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From:
leroysoetoro@kaga.com
https://www.insider.com/college-admissions-cheating-scandal-full-list- people-charged-2019-3
Federal prosecutors have charged more than 50 people with participating in
a scheme to get students into colleges by cheating on entrance exams or
bribing athletic coaches.
The parents charged include the actresses Lori Loughlin and Felicity
Huffman, as well as executives at prominent companies, venture-capital
firms, and law offices.
Coaches and test administrators were also among the people charged. Here's
the full list.
More than 50 people have been charged with participating in the college admissions scandal, a scheme involving bribery, money laundering, and
document fabrication to unfairly get students admitted to elite colleges.
Court documents reviewed by Insider said that the scheme included bribing college athletic coaches to recruit students regardless of their athletic ability, as well as cheating on entrance exams.
Prosecutors said the scheme was led by William Singer, a college-prep professional. He has pleaded guilty.
"Parents paid Singer approximately $25 million to bribe coaches and
university administrators to designate their children as purported
athletic recruits, thereby facilitating the children's' admission to those universities," the Department of Justice said in a press release.
Dozens of wealthy people, including celebrities and CEOs of public and
private companies, were charged.
Here's the full list of people charged and how they were described in
charging documents — as well as who has pleaded guilty in the scheme:
College athletics
Gordon Ernst: the head men's and women's tennis coach at Georgetown
University.
Donna Heinel: a senior associate athletic director at the University of Southern California.
Ali Khosroshahin: the head women's soccer coach at USC. He pleaded guilty
in June 2019.
Laura Janke: an assistant women's soccer coach at USC. She pleaded guilty
in May 2019.
Jovan Vavic: a water-polo coach at USC.
Jorge Salcedo: the head men's soccer coach at UCLA. He agreed to plead
guilty in April 2020.
William Ferguson: the women's volleyball coach at Wake Forest University. Michael Center: the head men's tennis coach at the University of Texas at Austin. He pleaded guilty in April 2019 and plans to cooperate with prosecutors.
Rudy Meredith: the head women's soccer coach at Yale. Meredith was the
first to plead guilty, shortly after the charges were first filed in March 2019.
John Vandemoer: the sailing coach at Stanford. He pleaded guilty in March. College admissions and school administration
William Rick Singer: the owner of the Edge College & Career Network and
CEO of the Key Worldwide Foundation. He pleaded guilty in March 2019.
Lisa "Niki" Williams: an assistant teacher at a high school in Houston who administered College Board and ACT tests.
Martin Fox: the president of a private tennis academy in Houston. He
pleaded guilty in October 2019.
Igor Dvorskiy: the director of a private school in Los Angeles who
administered College Board and ACT tests. He pleaded guilty in November
2019.
Steven Masera: an employee of the Edge College & Career Network and the
KWF. He pleaded guilty in May 2019.
Mikaela Sanford: an employee of the Edge College & Career Network and the
KWF.
Mark Riddell: a counselor at a private school in Florida. He was accused
of taking college entrance exams in place of students and correcting
students' answers after they had taken the exam. He pleaded guilty in
April 2019.
Parents
Gregory Abbott: the founder and chairman of the International Dispensing Corporation, a food-packaging and research company. Abbott pleaded guilty
in April 2019.
Marcia Abbott: Abbott's wife. Abbott pleaded guilty along with her
husband.
Gamal Abdelaziz: a hotel and casino executive who has worked for Wynn
Resorts.
Todd Blake: an entrepreneur and investor.
Diane Blake: a cofounder and executive of Winston Retail Solutions, a
retail marketing firm.
Jeffrey Bizzack: A California resident who paid $250,000 to get his son
into USC. He pleaded guilty in July 2019.
Jane Buckingham: the founder and CEO of Trendera, a boutique marketing
firm. Buckingham pleaded guilty in May 2019.
Gordon Caplan: a cochairman of the international law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher. Caplan agreed to plea guilty in April. He formally did so in
court in May 2019.
I-Hin "Joey" Chen: a shipping-industry service provider in California.
Gregory Colburn: a physician in California.
Amy Colburn: Colburn's wife.
Robert Flaxman: the president and CEO of Crown Realty & Development, a real-estate firm in California. Flaxman pleaded guilty in May.
Lori Loughlin: a "Full House" actress. Loughlin pleaded not guilty in
April.
Mossimo Giannulli: Loughlin's husband and the owner and fashion designer
of the Mossimo clothing brand. Giannulli pleaded not guilty in April.
Manuel Henriquez: the founder, chairman, and CEO of Hercules Capital, an investment firm. He pleaded guilty in October 2019.
Elizabeth Henriquez: Henriquez's wife. She pleaded guilty in October 2019. Douglas Hodge: an investor with positions at multiple major California investment firms who was formerly the CEO of Pimco. He pleaded guilty in October 2019.
Felicity Huffman: the "Desperate Housewives" and "American Crime" actress. Huffman pleaded guilty in April 2019. She did so formally in court in May.
In a statement, she said she was "ashamed" of paying $15,000 to have
someone cheat on a college entrance exam for her daughter.
Agustin Huneeus: a California vineyard owner. Huneeus pleaded guilty May
2019.
Bruce Isackson: the president of WP Investments, a California real-estate
firm. Isackson pleaded guilty and is cooperating with the government's investigation, the Justice Department announced in April 2019.
Davina Isackson: Isackson's wife. Isackson pleaded guilty and is also cooperating with the Justice Department, the department announced.
Michelle Janavs: a former executive at a food manufacturer. She pleaded
guilty in October 2019.
Elisabeth Kimmel: the president of Midwest Televisions, a media company. Marjorie Klapper: a jewelry-business owner in California. Klapper pleaded guilty in May 2019.
Karen Littlefair: an interior designer from Newport Beach, California. She pleaded guilty in January 2020.
Toby MacFarlane: a former executive at a California insurance company. He pleaded guilty in June 2019.
William McGlashan: an executive at TPG Growth, a private-equity firm.
Marci Palatella: the CEO of a liquor-distribution company.
Peter Jan Sartorio: the leader of a packaged-foods company. Sartorio
pleaded guilty in May 2019.
Stephen Semprevivo: an executive at Cydcor, an outsourced-sales company. Semprevivo pleaded guilty in May 2019.
Devin Sloane: an executive at Aquatecture, a water-technology company.
Sloane pleaded guilty in May 2019.
John Wilson: the founder and CEO of a private-equity and real-estate firm. Homayoun Zadeh: a dentistry professor at USC.
Robert Zangrillo: the founder and CEO of Dragon Global, a venture-capital
and real-estate-investment firm.
David Sidoo: a philanthropist. Sidoo pleaded guilty in March 2020.
Xiaoning Sui: a Chinese citizen and resident of Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. Sui pleaded guilty in February 2020.
A previous version of this article said William McGlashan had pleaded
guilty. He has pleaded not guilty.
--
No collusion - Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller III, March 2019.
Donald J. Trump, 304 electoral votes to 227, defeated compulsive liar in
denial Hillary Rodham Clinton on December 19th, 2016. The clown car
parade of the democrat party ran out of gas and got run over by a Trump
truck.
Congratulations President Trump. Thank you for cleaning up the disaster
of the Obama presidency.
Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.
President Trump has boosted the economy, reduced illegal immigration,
appointed dozens of judges and created jobs.
Senile loser and NAMBLA supporter Nancy Pelosi got "Trumped" on February
5, 2020. "President Trump, Not Guilty."
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)