Boston Herald

Feds: Ex-coach walked into Mexico

Curious visit detailed prior to scam sentencing

- By andrew Martinez

A former UCLA men’s soccer coach, due to plead guilty Wednesday to a racketeeri­ng charge for accepting $200,000 in bribes from parents of bogus college recruits, violated his probation by walking into Mexico last week without a passport, federal prosecutor­s say.

Jorge Salcedo, 47, will plead guilty to a racketeeri­ng charge in U.S. District Court and now faces a judge who will also take into considerat­ion the unauthoriz­ed border crossing.

“Mr. Salcedo indicated he crossed the border in McAllen,

Texas because he was told he could walk across without a passport,” Jessica Turkington, a U.S. probation officer wrote, noting she learned of Salcedo’s trip when Customs and Border Patrol said they interviewe­d the ex-coach.

Salcedo claimed to be a partner in the Series3 Medical company which he alleged is working on securing personal protective equipment for front-line health-care workers, and traveled to the border town of Reynosa, Mexico, for a meeting.

Turkington noted Salcedo had no permission to travel to Texas or Mexico. She wrote Salcedo thought he was no longer bound to his probation conditions after signing his plea agreement in March.

Salcedo previously requested a March trip to Mexico City for “business purposes,” Turkington wrote. She objected to the March request because Salcedo had not reported any employment as required by his pretrial release agreement. The ex-soccer coach then claimed he was working as a consultant and being paid via funds delivered to his wife’s bank account.

When the officer later asked Salcedo for documentat­ion regarding Series3 Medical, he was unable to provide multiple documents, including any verificati­on that the company needed him to travel to Mexico.

Prosecutor­s have asked federal Judge Indira Talwani to sentence Salcedo at the “low-end” of sentencing guidelines, with an undetermin­ed fine and $200,000 in forfeiture. It is unclear what penalties Talwani may issue for the probation violation.

Talwani, who gave actress Felicity Huffman a 14-day sentence for paying a corrupt proctor $15,000 to boost her daughter’s college testing score, has already issued a wide range of sentences for parents in the “Varsity Blues” college admissions scandal. Defendants before Talwani have received terms ranging from probation to five months in prison.

 ?? HeRald STaff file ?? GOING SOMEWHERE? ‘Varsity Blues’ college admissions scam defendant Jorge Salcedo, former head coach of men’s soccer at the University of California LA, leaves federal court on March 23, 2019. Prosecutor­s say Salcedo walked into Mexico without a passport last week prior to his expected sentencing in the case this week.
HeRald STaff file GOING SOMEWHERE? ‘Varsity Blues’ college admissions scam defendant Jorge Salcedo, former head coach of men’s soccer at the University of California LA, leaves federal court on March 23, 2019. Prosecutor­s say Salcedo walked into Mexico without a passport last week prior to his expected sentencing in the case this week.

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