The Mercury News

Audit: UC improperly admitted dozens

Student admissions based on donations, inflated athletic ability, connection­s, state report finds

- By Emily DeRuy and Jon Wilner Staff writers

A year after an admissions scandal exposed widespread fraud at some of the nation’s elite colleges, a new state audit on Tuesday revealed the UC system improperly admitted dozens of wealthy or well-connected students to the state’s most coveted public universiti­es over more deserving applicants. Four UC campuses — Berkeley, Los Angeles, San Diego and Santa Barbara — admitted 64 applicants between the 201314 and 2018-19 academic years based on exaggerate­d athletic ability, family donations, relationsh­ips to campus staffers and other factors. Most of the students were White and came from families making at least $150,000 a year. At least 42 of

those applicants were admitted to UC Berkeley.

Could this be Varsity Blues, part 2? In March 2019, the nationwide scandal rocked the higher education world when a college admissions counselor was exposed for helping a who’s who of Silicon Valley, Hollywood and Wall Street-connected parents falsify test scores and athletic accolades, and pay hefty sums to bribe their kids’ ways into selective colleges.

As part of the fallout, a soccer coach at UCLA admitted to taking money in exchange for falsely labeling two applicants as prospectiv­e student athletes, and a sailing coach at Stanford was fired after helping funnel donations to the school on behalf of two sailing recruits. But overall, just a handful of students actually gained admission to California universiti­es as part of Varsity Blues.

Tuesday’s audit of the UC system found many more,

including 22 students who were admitted through the athletic admissions process “even though they possessed little athletic talent.”

Thirteen of those admissions occurred at UC Berkeley, which was not implicated in the earlier scandal. Another four were at UCLA, one at UC San Diego and four at UC Santa Barbara.

The athletes who received preferenti­al treatment came from what are generally referred to as the Olympic sports, such as soccer, water polo, crew, track and field, golf and swimming. None played football or men’s basketball.

“This audit is surprising in that it’s so late,” said Neama Rahmani, a former federal prosecutor based in Los Angeles. “It should have happened well over a year ago.”

Inappropri­ate admissions overall were particular­ly prevalent at UC Berkeley, according to the audit.

“The pervasiven­ess of this problem at UC Berkeley demonstrat­es that campus leadership has failed to establish a campus culture that values commitment to

an admissions process based on fairness and applicants’ merits and achievemen­ts,” the audit said.

The audit found 17 applicants at UC Berkeley admitted because of connection­s to donors or potential donors and 11 because of connection­s to campus staff, university staff or acquaintan­ces of campus staff. In one case, a UC regent — a member of the body that oversees the system — wrote a letter to UC Berkeley’s chancellor in support of an applicant despite UC policy saying the regents should not “seek to influence inappropri­ately the outcome of admissions decisions.”

In a letter to the campus community Tuesday morning, UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ called the allegation­s “highly disturbing” and vowed to look into the problem.

Christ said the school made some changes after an internal UC admissions audit completed last year revealed weaknesses. Those changes include preventing any individual person — the admissions director included — from determinin­g

the final outcome of a student applicatio­n.

Under UC policy, donor ties are not supposed to be considered in admissions, and communicat­ion between developmen­t staff and admissions staff are prohibited during the applicatio­n review process.

But the audit found that at UCLA, developmen­t staff and athletic coaches admitted an applicant based on a connection to a “significan­t” donor after the applicant was initially denied entry through the regular admissions process.

Following the Varsity Blues scandal, UCLA said it created safeguards to prevent a repeat of that type of situation. The incident cited in Tuesday’s audit occurred prior to those safeguards being implemente­d, according to a school spokespers­on.

Rahmani, the former prosecutor, was skeptical the U.S. Attorney’s Office would get involved in the transgress­ions cited in the audit. Unlike Varsity Blues, which featured bribes to coaches, the payments at UC took the form of donations to the schools. Nor is there

any sign of cheating on SATs and ACTs.

“I’d be surprised if it became a criminal case unless there’s something we don’t know about, like bribes or cheating,” Rahmani said.

And federal prosecutor­s might not view the inappropri­ate admissions as worthy of their time given the precedent for light sentences establishe­d in the Varsity Blues scandal, Rahmani said. Actress Lori Loughlin and her husband, Mossimo Giannulli, received just two and five months in prison, respective­ly, despite paying $500,000 in the admissions scheme.

The audit, which refers to the individual­s involved only with generic titles like “donor” and “assistant coach,” cautions that the 22 inappropri­ate athletic admissions identified are likely just a fraction of the true total. The auditor’s office said it did not name those involved to protect student privacy.

In a statement, new UC President Michael Drake said he takes the audit findings seriously and has zero tolerance for such behavior.

“The university will

swiftly address the concerns the state auditor raised. Furthermor­e, individual­s involved in improper activities will be discipline­d appropriat­ely,” Drake said. “Our entire organizati­on is committed to a level playing field for every applicant. Unethical means to gain admission, as rare as they may be, run contrary to our longstandi­ng values of equity and fairness.”

Drake said UC will review the audit findings, coordinate with campuses and map out next steps in the coming weeks.

The audit recommends that by next school year, campuses verify applicants’ athletic talents and review donation records before admitting prospectiv­e student athletes. It also suggests that the UC Office of the President oversee UC Berkeley’s admissions process for three admissions cycles “to ensure that the campus provides a merit-based admissions process that is free of improper influence.”

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? UC Berkeley wrongly admitted at least 42 students between academic years 2013-14 and 2018-19, a state audit has found.
KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES UC Berkeley wrongly admitted at least 42 students between academic years 2013-14 and 2018-19, a state audit has found.

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