Felicity Huffman: Desperate Housewives star charged in exam cheating scheme
Desperate Housewives star Felicity
Huffman is among at least 40 people charged in a US college cheating
scam, according to unsealed court records.
The alleged scheme
involved helping students cheat on entrance exams, as well as getting
non-athletic students admitted on fake athletic scholarships.
Elite schools Yale, Stanford, and Georgetown were among the destination universities.
There was no suggestion that the schools were involved in wrongdoing.
According
to the charging documents, Ms Huffman was charged with conspiracy to
commit mail fraud and honest services mail fraud. She was secretly
recorded discussing the scheme with a co-operating witness.
The
papers said the co-operating witness also met with Ms Huffman and her
husband, the actor William H Macy, at their Los Angeles home and
explained the scam to them. The witness said the pair “agreed to the
plan”. Mr Macy was not indicted.
The actress Lori Loughlin, best
known for starring in the US sitcom Full House, was also indicted. The
defendants are largely wealthy and also include CEOs of major companies
“These parents are a catalog of wealth and privilege,” US Attorney Andrew Lelling said at a press conference on Tuesday.
Federal
prosecutors in Boston charged William “Rick” Singer, 58, with running
the alleged scheme through his company Edge College & Career
Network. Mr Singer is expected to plead guilty on Tuesday in Boston
federal court to charges including racketeering, money laundering, and
obstruction of justice.
How did the alleged scheme work?
The
documents set out in detail the various elements of the alleged scheme,
which was run by a firm called Edge College & Career Network.
Parents including Ms Huffman and Ms Loughlin paid between $200,000
(£153,000) and $6.5m to Edge for its services, authorities said.
The
firm reportedly instructed parents to claim their child had a
disability which required extra time for exams. The FBI said parents
were then told to invent an excuse – such as a family wedding – for
their students to sit the entrance exams at specific facilities, where
staff had been bribed to turn a blind eye to cheating.
Someone
working for the firm involved in the scandal either sat the exam for the
students, gave students the answers, or corrected their answer papers,
the FBI said.
The Edge staff member who assisted in the cheating
was briefed on exactly how well to perform, in order not to raise
suspicion that a child’s scores had improved too much, the FBI said. In
most cases, the students did not know their admission had been paid for
with a bribe, but in several the students were involved, officials
added.
The firm also allegedly created detailed fake athletic
profiles for students – including photo-shopping the faces of potential
students on to pictures of athletes found online – allowing students to
be recruited on athletic scholarships.
According to the FBI,
athletic coaches at various institutions were involved in the scheme –
recommending the fraudulent applicants internally and pocketing bribes
in return.
“We are not talking about donating a building that will
make it more likely for your child to get accepted, we’re talking about
deception and fraud,” Mr Lelling said.
“For every student admitted through fraud, an honest and genuinely talented student was rejected,” he added.
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