Family Paid $6.5 Million to Get Their Daughter Into Stanford--3rd Update
May 01 2019 - 10:54PM
Dow Jones News
By Melissa Korn and Jennifer Levitz
The family of a Chinese student paid a college counselor $6.5
million for help securing a spot at Stanford University after being
connected to the counselor by a Morgan Stanley financial adviser, a
person familiar with the matter said.
The involvement of Morgan Stanley illustrates how William "Rick"
Singer, the Newport Beach, Calif., college consultant who has
admitted to masterminding the college-admissions cheating scheme,
infiltrated wealthy networks to pitch his services.
Morgan Stanley said it fired Michael Wu, the Pasadena,
Calif.,-based adviser, for not cooperating with the company's
internal investigation into the college-admissions matter. The
company said it is cooperating with authorities. Mr. Wu didn't
respond to phone messages seeking comment.
The $6.5 million payment to the college counselor has been of
particular interest since it was the highest payment cited by the
U.S. Attorney's Office in Massachusetts when prosecutors made
public the admissions-fraud case in March. The family who made the
payment hasn't been charged in the case.
Chinese families were among Mr. Singer's alleged top clients.
Another Chinese family paid him $1.2 million for help getting a
young woman into Yale University, connecting with Mr. Singer
through an employee at Oppenheimer & Co.'s Summa Group.
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 the firms for guidance not only on managing wealth, but
also on related issues like college planning and philanthropy.
Morgan Stanley's website previously listed Mr. Wu as being a
managing director and international client adviser.
Morgan Stanley has said it at one time included Mr. Singer's
college-counseling business on its 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.
In March, federal authorities charged 50 people, including 33
parents, for their involvement in a sprawling college admissions
cheating scheme directed by Mr. Singer, who admitted to
fraudulently boosting teens' college-entrance exam scores or paying
college coaches to designate the children as recruited athletes,
all but guaranteeing their admission to the elite schools. Twenty
people have pleaded guilty or agreed to plead guilty.
In the matter of the woman admitted to Yale, Oppenheimer said an
employee met her father socially and served as a translator, an
activity outside her Oppenheimer job. During that activity, the
firm said, the father sought a recommendation for a college
counselor. Oppenheimer said the employee 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.
Prosecutors have said their investigation into college
admissions-fraud continues. They traveled to Los Angeles in April,
according to a court filing. Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Rosen
said the government's evidence included emails referencing some
parents who haven't been named, including "some who plotted with
Singer and withdrew for a variety of reasons."
The woman admitted to Stanford got in after her family paid Mr.
Singer $6.5 million in 2017, according to the person familiar with
the matter.
Mr. Rosen was referring to her when he said in court in March,
according to this person, that Mr. Singer brought an applicant to
then-Stanford's 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. A Stanford
spokesman said the payment came months after the student was
admitted, and the school received a total of $770,000 from the
charity.
Stanford has said that it 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 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 former 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 22:39 ET (02:39 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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