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Will children at center of college admissions scandal pay a price along with their parents?

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Elizabeth Paige Laurie

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Mar 19, 2019, 9:30:03 AM3/19/19
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Liberal Democrats, too lazy and stupid to compete
scholastically. This is the result of the present day inferior
California school system, once the envy of the entire free
world, after 40 years of Democrat control and parasitic
socialist union infestation.

TAGS: Cheat Lie Bribe Obama Ignorant Liberal Dumb Crime College
High School Sports USC Coach ACT Democrat LA Times, Washington
Post, NY Times Elite Hollywood TV Media Twitter youTube Scumbags
Kiss Your Job Goodbye

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Their parents face criminal charges, with federal prosecutors
alleging massive fraud to get them into some of America’s most
elite schools.

But it’s still unclear what is going to happen to the children
who were the beneficiaries of what prosecutors called the
largest college admissions scam ever uncovered.

Federal prosecutors allege cheating on standardized tests,
bribery and faking athletic achievements to get into college —
the types of misdeeds that would lead to serious discipline. But
in many cases, they said, the students did not know about the
arrangements their parents made.

Administrators at UCLA and USC said this week they are reviewing
student admission decisions after discovering that dozens of
families paid huge sums to gain access to at least eight
exclusive schools, including theirs, through bribes and lies.
Among the parents charged were Hollywood actresses Felicity
Huffman, of “Desperate Housewives,” and Lori Loughlin, of “Full
House.”

A USC spokesman said Wednesday that students who applied for
admission in the current cycle — which is underway for fall
admits — and are tied to the scheme will be denied admission.
That includes about half a dozen applicants.

The school will also conduct a case-by-case review for current
students and graduates who may have taken part in the scheme.

“We will make informed, appropriate decisions once those reviews
have been completed,” USC spokesman Eddie North-Hager said in a
statement.

UCLA said that it would consider canceling admissions if any
student was found to have lied in an application.

“If UCLA discovers that any prospective, admitted or enrolled
student has misrepresented any aspect of his/her application, or
that information about the applicant has been withheld, UCLA may
take a number of disciplinary actions, up to and including
cancellation of admission,” the university said.

The two schools have already fired or suspended coaches and an
administrator accused in the case.

USC’s senior associate athletic director Donna Heinel and men’s
and women’s water polo coach Jovan Vavic were fired after
allegedly receiving bribes totaling more than $1.3 million and
$250,000, respectively, to help parents take advantage of the
relaxed admissions standards for athletes at USC, even though
their children were not legitimately being recruited as athletes.

UCLA has placed men’s soccer coach Jorge Salcedo on leave.
Salcedo has been charged with conspiracy to commit racketeering
after allegedly accepting $200,000 in bribes for his role in
facilitating the enrollment of one female student and one male
student to the school under the pretense of being soccer
players, though they did not play the sport competitively.

UCLA said in the statement that it is not aware of any current
student-athletes under suspicion.

“The university is cooperating with the Department of Justice
and will conduct its own review to determine the proper steps to
take to address this matter,” it said.

The president of Wake Forest University said in a statement that
a student who was taken off the wait list after her parents
allegedly used William “Rick” Singer to bribe a volleyball coach
was admitted to the school and is currently enrolled.

“We have no reason to believe the student was aware of the
alleged financial transaction,” Nathan O. Hatch said.

At Stanford, the head sailing coach was accused of accepting
bribes to recommend two prospective students for admission,
according to court documents. The university said neither
student ended up at Stanford — one was denied admission and
intended to reapply but didn’t, and the second never completed
an application.

Federal investigators have charged 50 people in the case, which
has heightened the debate about the advantages the ultra-rich
enjoy in accessing the country’s best colleges amid intense
competition in which merit alone is not enough to assure
admission, even for students with perfect grade-point averages
and stellar resumes.

The scheme, which began in 2011, centered on the owner of a for-
profit Newport Beach college admissions company that wealthy
parents paid to help their children cheat on college entrance
exams and to falsify athletic records of students to enable them
to secure admission to elite schools, including UCLA, USC,
Stanford, Yale and Georgetown, according to court records.

Singer, who owns the admissions company called the Edge College
& Career Network, was charged with money laundering, obstruction
of justice, racketeering and conspiracy to defraud the United
States. Singer cooperated with authorities and pleaded guilty to
the charges in Boston on Tuesday afternoon.

It’s not the first time some of these universities have been
ensnared in cheating scandals involving privileged students.

In 2005, Walmart heiress Elizabeth Paige Laurie returned her USC
degree after she was accused of paying a fellow college student
$20,000 to do her homework.

The move came nearly a year after Laurie’s freshman-year
roommate, Elena Martinez, told the ABC newsmagazine “20/20” that
she had written term papers and done assignments for the heiress
for more than three years.

https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-usc-ucla-college-
admissions-scandal-20190314-story.html
 

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