Yale is the first university to rescind the acceptance of a student over
the national college admissions cheating scandal that implicated 50
people, including celebrities, college administrators and coaches. The
FBI investigation, dubbed "Operation Varsity Blues," discovered that
parents paid anywhere from $200,000 to $6.5 million for guaranteed
admission into elite colleges and universities.
Federal prosecutors allege that the rich and powerful parents involved
in the scam paid $25 million collectively since 2011 to William "Rick"
Singer to aid their under qualified students in gaining admission into
some of the nation's most elite colleges. Singer allegedly either had
someone cheat on their ACT or SAT exams or bribed athletic coaches who
accepted students on their team, even if they did not play the sport.
Singer, owner of Edge College & Career Network, has already pleaded
guilty to racketeering conspiracy, money laundering, conspiracy and
other charges
As class action law suit has also been filed against eight colleges implicated in the admissions
bribery scandal by students who were denied admission to the schools.
The suit, which claims more than $5 million in damages, states that as a
result of the scheme "unqualified students found their way into the
admissions rolls of highly selective universities, while those students
who played by the rules and did not have college-bribing parents were
denied admission." The suit is seeking repayment of the college
application fees students paid to the universities, according to NBC.
Twelve defendants, including six former college athletic coaches and
two test administrators, each pleaded not guilty to racketing conspiracy
charges in federal court in what is now considered the "nation's
largest-ever college bribery scheme," according to USA Today. If
convicted, they each face a maximum penalty of up to 20 years in prison,
$250,000 in fines and 3 ½ years of court supervision.
The eight colleges currently tied to the admissions cheating and
bribery scandal include the University of Southern California, UCLA,
Stanford University, Georgetown University, Yale University, Wake Forest
University, University of Texas at Austin, and the University of San
Diego. Some of the schools implicated in the admissions and bribery
scheme already plan to use the money received to fund college scholaeship
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