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50 People Charged in Largest-Ever College Admissions Scam


Fifty people were charged Tuesday in a scheme in which wealthy parents allegedly bribed college coaches and other insiders to get their children into some of the nation’s most selective schools.

Federal authorities called it the biggest college admissions scam ever prosecuted by the U.S. Justice Department, with the parents accused of paying an estimated $25 million in bribes.

At least nine athletic coaches and 33 parents, many of them prominent in law, finance, fashion, the food and beverage industry and other fields, were charged. Dozens were arrested by midday.

“These parents are a catalog of wealth and privilege,” U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling said in announcing the results of a fraud and conspiracy investigation code-named Operation Varsity Blues.

The coaches worked at such schools as Yale, Stanford, Georgetown, Wake Forest, the University of Texas, the University of Southern California and the University of California at Los Angeles. A former Yale soccer coach pleaded guilty and helped build the case against others.

Two more of those charged — Stanford’s sailing coach and the college-admissions consultant at the very center of the scheme — pleaded guilty Tuesday in Boston. Others appeared in court and were released on bail.

No students were charged, with authorities saying that in many cases the teenagers were unaware of what was going on. Several of the colleges involved made no mention of taking any action against the students.

The scandal is certain to inflame longstanding complaints that children of the wealthy and well-connected have the inside track in college admissions — sometimes through big, timely donations from their parents — and that privilege begets privilege.

College consultants were not exactly shocked by the allegations.

“This story is the proof that there will always be a market for parents who have the resources and are desperate to get their kid one more success,” said Mark Sklarow, CEO of the Independent Educational Consultants Association. “This was shopping for name-brand product and being willing to spend whatever it took.”

The central figure in the scheme was identified as admissions consultant William “Rick” Singer, founder of the Edge College & Career Network of Newport Beach, California. He pleaded guilty, as did Stanford’s John Vandemoer.

Singer’s lawyer, Donald Heller, said his client intends to cooperate fully with prosecutors and is “remorseful and contrite and wants to move on with his life.”

Prosecutors said that parents paid Singer big money from 2011 through last month to bribe coaches and administrators to falsely make their children look like star athletes to boost their chances of getting accepted. The consultant also hired ringers to take college entrance exams for students, and paid off insiders at testing centers to correct students’ answers.

Some parents spent hundreds of thousands of dollars and some as much as $6.5 million to guarantee their children’s admission, officials said.

“For every student admitted through fraud, an honest and genuinely talented student was rejected,” Lelling said.

Several defendants were charged with conspiracy to commit fraud, punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

Lelling said the investigation is continuing and authorities believe other parents were involved. The IRS is also investigating, since some parents allegedly disguised the bribes as charitable donations. The colleges themselves are not targets, the prosecutor said.

The investigation began when authorities received a tip about the scheme from someone they were interviewing in a separate case, Lelling said. He did not elaborate.

Authorities said coaches in such sports as soccer, sailing, tennis, water polo and volleyball took payoffs to put students on lists of recruited athletes, regardless of their ability or experience. Once they were accepted, many of these students didn’t play the sports in which they supposedly excelled.

The applicants’ athletic credentials were falsified with the help of staged photographs of them playing sports, or doctored photos in which their faces were pasted onto the bodies of genuine athletes, authorities said.

Prosecutors said parents were also instructed to claim their children had learning disabilities so that they could take the ACT or SAT by themselves and get extra time. That made it easier to pull off the tampering, prosecutors said.

Among the parents charged was Gordon Caplan of Greenwich, Connecticut, co-chairman of the international law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher, based in New York. He and other parents did not immediately return telephone or email messages for comment.

Caplan was accused of paying $75,000 to get a test supervisor to correct the answers on his daughter’s ACT exam after she took it. In a conversation last June with a cooperating witness, he was told his daughter needed to “be stupid” when a psychologist evaluated her for learning disabilities that would entitle her to more time to take the test, according to court papers.

The witness described the scheme as “the home run of home runs.”

“And it works?” Caplan asked.

“Every time,” the witness responded, prompting laughter from both.

A number of colleges moved quickly to fire or suspend the coaches and distance themselves from the scandal, portraying themselves as victims. Stanford fired the sailing coach, and USC dropped of its water polo coach and an athletic administrator. UCLA suspended its soccer coach, and Wake Forest did the same with its volleyball coach.

Actress Lori Loughlin and her husband allegedly gave $500,000 to have their two daughters labeled as recruits to the USC crew team, even though neither participated in the sport. Their 19-year-old daughter Olivia Jade Giannulli, a social media star with a popular YouTube channel, is now at USC.

Court documents said actress Felicity Huffman paid $15,000 that she disguised as a charitable donation so that her daughter could take part in the entrance-exam cheating scam.

Court papers said a cooperating witness met with Huffman and her husband, actor William H. Macy, at their Los Angeles home and explained to them that he “controlled” a testing center and could have somebody secretly change her daughter’s answers. The person told investigators the couple agreed to the plan.

Macy was not charged; authorities did not say why.

The couple’s daughter, Sofia, is an aspiring actress who attends Los Angeles High School of the Arts.

A spokeswoman for Loughlin had no comment.

In another case, a young woman got into Yale in exchange for $1.2 million from the family, prosecutors said. A false athletic profile created for the student said she had been on China’s junior national development soccer team.

Prosecutors said Yale coach Rudolph Meredith received $400,000, even though he knew the student did not play competitive soccer. He did not return messages seeking comment.

Sklarow, the independent education consultant unconnected to the case, said the scandal “certainly speaks to the fact that the admissions process is broken.”

“It’s so fraught with anxiety, especially at the elite schools,” he said, “that I think it can’t be surprising that millionaires who have probably never said no to their kids are trying to play the system in order to get their child accepted.”

(AP)



4 Responses

  1. This is a strange story. What they did was not nice but why is it illegal? I read that they are being charged with mail fraud. What does the mail have to do with this?

  2. Affirmative action for the rich and well connected?????

    They all can be charged under state law with plain “fraud” (telling falsehoods to gain an economic advantage), but the Federal government lacks jurisdiction unless it involves either interstate activities or use of the mail (which includes telephones or internet). Since this principal defendant acted nationally, it makes sense for the federal courts to hear the case, though they can all be charged for the same crime in state courts, either in the state they lived in or the state where the college was located. Since some of the applications were to state schools, they can also be charged with theft of government services.

  3. > Aryeh Zelasko What does the mail have to do with this?

    honest services fraud component of the mail fraud statue, 18 U.S.C. § 1346

    > For the purposes of this chapter, the term “scheme or artifice to defraud” includes a scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.

    Thus it is a federal crime to deprive someone else of an “honest service”, even if the employer is a private enterprise (other sections have stricter rules for government employees or government funds). Though I am not a lawyer (nor am I in the U.S.) it looks like the idea is that when the entrance exams are given, then those employees who take money to help cheat have committed the criminal act of defrauding the employer (who is responsible for the integrity of the exams) of the honest service of doing his job to safeguard the integrity of the exams. § 1346 specifically makes it a crime to use such things as “wire, radio, or television communication” (includes mail) when it is used “for the purpose of executing such scheme”.

    The Supreme Court has limited the application of this “honest service” crime to cases where an actual bribe was taken in order to pervert the employer’s goal of providing an honest service. However, someone with a fiduciary duty is treated more strictly under the law, which means a trusted employee (say working for a financial institution) who chooses investments based on the investment benefiting himself rather than for the benefit of the employer has violated this crime.

  4. Some years ago, several aspiring applicants to the University of Pennsylvania Law school petitioned the court alleging discrimination. The applicants learned that another applicant with much lesser credentials than theirs was accepted. After a prolonged court battle, the Board of Regents of the law school admitted that indeed they admitted said student with lesser credentials. What they did no say was that the accepted applicant was Mrs. Pierre DuPont, wife of the governor of Delaware.

    No more Federal funds to U of P on such outrageous discrimination ????? NOT ON YOUR LIFE !!!!

    The head of Philadelphia City Counsel, Francis X. Schwartz, many years ago was convicted of accepting bribes to enable applicants to be accepted to medical schools in Philly—he was convicted and served time.

    I would like at least 10 of the largest known medical schools in the USA to submit to a duly authorized judicial body the list of all applicants to their medical schools, and also provide a list of those accepted and those rejected. I would then have a team of expert investigators/data processing types/probability majors review the data and establish why, how, and any unusual correlations that reflect bias, discrimination on the basis of race, economics, nepotism, etc.
    No more Federal funds to medical schools on such outrageous discrimination ????? NOT ON YOUR LIFE !!!!

    A goy,
    Gerry Mullen

    PS: Everyone loses you, me, America and Olam–when our standards, academically and morally are LOWERED !!

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