Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ex-coach admits accepting bribe

He took $100,000 to get student into Texas as a recruit

- By Alanna Durkin Richer The Associated Press

BOSTON — The former men’s tennis coach at the University of Texas at Austin admitted Wednesday to accepting a $100,000 bribe in a wide-ranging college admissions bribery scheme and has agreed to cooperate with authoritie­s investigat­ing the high-profile case.

Michael Center, 55, is the third coach to plead guilty in the nationwide scandal that has also ensnared wealthy parents, including executives and Hollywood actresses.

The case has put a spotlight on the cutthroat college admissions process and amplified complaints that the system is rigged in favor of the rich. The parents are charged with paying big money to doctor entrance exam scores or get their children admitted to highly selective schools as athletic recruits for sports they didn’t play.

Authoritie­s say the admissions consultant at the center of the scam, Rick Singer, paid Center to help an applicant get admitted as a tennis recruit, even though the student didn’t play the sport competitiv­ely.

In 2015, Singer gave Center $40,000 in donations for the school’s tennis program and later flew to Austin, where he gave the coach about $60,000 in cash for himself, Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Rosen said.

Center looked down at his hands on the table in front of him as the prosecutor read the allegation­s. Rosen revealed that Center has also entered into a cooperatio­n agreement with the government in the hopes of getting a lighter sentence.

Prosecutor­s have said they will seek 15 to 21 months in prison, although they’ve agreed to ask for less if Center provides substantia­l assistance in their investigat­ion.

Thirteen of the 33 parents charged in the case agreed this month to plead guilty, including “Desperate Housewives” star Felicity Huffman. Huffman, who was charged with paying $15,000 to have someone boost her daughter’s SAT score, will plead guilty May 21.

Prosecutor­s have said they will seek between four and 10 months in prison for Huffman.

On Tuesday, another parent and a former University of Southern California coach said they will also plead guilty.

Laura Janke, who was an assistant women’s soccer coach at USC, created bogus athletic profiles that portrayed the applicants as star athletes for sports they didn’t play, prosecutor­s said. She is also cooperatin­g with prosecutor­s and could testify against defendants at trials, if asked.

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