From the BBC:
“Lori Loughlin: US actress to
plead guilty in college cheating scam”
US actress Lori Loughlin, of the
sitcom Full House, and her husband, designer Mossimo Giuannulli, will plead
guilty to college admissions scam charges. They are among 50 people charged in
an alleged criminal enterprise to get their children into top US schools. The
couple had initially pleaded not guilty to the fraud charges. Officials say
they have agreed to a plea deal of prison time, a fine and community service
under supervised release. According to the US Attorney's office in
Massachusetts, Ms Loughlin will plead guilty to conspiracy to commit wire and
mail fraud on Friday. Mr Giannulli will plead guilty to the same, plus one
count of honest services wire and mail fraud. Prosecutors had said Ms Loughlin
and Mr Giannulli paid $500,000 (£408,000) in bribes to have their two daughters
admitted into the University of Southern California (USC) as fake rowing-team
recruits. Under the terms of the deal, Ms Loughlin will serve two months in
prison, pay $150,000 in fines, have two years of supervised release and
complete 100 hours of community service. Her husband's sentence is similar: he
will serve five months in prison, pay $250,000 and must complete 250 hours of
community service. "Under the plea agreements filed today, these
defendants will serve prison terms reflecting their respective roles in a
conspiracy to corrupt the college admissions process and which are consistent
with prior sentences in this case," Massachusetts US Attorney Andrew
Lelling said in a statement on Thursday. "We will continue to pursue
accountability for undermining the integrity of college admissions." The pair will bring the total number of
parents pleading guilty in the scam to 24. The couple were among the most
high-profile suspects to be caught up in the national cheating scandal. Desperate Housewives actress Felicity Huffman
was also charged and pleaded guilty within one month. She ultimately served 11
days of a two week sentence in a San Francisco-area prison. Prosecutors in
Massachusetts had publicly warned Ms Loughlin that the longer her case dragged
on, the longer her sentence would be if she was eventually found guilty at
trial rather than plead guilty. "If she's convicted, I don't think I'm
giving her any state secrets by saying we would probably ask for a higher
sentence for her than we did for Felicity Huffman," Mr Lelling told
WCVB-TV in Boston in October. The development comes only two weeks after the
couple again moved to have the case dismissed.
^ Oh Aunt Becky. It seems you are
going from the Tanner House to the Big House. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-52759405
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