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F.B.I. uncovers college entrance exam scam

Athletics Departments have a lot of sway over Admissions. My son was a late (non-football) recruit to another State University. He applied on May 3 of his senior year after being seen initially.
After the recruiter saw him play one last time on May 11, he was officially admitted on May 13. That does not happen anyway unless the Athletic Department is involved.
The deadline to apply was in February. You had to have your deposit in by May 1. He got premium housing and a athlete roommate.
 
It appears that many of the people involved are celebrities and the wealthy bribing admissions officers to get their children into these schools when they otherwise wouldn’t have the academic profiles for admission. Sometimes, this would take the form of the child applicant being considered a “recruited athlete” for the school to push them into a different admissions category, even if the kid had no intentions of playing the sport in college.

LOL, do you think maybe Snoop Dog is involved?
 
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The only mildly surprising aspect of this - to me - is that they just didn't write out the checks directly to the University.

Which would have, of course, not required anyone to do anything even questionably illegal.
Some of the parents may be as dumb as their kids :)

My only surprise is that Snoop Dog wasn't on the list....yet.
 
The Yale Women's Soccer coach got FOUR HUNDRED THOUSAND to have a kid placed on the team....you seriously can't make this shit up!
 
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The Yale Women's Soccer coach got FOUR HUNDRED THOUSAND to have a kid placed on the team....you seriously can't make this shit up!
I have a feeling this happens a lot. Maybe not on this scale, but its too easy to run money through camps and clinics and appearance fees, etc.

Did this coach claim the income on her tax return?
 
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Former Pimco CEO Douglas Hodge and the lead independent director of a Franklin Templeton mutual fund board were among the dozens charged Tuesday in a college admissions bribery scheme, according to court documents.


Federal prosecutors charged 50 people Tuesday in connection with bribing college exam administrators and varsity coaches in order to cheat test scores and get their children admitted to elite colleges. Hodge and Franklin fund board member John B. Wilson were among several defendants connected to the financial services industry. The FBI sting also captured celebrities including Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin.

Hodge, who served as Pimco’s CEO between early 2014 and November 2016, paid bribes to sports administrators at the University of Southern California in order to have two of his three children admitted as athletic recruits, according to a charging document.

As part of the scheme, Hodge’s daughter indicated she was co-captain of a Japanese national soccer team, while his son’s athletic profiles included fabricated tennis and football achievements, prosecutors alleged. Hodge paid $200,000 in bribes for his daughter and $250,000 for his son, according to the affidavit.

Hodge was chief operating officer and was the Tokyo-based head of Pimco’s Asia-Pacific office from 2002 to 2009.

Hodge retired from Pimco after 28 years at the Newport Beach shop in November 2017. He serves as a managing director and senior advisor after passing the CEO reigns over to Emmanuel “Manny” Roman.

Wilson, who has been a trustee of the Franklin Funds since at least 2006 and lead independent director since 2008, is also the chair of the board’s audit committee. He is also the president and founder of Hyannis Port Capital, a real estate and private equity firm in Massachusetts.

Prosecutors say he also bribed sports administrators at USC in order to have his son admitted as a water polo recruit. The board director expressed concern in an e-mail that it would “be known that [his son] is a bench warming candidate” and “a clear misfit at practice.” But a USC water polo coach who received bribes told the university’s athletics administrator that Wilson’s son “would be the fastest player on our team … this kid can fly,” according to an affidavit. The document states that Wilson paid $220,000 in bribes on behalf of his son and $1 million for his daughter.

A spokeswoman for Pimco did not respond for comment by publication.

A spokeswoman for Franklin Templeton declined to comment.
 
Former Pimco CEO Douglas Hodge and the lead independent director of a Franklin Templeton mutual fund board were among the dozens charged Tuesday in a college admissions bribery scheme, according to court documents.


Federal prosecutors charged 50 people Tuesday in connection with bribing college exam administrators and varsity coaches in order to cheat test scores and get their children admitted to elite colleges. Hodge and Franklin fund board member John B. Wilson were among several defendants connected to the financial services industry. The FBI sting also captured celebrities including Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin.

Hodge, who served as Pimco’s CEO between early 2014 and November 2016, paid bribes to sports administrators at the University of Southern California in order to have two of his three children admitted as athletic recruits, according to a charging document.

As part of the scheme, Hodge’s daughter indicated she was co-captain of a Japanese national soccer team, while his son’s athletic profiles included fabricated tennis and football achievements, prosecutors alleged. Hodge paid $200,000 in bribes for his daughter and $250,000 for his son, according to the affidavit.

Hodge was chief operating officer and was the Tokyo-based head of Pimco’s Asia-Pacific office from 2002 to 2009.

Hodge retired from Pimco after 28 years at the Newport Beach shop in November 2017. He serves as a managing director and senior advisor after passing the CEO reigns over to Emmanuel “Manny” Roman.

Wilson, who has been a trustee of the Franklin Funds since at least 2006 and lead independent director since 2008, is also the chair of the board’s audit committee. He is also the president and founder of Hyannis Port Capital, a real estate and private equity firm in Massachusetts.

Prosecutors say he also bribed sports administrators at USC in order to have his son admitted as a water polo recruit. The board director expressed concern in an e-mail that it would “be known that [his son] is a bench warming candidate” and “a clear misfit at practice.” But a USC water polo coach who received bribes told the university’s athletics administrator that Wilson’s son “would be the fastest player on our team … this kid can fly,” according to an affidavit. The document states that Wilson paid $220,000 in bribes on behalf of his son and $1 million for his daughter.

A spokeswoman for Pimco did not respond for comment by publication.

A spokeswoman for Franklin Templeton declined to comment.
Chairman of Wilkie Farr also involved.
 
As someone said earlier, if this stuff got reported on tax returns, I would not want to be these people.
 
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I think the only surprise is that it took this convoluted plan to get the admissions standard lowered to that of an athlete. I always assumed it just required the right donation. The worse the student, the bigger the donation. Maybe this was just cheaper.
 
Yeah - No red flag from anyone when a kid gets a 1020 on the PSAT and a 1420 on the SAT? - no way, no how that happens. I bet the kid had a 2.8 high school GPA. My daughter just took the SAT's this past weekend after working her butt off the last month or so. Really sucks when the rich just get a pass in life.
 
Yeah - No red flag from anyone when a kid gets a 1020 on the PSAT and a 1420 on the SAT? - no way, no how that happens. I bet the kid had a 2.8 high school GPA. My daughter just took the SAT's this past weekend after working her butt off the last month or so. Really sucks when the rich just get a pass in life.
the real red red flags are when they go from 600 to 900 on the next test.
 
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The Yale Women's Soccer coach got FOUR HUNDRED THOUSAND to have a kid placed on the team....you seriously can't make this shit up!
Georgetown's tennis coach got over $2.7 million for taking 12 "tennis players" over several years.
 
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The crew nonsense is somewhat tied up in Title 9 and filling quotas. It’s quite complicated but it does lead to a softer admission standard. Donations are very different. If a parent donates a large sum of money to a university that’s a very different but much more American and acceptable form of bribery. It presents an interesting moral question.

“ If a large donation allows several other students who wouldn’t normally be financially able to attend the school, or greatly inhances the quality of education for others, what damages accrue in allowing a less qualified child of the donor to matriculate “.

Quite frankly one must balance this against the overall financial gain to the university, and the immediate loss sustained by a single more qualified student who failed to gain admission. This is an interesting conundrum.


Women's Crew is the equalizer sport in Title IX. Its no wonder that it would also be the sport of choice for "fake" athletes to fly under the radar.
Gilbert Gaul's Book "Billion Dollar Ball" Has a whole chapter dedicated to it How Women's Rowing saved college football. --Recommended read by the way--

"In 1995 the year Kansas State announced a new team there were 44 rowing teams with 1800 athletes 5 years later there were 84 with 5000. Almost the exact number to offset football and comply with title IX"

From and avg of 40 per squad to almost 60 per squad you can field at least 7 rowers in depth on an 8.
 
This story, and the blowback on twitter, is hilarious. William Macy’s involvement is leading to 5 Star Gifery

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Women's Crew is the equalizer sport in Title IX. Its no wonder that it would also be the sport of choice for "fake" athletes to fly under the radar.
Gilbert Gaul's Book "Billion Dollar Ball" Has a whole chapter dedicated to it How Women's Rowing saved college football. --Recommended read by the way--

"In 1995 the year Kansas State announced a new team there were 44 rowing teams with 1800 athletes 5 years later there were 84 with 5000. Almost the exact number to offset football and comply with title IX"

From and avg of 40 per squad to almost 60 per squad you can field at least 7 rowers in depth on an 8.

Except that women's crew only awards the equivalent of only 20 scholarships. And men's crew? Not an NCAA sport so no scholarship limits, though fewer programs overall (which does nothing, of course, for an individual school's Title IX issues).

Reality with crew is that there are not a lot of programs at the high school level. As a result, it was not uncommon to see rowing coaches prowling around at freshman orientation looking for tall muscular specimens to see if they were interested. Happened to one of my wife's former students who never pulled an oar until she went to college. Now rows in a varsity four and gets almost no money for the ridiculous hours she puts into her sport.

Finally, a team usually fields two eights and two fours That's 28. The remainder man novice boats.
 
Just saw an article yesterday about former Penn coach Jerome Allen who is accused to taking bribes to get someone’s kid into Penn. I totally missed when that was announced in 2018.
 
Except that women's crew only awards the equivalent of only 20 scholarships. And men's crew? Not an NCAA sport so no scholarship limits, though fewer programs overall (which does nothing, of course, for an individual school's Title IX issues).

Reality with crew is that there are not a lot of programs at the high school level. As a result, it was not uncommon to see rowing coaches prowling around at freshman orientation looking for tall muscular specimens to see if they were interested. Happened to one of my wife's former students who never pulled an oar until she went to college. Now rows in a varsity four and gets almost no money for the ridiculous hours she puts into her sport.

Finally, a team usually fields two eights and two fours That's 28. The remainder man novice boats.
Still a large remainder to help title IX numbers

He even mentions your exact scenario

"Trying to find scores of unpolished athletes willing to rise before dawn and push through workouts for little to no money.....etc"

Point is if they are hard up for bodies, its not surprising at all that an assistant AD at USC would be approving some non rowing richie rich's figuring they will just meld in with the numbers
 
Still a large remainder to help title IX numbers

He even mentions your exact scenario

"Trying to find scores of unpolished athletes willing to rise before dawn and push through workouts for little to no money.....etc"

Point is if they are hard up for bodies, its not surprising at all that an assistant AD at USC would be approving some non rowing richie rich's figuring they will just meld in with the numbers

Actually, for the most part they'd be approving is size, I'd say over 5'7" and 5' and under. Again finding numbers that have pulled oars ain't likely.
 
Quite frankly one must balance this against the overall financial gain to the university, and the immediate loss sustained by a single more qualified student who failed to gain admission. This is an interesting conundrum.

The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few....or the one
 
If you think about it, this faux athlete admissions angle shouldn’t be a surprise. Athletics are a notorious money pit. Only a select few athletic departments actually operate in the black?

I have always wondered how the small, academic elite New England schools like Amherst, Williams, Colby, Bates & Bowdoin etc can field so many teams with great facilities.

First, they don't fritter away a lot of money. The total athletic budget at Amherst would be covered by the salaries of Franklin and his staff. Williams? Toss Barbour onto that pile. Second, a large chunk in underwritten by designated endowments.

Facilities? Paid for by donations.
 
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