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With New Charges, Prosecutors Raise Stakes for Some Parents in Admissions Case

As federal prosecutors Tuesday brought new money laundering charges against 16 parents enmeshed in the college admissions scandal, a question hung over the sprawling case: Would anybody implicated in the scam actually serve time behind bars?
With New Charges, Prosecutors Raise Stakes for Some Parents in Admissions Case
With New Charges, Prosecutors Raise Stakes for Some Parents in Admissions Case

Hollywood actress Lori Loughlin and her husband, designer Mossimo Giannulli, were among those indicted on a count of conspiracy to commit fraud and another of money laundering conspiracy.

Prosecutors have charged a total of 50 people, including the college consultant at the center of the scandal, William Singer, who has already pleaded guilty to racketeering and other charges. Thirty-three parents are accused of paying Singer to arrange for cheating on entrance exams or conspiring with him to bribe coaches or athletic officials to get their children admitted to colleges as recruits to sports teams, on the basis of fake credentials.

On Monday, prosecutors said that 13 of the parents, including actress Felicity Huffman, would plead guilty. In all but one case, those parents will plead guilty to a single count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest service mail fraud. Then Tuesday came indictments, including new counts, against many of the parents who had not announced plans to enter guilty pleas.

Vassili Thomadakis, a former assistant U.S. attorney in the district of Massachusetts, said Singer would almost certainly be sent to prison for some period of time, even though he has cooperated with the investigation. Thomadakis said it was also likely that any coaches or administrators who were convicted would face prison time, perhaps for a matter of months or a few years.

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Less clear, it seemed, was what might happen to any parents convicted in the case.

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Former prosecutors said that might depend on an array of matters.

“For folks who have these kind of the bigger payments that you see in the indictment, I think that they certainly face some prison time, especially if they take the case to trial and lose,” Thomadakis said. Thomadakis said prosecutors are likely to argue that a sentence of some prison time is necessary to dissuade other parents eager to do anything to help their children get into college from engaging in similar behavior.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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