Daily News (Los Angeles)

Man gets home confinemen­t in college admissions case

-

A former director of a private California school was sentenced Tuesday to three months of home confinemen­t for his role in the sprawling college admissions bribery scheme.

Igor Dvorskiy, who was director of West Hollywood College Preparator­y School and lived in Sherman Oaks when charged, was ordered to serve one year of supervised release — including the three months of home detention — for allowing cheating on college entrance exams he administer­ed. He pleaded guilty in 2019 to a charge of racketeeri­ng conspiracy.

Prosecutor­s say Dvorskiy agreed to administer ACT and SAT tests at West Hollywood College Prep for the clients of Rick Singer, a college admissions consultant and the bribery scheme's mastermind, and let another man pretend to proctor the tests and correct their answers.

Dvorskiy is among more than 50 people convicted in the scandal that revealed a scheme to get the children of rich parents into top schools with rigged test scores and bogus athletic credential­s.

Dvorskiy's attorneys said in court papers that he feels “deep remorse” for his involvemen­t in the scheme and “the impact that it has had on his family, community, and the college admissions system.”

They noted that his actions were “not motivated by a desire to personally enrich himself,” and that Dvorskiy put all the money that Singer gave him into

West Hollywood College Prep.

“He takes full responsibi­lity for his participat­ion and he accepts the consequenc­es of his guilty plea,” his lawyers wrote.

Singer is scheduled to be sentenced in November. He pleaded guilty to several felonies after helping authoritie­s build the massive case by secretly recording his conversati­ons with parents and athletic coaches.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States