In College Admissions Scandal, Family Paid $6.5 Million to Get Their Daughter into Stanford
May 01 2019 - 1:11PM
Dow Jones News
By Melissa Korn and Jennifer Levitz
A family from China paid a college counselor $6.5 million for
help securing a spot at Stanford University, and connected to the
counselor via a Morgan Stanley employee, according to a person
familiar with the matter.
The involvement of Morgan Stanley illustrates how William "Rick"
Singer, the Newport Beach, Calif., college consultant who has
admitted to masterminding the alleged college-admissions cheating
scheme, infiltrated wealthy networks to pitch his services.
The $6.5 million payment has been of particular interest since
it was the highest payment cited by the U.S Attorney's Office in
Massachusetts when prosecutors announced the sprawling
admissions-fraud case in March. The family who made the payment
hasn't been charged in the case.
Prominent financial firms helped give Mr. Singer credibility by
bringing him in to speak at employee and client events, or
referring him to existing or potential clients. Affluent families
rely on these firms for guidance not only on managing wealth, but
also on related issues like college planning and philanthropy.
Morgan Stanley has said it at one time included Mr. Singer's
college-counseling business on the firm's list of referral
organizations. A person familiar with the referral arrangement said
referrals could be passed to clients, and that Mr. Singer's company
was off the list after 2015. Mr. Singer could have maintained
contact with some Morgan Stanley employees after he was no longer
an official referral, the person said.
The Wall Street Journal couldn't immediately determine the
relationship between Morgan Stanley and the family.
The Journal reported Monday that Mr. Singer connected to another
Chinese family, which paid him $1.2 million for help getting a
young woman into Yale University, via an employee at Oppenheimer
& Co.'s Summa Group.
Oppenheimer said the employee met that girl's father socially
and served as a translator, an activity outside of her Oppenheimer
job. During that activity, the company said, the father sought a
recommendation for a college counselor. Oppenheimer said the
employee subsequently introduced the family to Mr. Singer. The firm
said the family has never been a client of the firm. Mr. Singer was
a board member of Summa's philanthropic foundation as recently as
January, according to the charity's website.
The young woman was admitted to Stanford after her family paid
Mr. Singer $6.5 million in 2017, according to the person familiar
with the matter.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Rosen said in court in March that
Mr. Singer brought an applicant to then-Stanford sailing coach and
created a falsified sailing athletic profile for the prospective
student.
"This candidate was ultimately accepted to Stanford partly due
to the fact that she had fabricated sailing credentials," Mr. Rosen
said.
After she was admitted, Mr. Rosen said, Mr. Singer paid the
then-sailing coach $500,000 from his Key Worldwide Foundation
charity, which was sent to the Stanford Sailing Program.
Stanford said last month that it had rescinded the admission of
one student this spring after determining some material on that
student's application was false. The student hadn't received
recommendations from any athletic coaches and wasn't affiliated
with the sailing team. It didn't name the individual.
A Stanford University spokesman declined to identify the
student, citing federal privacy laws, or comment further on the
case.
The school said it came across the student after conducting a
review of people potentially tied to Mr. Singer's scheme.
Stanford's sailing coach, John Vandemoer, has pleaded guilty to
racketeering conspiracy and admitted to taking bribes in exchange
for giving athletic recommendations to two other applicants.
Neither of those applicants attended the school. Mr. Vandemoer has
been fired from Stanford.
Write to Melissa Korn at melissa.korn@wsj.com and Jennifer
Levitz at jennifer.levitz@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 01, 2019 12:56 ET (16:56 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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