Chicago Sun-Times

IRS looms over college scandal

Parents could face tax charges, big fines in admissions scam

- BY ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

BOSTON — A wide-ranging college admissions cheating scheme allowed wealthy parents not only to get their kids into sought-after schools but to write off the bribes on their taxes, federal authoritie­s say.

Now some parents who are already facing possible prison time could be hit with additional criminal charges and stiff financial penalties, experts say.

And a slew of others who paid into the foundation that an admissions consultant used to mask the bribes, but haven’t been charged in the scam, are also sure to face IRS scrutiny.

The IRS has “been known as the follow the money crowd since the days of Al Capone so they will be following those lists and that money very carefully,” said Mark Matthews, a former deputy commission­er of the agency who’s now an attorney at Caplin & Drysdale in Washington.

Consultant Rick Singer funneled millions of dollars from parents through his tax-exempt organizati­on and then used it to pay coaches and other insiders to designate applicants as athletic recruits or cheat on entrance exams, prosecutor­s allege.

Among the 33 prominent parents charged in the case are Hollywood stars Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman, who haven’t publicly commented on the case. The actresses and others — including Loughlin’s fashion designer husband Mossimo Giannulli — are scheduled to make their initial appearance­s this week in Boston federal court.

The parents’ bribes were disguised as “donations” to the Key Worldwide Foundation, which purported “to provide education that would normally be unattainab­le to underprivi­leged students, not only attainable but realistic.”

Singer’s foundation sent the parents letters thanking them for the donation that claimed “no goods or services were exchanged,” allowing many of them to deduct the payments from their taxes as charitable contributi­ons, prosecutor­s say.

After Singer began cooperatin­g with investigat­ors in September in the hopes of getting a lenient sentence, the FBI had him call the parents and pretend that his foundation was being audited by the IRS in an attempt to get them to admit their involvemen­t in the scheme.

“So what I want to make sure is that you and I are both on the same page because what I’m going to tell them is that you made a 50K donation to my foundation for underserve­d kids and not that [the proctor] took the test for [your daughter] . . . . ” Singer told one parent, according to court documents.

“Dude, dude, what do you think, I’m a moron?” Agustin Huneeus Jr., a Napa Valley, California, vintner, replied. An email was sent to Huneeus’ attorney on Monday.

The IRS, which has been investigat­ing the criminal case jointly with the FBI, has said it is looking into the parents’ payments.

Though prosecutor­s outlined the tax deduction scheme when the parents were arrested last month, none of them have been charged with tax evasion. Some experts suspect officials are holding the additional charge, among others, over the parents in an attempt to persuade them to quickly plead guilty.

To convict them of tax crimes, prosecutor­s would have to prove that they not only purposely underpaid, but knew they were breaking the law when they did. If may be a difficult sell, but parents could try to argue that their statements on the phone calls don’t prove that they knew the deductions were illegal.

In addition to paying back the taxes they owe, parents could get hit at a minimum with a 20% penalty for claiming a deduction when they shouldn’t have, said Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, a professor at the University of Notre Dame Law School. Some could be on the hook for a civil tax fraud penalty that’s equal to 75% of the amount they underpaid, Mayer said.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? William “Rick” Singer funneled millions of dollars from parents through his tax-exempt organizati­on and then used it to pay coaches and other insiders to designate applicants as athletic recruits or cheat on entrance exams, prosecutor­s allege.
STEVEN SENNE/AP William “Rick” Singer funneled millions of dollars from parents through his tax-exempt organizati­on and then used it to pay coaches and other insiders to designate applicants as athletic recruits or cheat on entrance exams, prosecutor­s allege.
 ??  ?? Agustin Huneeus Jr.
Agustin Huneeus Jr.

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