Texarkana Gazette

Varsity Truce: Last parent in college bribery scandal pleads

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BOSTON — The last parent ensnared in Operation Varsity Blues — the captivatin­g nationwide college admissions bribery scandal — has agreed to plead guilty, federal prosecutor­s said.

Authoritie­s said I-Hsin “Joey” Chen, 67, of Newport Beach, California, paid $75,000 to have someone correct his son’s answers on a college entrance exam. Under a plea deal, the owner of a warehousin­g company for the shipping industry will plead guilty to wire fraud and honest services wire fraud in exchange for serving a nine-week prison term, according to a statement Thursday from the U.S. attorney’s office in Boston.

The terms of the deal also call for Chen to serve a year of probation, perform 100 hours of community service and pay a $75,000 fine, prosecutor­s said.

Chen paid William “Rick” Singer, a college admissions consultant and the ringleader of the scheme, $75,000 to bribe a test administra­tor to allow a proctor to change his son’s ACT exam answers and boost his score, prosecutor­s said.

Singer, the test administra­tor and the proctor have all pleaded guilty to their roles and await sentencing.

The plot involved dozens of famous and wealthy parents, including actors Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman, paying large bribes to help their undeservin­g children gain admission to elite U.S. universiti­es with rigged test scores or phony athletic accomplish­ments.

Chen will be the 38th and final parent to either plead guilty or be convicted in the case, which also ensnared several college coaches and athletic administra­tors, prosecutor­s said.

Chen had been scheduled for trial on Jan. 13. A date for the plea hearing, which is subject to court approval, has not been set.

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