Texarkana Gazette

Huffman released with 2 days left on 2-week prison term

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SAN FRANCISCO — Actress Felicity Huffman was released Friday morning from a federal prison in California two days before the end of a two-week sentence for her role in the college admissions scandal, authoritie­s said.

The “Desperate Housewives” star was released from the low-security prison for women because under prison policy, inmates scheduled for weekend release are let out on Friday, the U.S. Bureau of Prisons said.

Her husband, actor William H. Macy, dropped off Huffman — aka inmate No. 77806-112 — at the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n, Dublin in the San Francisco Bay Area on Oct. 15, with one day of credit already banked for the day she was originally arrested and jailed.

A federal judge in Boston last month sentenced Huffman, 56, to two weeks in prison, a $30,000 fine, 250 hours of community service and a year’s probation after she pleaded guilty to fraud and conspiracy for paying an admissions consultant $15,000 to have a proctor correct her daughter’s SAT answers.

The Emmy-award winning actress tearfully apologized at her sentencing, saying, “I was frightened. I was stupid, and I was so wrong.”

A representa­tive for Huffman did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment from the actress on Friday.

Huffman was the first parent sentenced in a scandal involving dozens of wealthy parents accused of bribing their children’s way into elite universiti­es or cheating on college entrance exams.

Other parents in the far-reaching scandal could face far stiffer sentences.

On Tuesday, a grand jury in Boston indicted “Full House” actress Lori Loughlin, her fashion designer husband Mossimo Giannuli and nine other parents on new charges of trying to bribe officials at an organizati­on that receives at least $10,000 in federal funding.

Loughlin and Giannulli have pleaded not guilty.

The charge of conspiracy to commit federal program bribery carries a maximum sentence of up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

The scheme, the biggest college admissions case ever prosecuted by the Justice Department, has shown how far some will go to get their children into top universiti­es like Stanford and Yale.

Prison officials would not provide specific informatio­n on Huffman but said she would follow all the same rules and guidelines as other inmates.

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