Los Angeles Times

Focus in college admissions scam shifts to holdouts

With three parents pleading guilty, the 19 left fighting charges are the top focus of federal prosecutor­s.

- By Matthew Ormseth

With three more guilty pleas final, prosecutor­s have nearly wrapped up cases in which parents have agreed to deals.

Three California parents pleaded guilty Friday to fraud conspiracy and admitted their roles in a test-fixing and bribery scheme, wrapping up an early string of guilty pleas for federal prosecutor­s in their investigat­ion into college admissions cheating.

Jane Buckingham, 50, a Los Angeles marketing executive and self-styled “trend forecaster,” admitted paying Newport Beach college admissions consultant William “Rick” Singer $35,000 of the $50,000 price to rig her son’s ACT score.

Marjorie Klapper, 50, a Menlo Park resident and jeweler, acknowledg­ed paying Singer $15,000 to inflate her son’s score on the exam.

Robert Flaxman, 62, a developer who lives in Laguna Beach, admitted paying $75,000 to doctor his daughter’s ACT score.

Federal prosecutor­s in Massachuse­tts recommend that Buckingham and Flaxman be sentenced at the low end of an eight-to-14-month range, according to their plea agreements and federal sentencing guidelines. They recommend Klapper be sentenced at the low end of a four-to-10-month range.

Prosecutor­s also recommend that Buckingham and Flaxman be fined $40,000, and Klapper $20,000.

With the three pleading guilty, prosecutor­s from the U.S. attorney’s office in Massachuse­tts have tied up all but one of the 14 guilty pleas they negotiated from 33 parents charged in March.

Toby MacFarlane, a title insurance executive from Del Mar, will plead guilty June 21.

The remaining 19 parents, who include such wellknown names as actress Lori Loughlin and private equity chief Bill McGlashan, have pleaded not guilty. After negotiatio­ns with prosecutor­s foundered, they were indicted on charges of money laundering conspiracy in addition to the fraud conspiracy offense with which they were initially charged.

Parents who balked at a deal risked being charged with additional money laundering offenses; some faced the possibilit­y that their children could be charged. Prosecutor­s have said some children of Singer’s clients were aware they were benefiting from an unlawful scheme, but others were not.

No children of Singer’s clients have been charged, although three have been informed that they are possible targets of the investigat­ion, The Times previously reported.

Prosecutor­s recently handed defense attorneys hundreds of gigabytes of evidence collected during the course of their yearlong investigat­ion: recorded phone calls, emails, banking and academic records, and surveillan­ce footage, among other records.

In one recorded call, quoted in an affidavit supporting charges against Buckingham, the marketing guru discussed with Singer bribing an exam proctor in Houston to allow a 36-yearold Harvard graduate to take the ACT in her son’s stead.

Buckingham sent Singer a sample of her son’s handwritin­g for his test-taking accomplice, Mark Riddell, to mimic. Riddell scored a 35 out of 36 on her son’s ACT — a score in the 99th percentile nationally. Buckingham wired Singer $35,000 and said she could have her former spouse pay the balance.

Riddell and Singer have admitted to committing an array of fraud and money laundering offenses, and are awaiting sentencing.

The scheme, Buckingham told Singer on another recorded call, was “craziness, I know it is,” but she considered him a miracle worker. Now that he had fixed her son’s ACT, she told Singer, “I need you to get him into USC, and then I need you to cure cancer and [make peace] in the Middle East.”

Three months later, Buckingham called Singer again. She wanted her daughter’s ACT score inf lated as well, she said, “but if she got a 32 or 33, I’m assuming that would make her pretty competitiv­e.”

 ?? Nicolaus Czarnecki Boston Herald ?? LAGUNA BEACH developer Robert Flaxman, center, admitted paying a college admissions consultant to boost his daughter’s ACT score.
Nicolaus Czarnecki Boston Herald LAGUNA BEACH developer Robert Flaxman, center, admitted paying a college admissions consultant to boost his daughter’s ACT score.

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