Ex-USC coach testifies she took part in U.S. college fraud scheme

  • 9/27/2021
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BOSTON (Reuters) - A former University of Southern California soccer coach choked up on Monday as she testified in the first trial in the U.S. college admissions scandal that in exchange for money, she helped wealthy parents’ children get into schools as fake athletic recruits. Laura Janke, who worked at the University of Southern California as a women"s soccer coach, arrives to testify in federal court in the trial of former Wynn Resorts Ltd executive Gamal Aziz and private equity firm founder John Wilson in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., September 24, 2021. REUTERS/Faith Ninivaggi Laura Janke told a Boston federal jury that those children included the daughter of ex-casino executive Gamal Aziz, who is on trial with private equity firm founder John Wilson over charges they participated in the fraud scheme. She said she helped the scheme’s mastermind, William “Rick” Singer, get Aziz’s daughter and others, including a daughter of “Full House” actress Lori Loughlin, admitted as sports recruits, regardless of their abilities. “I basically devalued the sport and the commitment it takes for athletes to play,” Janke said. Fifty-seven people have been charged in the scandal, including Singer, who pleaded guilty in 2019 to using bribery and exam cheating to secure spots for his clients’ children at universities. Loughlin also pleaded guilty. Prosecutors say Aziz, a former Wynn Resorts Ltd executive also known as Gamal Abdelaziz, and Wilson, Hyannis Port Capital’s founder, paid Singer to get their children admitted to USC as sports recruits. They deny wrongdoing. Janke, who pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy, said that as an assistant women’s soccer coach at USC, she and the head coach recruited Singer-backed children for $50,000 per student. Janke said that money initially went to the soccer program and was later split between the coaches. After leaving USC in 2015, Janke said Singer paid her to create athletic profiles used in the admissions process that included made-up information about applicants to schools including USC, Yale and Stanford. Janke said those profiles included one for Aziz’s daughter that falsified her height, team position and accolades. “I had to make it believable enough so you could say they would make an impact on the team without raising any red flags,” Janke said.

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