, lashed out at "mischievous persons who have been spoiling his and his family's names". He said he would appeal ASQA's decision to cancel the college's licence after only 3 per cent of Unique's students graduated between July and December 2014 and that he would take "legal action against all these irresponsible newspapers and reporters". "Some cheap personalities and papers have reported that I have disappeared somewhere," he wrote in another message to friends last week.

"By the grace of God I have become even fatter and can be noticed easily from distance. I am working daily at home, at college and other businesses." Unique International College, above Silly Willy's $2 shop in Granville. He said that the college, with a roll of 2000, was continuing to operate five days a week. It is legally allowed to do so until its appeal period expires on November 23. Internal emails sent by a staff member highlight concerns over correspondence sent to student emails that never existed. The Kenthurst property formerly owned by Unique International College. Credit:Domain

"Don't worry about [the] failure notice you keep on sending mails to students," a senior manager at the college responded. The college's forum discussions in 2014 also reveal no responses from students to questions asked by trainers in salon management and marketing. The chandelier at the Kenthurst property formerly owned by Unique International College weighed in at one tonne. Credit:Domain In one instance, one trainer said she had begun teaching a classroom full of Filipino pensioners who thought they had been signed up for a free diploma of marketing, despite the course actually costing up to $20,000. Mr Khela told Jagbani that his colleges had always followed all the rules and would continue to do so in future.

A Facebook post pomoting the visa business at Unique International College. "If this college has 2000 students and 50 staff how it can run from a room?" he said. Fairfax Media can reveal that the college also operated a visa business, BISA Education Consultancy, out of its tiny campus in Sydney's west. The story about Unique International College in Indian newspaper Jagbani. Credit:Unique International College The visa business, targeted at the Filipino community, was run in partnership with Ryan Agcaoili, a "Qualified Education Agent Counsellor." Mr Agcaoili also received Unique's teacher of the year award in 2014.

Land title documents also reveal that just three months before the ACCC launched its crackdown on Unique International College, Mr Khela sold the $5.8 million home he bought in his company's name to two other executive members of Unique International College, Jasmeen Kaur and Mandeep Kang. The home comes complete with a one-tonne chandelier, 12-car garage, and a tiered-seating cinema. Last week he urged his friends in the Nepalese, Punjabi and Sikh community to be on the look out on for any negative comments about him. "You can help in one way my friends, that if you ever see a negative comment please send screen shot of that (post, date and time with comments). This will be the biggest help," he wrote. Mr Khela is due to lodge his appeal to ASQA on November 23, the day before he is due to appear before the Federal Court.