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fc ot Felicity Huffman 2 weeks of hard time.....

sluggo72

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Aug 31, 2006
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two weeks in jail in college admissions cheating case

Oscar-nominated actress Felicity Huffman was sentenced Friday to 14 days in jail for paying thousands of dollars to fraudulently boost her daughter’s chances of attending an elite university.


The “Desperate Housewives” star and wife of actor William H. Macy is just one among dozens of wealthy parents who paid hefty bribes to test proctors, college athletics officials or other fixers in order to help secure spots for their children at prestigious schools.


Huffman, 56, paid $15,000 as part of a cheating scheme to have a college counselor correct wrong answers on her oldest daughter’s SAT scores in 2017, according to federal authorities.

She pleaded guilty in May to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest services mail fraud.

The prosecutors in Massachusetts federal court had recommended Huffman spend one month in jail — near the low end of the sentencing guidelines in the case — followed by one year of supervised release and a $20,000 fine.

Lawyers for Huffman had asked that she be sentenced to a year of probation, along with 250 hours of community service and a $20,000 fine.

Loughlin’s payments in the college admissions scandal were dwarfed by some other alleged cheaters. “Full House” actress Lori Loughlin, for instance, is accused with her husband, fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli, of paying a total of $500,000 in bribes to get their two daughters admitted to the University of Southern California. Loughlin pleaded not guilty to the charges against her.

before I have to throw a flag on myself....

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I think if these kids that shouldn't have gotten admitted actually did well in that school, then the school should pay whatever penalties and not these ignorant but perhaps well-wishing parents. It shouldn't be so easy for an average student to do just fine in an institution that requires SAT scores or whatever to be so high. Something is wrong if they do.

And of course, something is wrong.
 
I think if these kids that shouldn't have gotten admitted actually did well in that school, then the school should pay whatever penalties and not these ignorant but perhaps well-wishing parents. It shouldn't be so easy for an average student to do just fine in an institution that requires SAT scores or whatever to be so high. Something is wrong if they do.

And of course, something is wrong.

SAT scores are not necessarily an indicator of the academic rigor of a school. In many cases they are a measure of popularity among the applicant pool i.e the number of kids that apply for a much smaller number of available spaces.
 
I think if these kids that shouldn't have gotten admitted actually did well in that school, then the school should pay whatever penalties and not these ignorant but perhaps well-wishing parents. It shouldn't be so easy for an average student to do just fine in an institution that requires SAT scores or whatever to be so high. Something is wrong if they do.

And of course, something is wrong.

“ ignorant” = not. They knew exactly what they were doing imo.
The hardest part of the top schools is getting in; one Ivy League school said, in its alumni publication, that roughly 3/4ths of the kids rejected could do the work. The TOTAL undergraduate Ivy League enrollment is approximately 50,000 or a few thousand less the the University Park enrollment.
Regardless, we are what we make of ourselves.
 
I wonder who she's going to beat up first when she gets in the joint.
 
I mean, why not just cut a check to USC? Is the idea that she wanted her daughter (and others) to think she got in on her own merit? Most universities like having students with famous/influential relatives. You can't tell me Brooke Shields or Natalie Portman or Emma Watson go to Princeton and Harvard and Brown if not otherwise famous. Or George Bush at Yale if not for his legacy. It's part of the wink/nod admissions process for those schools and everyone knows it.
 
I mean, why not just cut a check to USC? Is the idea that she wanted her daughter (and others) to think she got in on her own merit? Most universities like having students with famous/influential relatives. You can't tell me Brooke Shields or Natalie Portman or Emma Watson go to Princeton and Harvard and Brown if not otherwise famous. Or George Bush at Yale if not for his legacy. It's part of the wink/nod admissions process for those schools and everyone knows it.
And it's a big bowl of wrong!
 
I mean, why not just cut a check to USC? Is the idea that she wanted her daughter (and others) to think she got in on her own merit? Most universities like having students with famous/influential relatives. You can't tell me Brooke Shields or Natalie Portman or Emma Watson go to Princeton and Harvard and Brown if not otherwise famous. Or George Bush at Yale if not for his legacy. It's part of the wink/nod admissions process for those schools and everyone knows it.

I agree but your second sentence is correct imho. Famous/powerful people live in an entirely different world; even just plain rich people can be middle class in many respects. Probably wanted her to feel like she earned it. I think it was hard for her to plead ignorance when she had her daughters SAT scores changed. That is some next-level felony s**t. Smart to plead guilty and just own it.

Legacy is/was everything at the Ivy’s. Even more than money in many cases.
 
I mean, why not just cut a check to USC? Is the idea that she wanted her daughter (and others) to think she got in on her own merit? Most universities like having students with famous/influential relatives. You can't tell me Brooke Shields or Natalie Portman or Emma Watson go to Princeton and Harvard and Brown if not otherwise famous. Or George Bush at Yale if not for his legacy. It's part of the wink/nod admissions process for those schools and everyone knows it.
Yes, but not their kids. If being good at sports can help you get into college, what do you think being a movie star can do. That’s a pretty impressive extracurricular activity.

Regarding the admissions departments, the types of hits required to do what your talking about (think a new library) dwarf the backdoor deals these people made (that’s why it happened.)
 
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