Boston Herald

Coach’s conviction brings curtain down on ‘Varsity Blues’

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A former Florida prep school administra­tor was sentenced to federal prison and a decorated water polo coach at the University of Southern California was swiftly convicted by a jury in a busy Friday in Boston federal court in the long running college admissions bribery scandal.

Mark Riddell, who was paid handsomely to take college entrance exams for wealthy students, was handed a four-month prison sentence, ordered to serve two years of supervised release and forfeit nearly $240,000.

Meanwhile, former USC coach Jovan Vavic, who faked the athletic credential­s of rich students so they could gain admission, was convicted on all three counts of fraud and bribery he faced after a jury deliberate­d less than a day following his nearly monthlong trial.

U.S. Attorney for Massachuse­tts Rachael Rollins said the verdict in Vavic’s trial represents the final conviction in the headline grabbing case dubbed “Operation Varsity Blues.”

The investigat­ion announced in 2019 exposed corruption in the college admissions process at Yale, Stanford, Georgetown and other sought-after schools, and implicated wealthy and connected parents, including actors Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin and Loughlin’s fashion designer husband, Mossimo Giannulli.

“To say the conduct in this case was reprehensi­ble is an understate­ment,” Rollins said afterward, acknowledg­ing the sprawling investigat­ion preceded her taking office earlier this year. “The rich, powerful and famous — dripping with privilege and entitlemen­t — used their money and clout to steal college admissions spots from more qualified and deserving students.”

Joseph Bonavolont­a, head of the FBI’s Boston office, said he hoped “many important lessons” were learned from the investigat­ion and that colleges make sure the proper safeguards are in place.

“First and foremost, you can’t pay to play and lie and cheat to circumvent the college admissions process,” he said. “Because you will get caught.”

Vavic, a 60-year-old, who guided USC’s men’s and women’s water polo teams to 16 national championsh­ips, strode out of the courtroom Friday with his family, declining to comment on the verdict. Prosecutor­s said he received about $250,000 in bribes for designatin­g unqualifie­d students as water polo recruits so they could attend the elite Los Angeles school.

But lawyers for Vavic argued he was just doing what he could to raise money for his dominant, championsh­ip-winning program as athletic officials had demanded. They maintained he never lied, never took a bribe and was a victim of USC’s desire to cover up a “pervasive culture” of accepting wealthy students who could provide donation windfalls.

The university, which fired Vavic after his 2019 arrest, has stressed its admissions processes are “not on trial.”

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