Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Former Pitt student avoids jail, but will be deported to China

- By Torsten Ove

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The lead defendant in a scheme by Chinese students to cheat their way into American universiti­es received a probationa­ry term Monday instead of prison and will be deported to China.

Han Tong, 24, a former University of Pittsburgh student, had faced a possible 30 to 37 months in prison, but his lawyer asked for a variance and U.S. District Judge Joy Flowers Conti granted it.

The lawyer, James Brink, and the U.S. Attorney’s office declined to comment after a sentencing hearing conducted mostly at sidebar. Tong also had no comment.

Judge Conti imposed a threeyear term of probation and said it was justified based on the circumstan­ces of the case and Tong’s history. Tong has no other criminal record and has been a “devoted son” and “good friend” who has helped others in “many ways,” the judge said, based on letters his relatives and friends wrote to her.

Tong, who got into Pitt in 2011 by having someone in China take an English test for him, pleaded guilty in the summer to his leadership

role in a conspiracy by Chinese students to cheat on college entrance tests. He was the lead defendant of 15 people indicted in Pittsburgh in 2015.

During his plea, he admitted that he either took entrance tests for others or found impostors to take the tests, in each case using fake passports made in China and sent to him at his Oakland apartment.

He was among five testtakers in the scheme, once even flying to California to take an SAT for someone else. He was typically paid $2,000.

Prosecutor­s said he also acted as a facilitato­r of the scheme in Pittsburgh. In one case, for example, a female co-conspirato­r who graduated from Carnegie Mellon University obtained a fake passport sent from a businesswo­man in China to Tong in Pittsburgh. The student used the passport in posing as someone else to take an English test in Monroevill­e in November 2013.

Tong will be turned over to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t for deportatio­n.

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