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{{Infobox Person
{{Infobox Person
| name = Rick Singer
|name = William Rick Singer
| image =
|image =
| birth_date = 1960
|birth_date = 1960
| birth_place = United States
|birth_place = Santa Monica, California
|charges = Racketeering conspiracy, money laundering, tax conspiracy, obstruction of justice
|residence = Newport Beach, California
| sentence = 3.5 years in federal prison
|charges = Racketeering conspiracy, Money laundering conspiracy, Conspiracy to defraud the United States, Obstruction of justice
| facility = Federal prison (location undisclosed)
|conviction_date = March 12, 2019 (guilty plea)
| status = Released (2024)
|sentence = 42 months federal prison, 3 years supervised release
|sentencing_date = January 4, 2023
|restitution = $10,668,841 (to the IRS)
|forfeiture = Over $5.3 million in assets plus a $3.4 million money judgment
|judge = Hon. Rya W. Zobel
|case_number = 1:19-cr-10078 (D. Mass.)
|facility = Federal Bureau of Prisons custody
|status = Released; on supervised release
|occupation = Former college admissions consultant
|known_for = Architect of the 2019 college admissions bribery scheme ("Operation Varsity Blues")
}}
}}
'''William Rick Singer''' is an American former college admissions consultant who masterminded the largest college admissions fraud scandal in United States history. Known as "Operation Varsity Blues," the scheme involved bribing college coaches and administrators to designate applicants as athletic recruits, as well as facilitating cheating on standardized tests. Singer pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy, money laundering, tax conspiracy, and obstruction of justice, and was sentenced to 3.5 years in federal prison in January 2023.


== Early Life and Career ==
'''William Rick Singer''' (born 1960) is an American former college admissions consultant who organized the bribery scheme at the center of the 2019 federal prosecution the government code-named "Operation Varsity Blues." Prosecutors described it as the largest college admissions fraud case ever brought in the United States. Singer ran a Newport Beach counseling business called The Key and a related nonprofit, the Key Worldwide Foundation. He used both to move money from wealthy parents to corrupt athletic coaches and test administrators. Some children were admitted to selective universities as fabricated athletic recruits. Others received inflated scores on the SAT and ACT through a corrupt proctor.


Rick Singer was born in 1960. Before entering the college admissions industry, he worked as a basketball coach and athletic director at various schools. In the late 1980s and 1990s, he transitioned into college counseling, recognizing the lucrative market created by wealthy parents desperate to secure elite university admissions for their children.
Singer took in more than $25 million from clients between 2011 and 2019 and paid more than $7 million of it in bribes. On March 12, 2019, the day the case became public, he pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and obstruction of justice.<ref name="doj" /> He had begun cooperating with the FBI months earlier and recorded calls with parents and coaches that became central evidence against dozens of defendants.<ref name="cnn" /> On January 4, 2023, U.S. District Senior Judge Rya W. Zobel sentenced him to 42 months in federal prison and three years of supervised release. The court ordered $10,668,841 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service and forfeiture of more than $5.3 million in assets plus a $3.4 million money judgment.<ref name="doj" /><ref name="irs" /> He was released to a halfway house in 2024 and finished his term of imprisonment in 2025. He later announced plans to return to college counseling under court-ordered disclosure conditions.<ref name="cnn2025" /> See [[Varsity Blues Scandal]].


Singer founded The Key, a for-profit college counseling and preparation business based in Newport Beach, California, which became the operational front for his fraudulent activities. The company marketed itself as providing legitimate college admissions consulting, SAT/ACT preparation, and academic tutoring services. Singer's legitimate business operations provided cover for the parallel criminal enterprise he was building.
== Background and Career ==


In approximately 2013, Singer established the Key Worldwide Foundation (KWF), which he registered as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization ostensibly dedicated to helping underprivileged students. In reality, KWF served as a sophisticated money laundering vehicle. Parents would make "charitable donations" to KWF—which allowed them to claim tax deductions—and Singer would then use these funds to pay bribes to coaches and administrators. This structure added a [[Tax Fraud|tax evasion]] component to the scheme, as clients were effectively deducting their bribe payments from their taxable income.
Singer was born in 1960. Before he moved into private college counseling he coached high school basketball and worked in athletics. He shifted into the admissions advising business in the 1990s, as competition for spots at selective universities intensified and families began paying for outside help.


Singer marketed himself as an expert who had "mastered the system" of college admissions. He charged fees ranging from $200,000 to $500,000 per student, though some clients paid over $1 million for multiple children. His pitch emphasized guaranteed results, distinguishing his services from legitimate college counselors who could only offer guidance without certainty. Between 2011 and 2019, Singer received approximately $25 million in payments from clients, a portion of which he retained while distributing the remainder as bribes.
He built his practice in Newport Beach, California, under the name The Key. The company sold college counseling, test preparation, and tutoring. It presented itself as an ordinary advising service. Singer charged large fees and told parents he could deliver results that legitimate counselors could not promise. The Key was the public face of the operation. Behind it ran a second business built on bribery and fraud.<ref name="doj" />


== The College Admissions Scheme ==
Around 2012 Singer set up the Key Worldwide Foundation, a nonprofit he registered as a 501(c)(3) charity. On paper it funded programs for disadvantaged students. In practice it was the channel for the bribes. Parents wrote checks to the foundation and treated the payments as charitable donations on their taxes. Singer then routed the money to coaches and test administrators. The structure let clients claim tax deductions on what were in fact bribe payments, which is why the Internal Revenue Service became part of the investigation and later the recipient of court-ordered restitution.<ref name="doj" /><ref name="irs" />


=== Overview ===
Between approximately 2011 and February 2019, Singer collected more than $25 million from his clients. He paid more than $7 million of that total in bribes and kept the rest.<ref name="irs" />


Between 2011 and 2019, Singer orchestrated a massive fraud scheme that prosecutors described as the largest college admissions scam ever prosecuted in the United States. The scheme operated through two primary mechanisms:
== The Scheme ==


# '''The "Side Door"''': Bribing college coaches and athletic administrators to designate students as recruited athletes, regardless of their actual athletic ability
Singer described his service to parents as a "side door" into selective colleges. He laid out three paths for a family. The "front door" was ordinary admission earned on merit. The "back door" was a large donation to a university, legal but with no guarantee of a result. The "side door," his term, was a fixed payment that bought an outcome through bribery.<ref name="cnn" /> The scheme had two main parts.
# '''Test Fraud''': Arranging for students to cheat on SAT and ACT exams, either by having a corrupt proctor correct their answers or by having someone else take the test in their place


=== The "Side Door" Scheme ===
The first was the fake athletic recruit. Universities give recruited athletes preferential treatment in admissions. Singer paid coaches and athletic administrators to designate his clients' children as recruits in sports many of them had never seriously played. His staff built false athletic profiles with invented statistics and honors. In some cases students were photographed in athletic gear, or their faces were edited onto images of real athletes, to make the profiles look credible. A bribed coach would then flag the applicant to the admissions office as a recruit. Coaches were typically paid through the Key Worldwide Foundation, which disguised the payments as donations to athletic programs.<ref name="doj" />


Singer coined the term "side door" to describe his bribery scheme to clients. He explained that wealthy families had three options for college admission:
The second part was test fraud. Singer arranged for students to take the SAT or ACT at testing sites where he controlled the proctor. He bribed Igor Dvorskiy, who administered a site in West Hollywood, California, and Mark Riddell, a counselor and skilled test-taker. Riddell either took the exam in a student's place, fed answers during the test, or corrected answer sheets afterward. He could hit specific target scores so the results would look plausible against a student's record rather than suspiciously high. Singer often arranged fraudulent learning-disability diagnoses for clients so the students qualified for extended time and could test at the controlled locations.<ref name="doj" /><ref name="cnn" />
* The "front door" – legitimate admission based on merit
* The "back door" – major donations to universities (legal but not guaranteed)
* The "side door" – guaranteed admission through bribes to athletic coaches


The side door scheme exploited the preferential treatment given to recruited athletes in the admissions process at elite universities. Athletic recruits typically face lower academic standards and receive priority consideration in admissions decisions. Singer corrupted this legitimate system by paying coaches to designate non-athletic students as recruited athletes.
Singer's clients included business executives, financiers, lawyers, physicians, and entertainers. Actress Lori Loughlin and her husband, designer Mossimo Giannulli, paid $500,000 to have their two daughters admitted to the University of Southern California as crew recruits, though neither rowed. Actress Felicity Huffman paid $15,000 to have her daughter's SAT answers corrected. Prosecutors charged 50 people in the case, including 33 parents.<ref name="cnn" /> Targeted athletic programs included those at the University of Southern California, Yale University, Stanford University, Georgetown University, the University of Texas at Austin, Wake Forest University, and UCLA.<ref name="doj" />


The process typically involved several steps. First, Singer would identify coaches at target universities who were willing to accept bribes. He cultivated these relationships over years, making initial payments and gradually increasing the scope of corruption. Second, Singer's team would create fabricated athletic profiles for students, including fake statistics, awards, and accomplishments in sports the students had never seriously played. In some cases, Singer arranged for students' faces to be photoshopped onto bodies of actual athletes, or had students pose for staged photographs in athletic gear. Third, the bribed coach would submit the student's application to the admissions office as a recruited athlete, often providing a favorable evaluation of the student's supposed athletic abilities.
== Charges and Guilty Plea ==


Coaches were typically paid between $100,000 and $400,000 per student, though amounts varied. Singer structured payments through KWF to conceal their true nature, often describing them as donations to support the athletic program. The scheme was particularly effective because athletic departments at major universities have significant autonomy in recruiting decisions, and admissions offices generally defer to coaches' expertise in evaluating athletic talent.
The investigation reached Singer through an unrelated matter. In 2018, a Los Angeles financial executive under investigation for securities fraud told investigators that Yale women's soccer coach Rudy Meredith had solicited a bribe to help a daughter gain admission. That tip led agents to Meredith and then to Singer.<ref name="cnn" /> The FBI's Boston field office and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts ran the case under the name "Operation Varsity Blues."


=== Universities and Sports Involved ===
Agents confronted Singer in September 2018. He agreed to cooperate and began recording his calls with parents and coaches. Those recordings ran for months before the case was unsealed.<ref name="cnn" />


Singer's scheme targeted athletic programs at multiple elite universities, including:
On March 12, 2019, the day the indictments were announced, Singer pleaded guilty in federal court in Boston to four felony counts:<ref name="doj" />
* '''University of Southern California (USC)''' – water polo, crew, soccer, football
* '''Stanford University''' – sailing
* '''Yale University''' – soccer
* '''Georgetown University''' – tennis
* '''University of Texas at Austin''' – tennis
* '''Wake Forest University''' – volleyball
* '''UCLA''' – soccer


=== Test Fraud Scheme ===
For the testing component, Singer arranged for students to take standardized tests at two specific testing centers where he had corrupted proctors: one in Houston, Texas, and another in West Hollywood, California. Singer bribed Igor Dvorskiy, a test administrator who controlled the Houston location, and Mark Riddell, a Harvard-educated test proctor and college counselor, to facilitate cheating.
The scheme exploited accommodations provided to students with learning disabilities. Singer would arrange for students to obtain fraudulent diagnoses of learning disabilities, which entitled them to extended time on tests and the ability to test at non-standard locations. This provided the cover necessary for the fraud to occur without detection by College Board or ACT administrators.
Riddell, who was exceptionally skilled at standardized tests, served as Singer's primary test-taker. The fraud was accomplished through several methods:
* Having Riddell take the entire test in place of the student while claiming to be the student
* Having Riddell sit in the testing room and overtly provide answers to students during the exam
* Having Riddell correct students' answer sheets after they completed the test, changing wrong answers to right ones
Riddell was able to achieve precise target scores requested by Singer and parents. Rather than simply maximizing scores, which might trigger suspicion, Riddell could calibrate results to achieve specific scores that would appear credible given the student's academic record—typically in the 1400-1500 range on the SAT or equivalent ACT scores. Parents would tell Singer what score they wanted, and Riddell would deliver it.
Singer paid Dvorskiy $2,000 per test to allow the fraud to occur at his testing center and to falsify records. Riddell received $10,000 per test, though he later claimed he believed he was participating in a legitimate tutoring program and did not fully understand the criminal nature of the scheme. Between 2011 and 2019, Riddell participated in cheating on tests for approximately 25 students.
=== Key Worldwide Foundation ===
Singer used his purported charity, Key Worldwide Foundation (KWF), to launder bribe payments. Parents would make "charitable donations" to KWF, which Singer would then use to pay off coaches and administrators. This structure allowed parents to claim tax deductions on their bribes, compounding the fraud.
== Clients and Scope ==
Singer's clients included numerous wealthy and prominent individuals from across the United States, representing entertainment, business, finance, and legal professions. The client base demonstrated the wide appeal of Singer's services among affluent families desperate to secure elite university admissions for their children.
Notable clients who were charged included:
* '''[[Lori Loughlin]]''' and '''[[Mossimo Giannulli]]''' – actress and fashion designer, paid $500,000 for their two daughters' admission to USC as fake crew recruits despite neither daughter having rowing experience
* '''[[Felicity Huffman]]''' – actress, paid $15,000 to have her daughter's SAT answers corrected by Mark Riddell
* '''[[Douglas Hodge]]''' – former CEO of PIMCO investment firm, paid over $850,000 between 2008 and 2012 to facilitate admission for four of his children to USC and Georgetown through fake athletic recruiting
* '''[[Michelle Janavs]]''' – heir to the Hot Pockets fortune, paid $300,000 for test score manipulation and fake beach volleyball recruitment for her daughters
* '''William McGlashan''' – TPG Capital executive, paid to facilitate his son's admission through test fraud and fake athletic recruiting
* '''Gordon Caplan''' – co-chairman of international law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher, paid $75,000 for test fraud
* '''Manuel Henriquez''' and '''Elizabeth Henriquez''' – CEO and executive of Hercules Capital, paid $400,000 for fraudulent test scores and athletic recruiting for their daughters
* '''Robert Zangrillo''' – Miami real estate developer, paid $250,000 for his daughter's admission to USC as a fake crew recruit
Singer's client base extended beyond celebrities to include executives from major corporations, successful entrepreneurs, attorneys, physicians, and other wealthy professionals. The geographic diversity of clients—spanning from California to New York, Massachusetts to Nevada—demonstrated Singer's national reach and marketing effectiveness.
In total, prosecutors charged 50 individuals, including 33 parents, in connection with the scheme. The parents collectively paid Singer approximately $25 million between 2011 and 2019, making Operation Varsity Blues the largest college admissions prosecution in American history both in terms of the number of defendants and the financial scope of the fraud.
== Investigation and Arrest ==
=== FBI Investigation ===
The FBI's investigation into Singer began in 2018, initiated not through complaints about college admissions but through an unrelated securities fraud investigation. Morrie Tobin, a Los Angeles financial executive being investigated for securities fraud, attempted to offer information about a different matter in exchange for leniency. During discussions with investigators, Tobin revealed that Yale University women's soccer coach Rudy Meredith had solicited a bribe from him in exchange for helping his daughter gain admission to Yale. This tip led investigators to Meredith, and through Meredith, to Singer's broader conspiracy.
The FBI approach reflected the case's origins in financial crime investigation rather than education enforcement. Agents from the FBI's Boston field office, working with prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts, conducted the investigation under the code name "Operation Varsity Blues"—a reference both to the athletic recruiting component of the scheme and to the 1999 film about high school football.
Investigators obtained court authorization for wiretaps on Singer's phone and gathered extensive evidence of his conversations with clients, coaches, and co-conspirators. The wiretaps captured Singer explicitly discussing bribes, fabricated athletic credentials, and test fraud with clients and coaches. Financial records from Key Worldwide Foundation provided documentary evidence of the money flows from parents through Singer to coaches and test administrators.
In September 2018, the FBI confronted Singer with the evidence against him. Facing overwhelming proof of his crimes and the prospect of decades in federal prison, Singer agreed to cooperate with the investigation. Beginning in September 2018, Singer began recording his conversations with clients and coaches while wearing a wire, creating additional evidence that would be used to prosecute participants in the scheme. Singer's cooperation continued for approximately six months before the investigation became public in March 2019.
=== Cooperation with Authorities ===
Singer's cooperation was crucial to building cases against his clients. He made recorded phone calls to parents, often prompting them to make incriminating statements about their knowledge of and participation in the scheme. These recorded conversations became central evidence in numerous prosecutions.
Singer's cooperation, however, became controversial and complicated several defendants' cases. Defense attorneys argued that Singer, at the direction of prosecutors, made misleading and deceptive statements to clients during recorded calls. Specifically, Singer told some parents that their payments were going to fund athletic programs or provide general university support, without explicitly confirming that the parents understood they were participating in bribery. This created ambiguity about whether some parents fully understood the illegal nature of their actions.
In several cases, including those of [[John Wilson]] and [[Gamal Abdelaziz]], defense attorneys successfully argued that the government's use of Singer to make potentially misleading statements violated their clients' rights. U.S. District Judge Nathaniel Gorton, who presided over several Varsity Blues trials, criticized the government's handling of Singer's cooperation, noting that prosecutors had instructed Singer to make statements that could be interpreted as deceptive.
Despite these controversies, Singer's cooperation was effective in securing convictions and guilty pleas from the majority of defendants. His detailed knowledge of the scheme's operations, combined with documentary evidence and financial records, provided prosecutors with overwhelming evidence against participants.
=== Guilty Plea ===
On March 12, 2019, Singer pleaded guilty to four charges:
* Racketeering conspiracy
* Racketeering conspiracy
* Money laundering conspiracy
* Money laundering conspiracy
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* Obstruction of justice
* Obstruction of justice


His plea was entered the same day the scandal was publicly announced and charges were filed against dozens of parents and coaches.
The obstruction count stemmed from conduct after he began cooperating, including a warning he gave to clients.<ref name="cnn" />


== Sentencing ==
== Cooperation ==


=== Delayed Sentencing ===
Singer was the government's central witness. After agreeing to cooperate, he placed recorded calls to parents at investigators' direction, often steering the conversations toward statements about the payments. Those recordings became the core of the cases against parents who had not dealt directly with the coaches.<ref name="cnn" />


Singer's sentencing was repeatedly delayed as he continued cooperating with prosecutors. The government needed his testimony and cooperation as cases against other defendants proceeded through the court system.
His cooperation also created problems for the prosecution. Defense lawyers argued that Singer, acting on instructions from agents, told some parents their money was going to support athletic programs or the university generally, rather than stating plainly that it was a bribe. That ambiguity gave several defendants an argument that they did not understand they were paying for fraud. In the trials of John Wilson and Gamal Abdelaziz, defense attorneys pressed this point. U.S. District Judge Nathaniel Gorton, who presided over Varsity Blues trials, was critical of how the government handled Singer's recorded statements.<ref name="cnn" />


=== January 2023 Sentencing ===
Even with those disputes, Singer's testimony, his recordings, and the foundation's financial records produced guilty pleas or convictions from most of the defendants. Of the 50 people charged, the great majority resolved their cases without an acquittal.<ref name="cnn" />


On January 4, 2023, nearly four years after his guilty plea, Singer was sentenced to 3.5 years in federal prison by U.S. District Judge Rya Zobel in Boston federal court. Prosecutors had sought six years, while Singer's attorneys asked for probation or home confinement, citing his extensive cooperation with the government's investigation and his deteriorating health.
== Sentencing ==


The sentencing hearing revealed the extent of Singer's financial gains from the scheme. In addition to the prison term, Singer was ordered to pay:
Singer's sentencing was delayed for years while related cases moved through the courts and the government continued to use his cooperation. He was finally sentenced on January 4, 2023, nearly four years after his plea.<ref name="cbs" />
* '''Forfeiture of $10,038,756''' – representing profits from the criminal enterprise
* '''Restitution of $10,607,830''' to the IRS – compensating for tax losses resulting from fraudulent charitable deductions claimed by clients


Singer's attorneys argued that his cooperation had been extraordinary, noting that he had provided testimony and evidence that led to the prosecution of dozens of individuals. They emphasized that without his assistance, many defendants would never have been charged. Singer himself made a statement at sentencing, apologizing for his actions and acknowledging the harm he had caused to the college admissions system and to students who legitimately earned admission to universities.
U.S. District Senior Judge Rya W. Zobel sentenced him to 42 months in federal prison, the equivalent of three and a half years, followed by three years of supervised release. Prosecutors had asked for six years. Singer's lawyers had asked for probation or a short term, citing his cooperation and his health.<ref name="cbs" /><ref name="irs" />


Judge Zobel acknowledged Singer's cooperation but emphasized that it could not excuse the severity and scope of his crimes. She noted that Singer had been "the architect and mastermind" of a scheme that corrupted the college admissions process and undermined public confidence in educational institutions. The judge stated that Singer's crimes warranted substantial punishment despite his assistance to prosecutors, as he had perpetrated the fraud for nearly a decade and had personally profited from corrupting the system.
The financial penalties were larger than the prison term. The court ordered Singer to pay $10,668,841 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service, covering the tax losses from the fraudulent charitable deductions his clients claimed. He was also ordered to forfeit assets worth more than $5.3 million and to satisfy a money judgment of approximately $3.4 million. The combined financial orders came to more than $19 million.<ref name="irs" /><ref name="doj" />


== Release and Aftermath ==
== Release and Aftermath ==


Singer was released from federal custody in 2024 after serving his sentence with credit for [[Good Time Credit|good time]]. His actual release date was not publicly disclosed, consistent with [[Bureau of Prisons]] practice for high-profile inmates. Following his release, Singer was subject to a period of [[Supervised Release]], though the specific terms and duration were not made public.
Singer was released from the federal prison to a halfway house in 2024 and completed his term of imprisonment in 2025. He remained on supervised release after that.<ref name="cnn2025" />


Despite his criminal conviction and the notoriety of his case, reports emerged in 2024 that Singer had returned to working in the college counseling and youth sports industry. He reportedly launched a new venture called "ID Future Stars," which he described as a platform focused on identifying and developing young athletic talent and helping students navigate the college recruitment process. The company's operations and Singer's specific role generated criticism from those who argued that someone convicted of corrupting the college admissions system should not be allowed to return to the same industry.
He announced plans to return to college admissions consulting. In 2025 a federal judge ruled that he could resume that work but had to disclose his criminal history to clients. The decision drew criticism from people who objected to a convicted fraudster re-entering the field he had corrupted.<ref name="cbsnew" /> Independent educational consulting groups issued statements urging families to use vetted advisers.<ref name="ieca" />


Singer maintained a low public profile following his release, declining most media interview requests. The controversy surrounding his return to college counseling raised questions about whether any professional licensing or regulatory mechanisms could prevent convicted fraudsters from re-entering the admissions consulting industry, which remains largely unregulated.
The case left a mark on the universities involved. Several reviewed and tightened the link between athletic recruiting and admissions, increased oversight of donations, and removed coaches and administrators who had taken part. In March 2021, Netflix released ''Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal'', which dramatized Singer's operation with actor Matthew Modine reading from his recorded calls.<ref name="cnn" />
 
== Impact and Legacy ==
 
=== Institutional Changes ===
 
The Varsity Blues scandal prompted significant reforms at affected universities:
* Enhanced oversight of athletic recruiting
* Separation between admissions decisions and athletic department influence
* Increased auditing of donations and their relationship to admissions
* Termination of coaches and administrators involved in the scheme
 
=== Cultural Impact ===
 
The scandal became a symbol of wealth inequality in American higher education and sparked national conversations about:
* The advantages wealthy families have in college admissions
* The legitimacy of legacy admissions and donor preferences
* The pressure placed on students to attend elite universities
* The corruption potential in college athletics
 
Netflix released a documentary, "Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal," in March 2021, which dramatized Singer's operations using actor Matthew Modine to portray Singer.
 
== Legal Proceedings Against Others ==
 
Singer's cooperation led to prosecutions of 50 individuals charged in connection with Operation Varsity Blues, making it one of the largest single criminal cases in terms of defendant count in federal court history.
 
=== Parent Prosecutions ===
 
'''33 parents''' were charged with various fraud and conspiracy offenses. The charges typically included [[Conspiracy]], [[Wire Fraud]], [[Mail Fraud]], [[Money Laundering]], and in some cases [[Federal Programs Bribery]] and [[Tax Fraud]]. The parents faced widely varying sentences based on the amounts paid, their level of involvement, acceptance of responsibility, and whether they proceeded to trial or pleaded guilty.
 
Most parents pleaded guilty and received sentences ranging from probation to several years in prison. [[Felicity Huffman]] received 14 days in prison, the most lenient incarceration sentence. [[Lori Loughlin]] and [[Mossimo Giannulli]], who initially fought the charges before eventually pleading guilty, received 2 months and 5 months respectively. [[Douglas Hodge]], who went to trial and was convicted, received 9 months in prison.
 
Two parents—John Wilson and Gamal Abdelaziz—went to trial and were convicted by a jury in October 2021, though their convictions were later complicated by appellate issues related to the honest services [[Wire Fraud]] theory used by prosecutors.
 
=== Coach and Administrator Prosecutions ===
 
'''Several coaches and administrators''' were charged and convicted, including:
 
* '''John Vandemoer''' (Stanford sailing coach) – First defendant sentenced; received 1 day in prison and 2 years supervised release after pleading guilty to racketeering conspiracy. Accepted $610,000 in contributions to Stanford's sailing program but did not personally profit.
 
* '''Rudy Meredith''' (Yale women's soccer coach) – Pleaded guilty to wire fraud and conspiracy; received 6 months in prison. Meredith was the coach whose solicitation of a bribe led to the FBI investigation.
 
* '''Donna Heinel''' (USC senior associate athletic director) – Convicted at trial of conspiracy charges; received 6 months home confinement. Facilitated numerous fake athletic recruits at USC and received over $1.3 million in payments from Singer.
 
* '''Michael Center''' (University of Texas men's tennis coach) – Pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit mail fraud; received 6 months in prison and forfeiture of $60,000.
 
* '''Jovan Vavic''' (USC water polo and men's and women's water polo coach) – Convicted at trial; received 4 months in prison. One of USC's most successful coaches, Vavic designated at least two students as water polo recruits in exchange for payments.
 
* '''Jorge Salcedo''' (UCLA men's soccer coach) – Pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy; received 8 months in prison. Accepted $200,000 to designate students as soccer recruits.
 
* '''Ali Khosroshahin''' (former USC women's soccer coach) – Pleaded guilty to conspiracy; received 6 months in prison.
 
=== Test Administrators and Proctors ===
 
* '''Mark Riddell''' – The test-taker who executed the standardized test fraud pleaded guilty to conspiracy and [[Mail Fraud]]. Sentenced to 4 months in prison, Riddell cooperated with prosecutors and testified against other defendants.
 
* '''Igor Dvorskiy''' – The test administrator who facilitated cheating at his testing center pleaded guilty to conspiracy. Sentenced to 3 years probation and 400 hours of community service.
 
== See Also ==
* [[Lori Loughlin]]
* [[Felicity Huffman]]
* [[Mossimo Giannulli]]
* [[Douglas Hodge]]
* [[Michelle Janavs]]
* [[Varsity Blues Scandal]]
* [[Wire Fraud]]
* [[Mail Fraud]]
* [[Money Laundering]]


== Frequently Asked Questions ==
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=Who is Rick Singer?|answer=Rick Singer is the mastermind behind Operation Varsity Blues, the largest college admissions fraud scandal in U.S. history. He ran a college counseling business that bribed coaches and facilitated cheating on standardized tests to get students into elite universities.}}
{{FAQ|question=Who is Rick Singer?|answer=William "Rick" Singer is the former college admissions consultant who organized the bribery scheme prosecuted in 2019 as "Operation Varsity Blues." He ran a Newport Beach counseling business called The Key and a related nonprofit, the Key Worldwide Foundation, and used both to bribe college coaches and test administrators on behalf of wealthy parents.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was Rick Singer's prison sentence?|answer=Rick Singer was sentenced to 3.5 years in federal prison in January 2023. He was released in 2024 after serving his sentence.}}
{{FAQ|question=What did Rick Singer do?|answer=Singer bribed athletic coaches to admit students as fake recruits and arranged for a corrupt proctor to fix SAT and ACT scores. He took in more than $25 million from clients between 2011 and 2019 and paid more than $7 million of it in bribes, routing much of the money through his nonprofit so parents could deduct it as charity.}}
{{FAQ|question=How did Rick Singer's scheme work?|answer=Singer operated a "side door" scheme where he bribed college coaches to designate students as athletic recruits regardless of their actual athletic ability. He also arranged for test fraud by having a corrupt proctor correct students' SAT/ACT answers or take tests in their place.}}
{{FAQ|question=What did Rick Singer plead guilty to?|answer=On March 12, 2019, Singer pleaded guilty to four felony counts: racketeering conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and obstruction of justice.}}
{{FAQ|question=How much money did Rick Singer make from the scheme?|answer=Singer received approximately $25 million in payments from wealthy parents between 2011 and 2019, which he used to bribe coaches and administrators while keeping a portion for himself.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was Rick Singer's sentence?|answer=On January 4, 2023, U.S. District Senior Judge Rya W. Zobel sentenced Singer to 42 months in federal prison, the equivalent of three and a half years, plus three years of supervised release. The court also ordered $10,668,841 in restitution to the IRS and forfeiture of more than $5.3 million in assets along with a $3.4 million money judgment.}}
{{FAQ|question=Did Rick Singer cooperate with the FBI?|answer=Yes, Singer cooperated extensively with the FBI after being confronted by investigators. He wore a wire and made recorded calls to clients that were used as evidence in prosecutions against parents and coaches.}}
{{FAQ|question=Did Rick Singer cooperate with the FBI?|answer=Yes. After agents confronted him in September 2018, Singer cooperated and recorded calls with parents and coaches. He was the government's central witness, and his recordings became key evidence against many defendants. Defense lawyers later argued that some of his recorded statements were misleading.}}
{{FAQ|question=Is Rick Singer still in prison?|answer=No. Singer was released to a halfway house in 2024 and completed his term of imprisonment in 2025. He remained on supervised release and announced plans to return to college counseling, which a federal judge permitted on the condition that he disclose his criminal history to clients.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references>
 
<ref name="doj">{{cite web |title=Architect of Nationwide College Admissions Scheme Sentenced to More Than Three Years in Prison |url=https://www.justice.gov/usao-ma/pr/architect-nationwide-college-admissions-scheme-sentenced-more-three-years-prison |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice, District of Massachusetts |date=2023-01-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
{{MetaDescription|Rick Singer masterminded Operation Varsity Blues, the largest college admissions scandal in US history. Learn about his 3.5-year prison sentence.}}
<ref name="irs">{{cite web |title=Architect of nationwide college admissions scheme sentenced to more than three years in prison |url=https://www.irs.gov/compliance/criminal-investigation/architect-of-nationwide-college-admissions-scheme-sentenced-to-more-than-three-years-in-prison |publisher=Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation |date=2023-01-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
 
<ref name="cnn">{{cite news |last=del Valle |first=Lauren |title=William 'Rick' Singer sentenced to 3.5 years in college admissions scandal |url=https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/04/us/william-rick-singer-sentencing-college-admissions-scandal |work=CNN |date=2023-01-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
<html>
<ref name="cbs">{{cite news |title=Rick Singer, mastermind of the "Varsity Blues" college cheating scandal, sentenced to 3.5 years in prison |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/rick-singer-sentenced-3-5-years-prison-mastermind-varsity-blues-college-cheating-scandal/ |work=CBS News |date=2023-01-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
<ref name="cnn2025">{{cite news |title=William 'Rick' Singer: Mastermind behind college admissions scam is back in business with a court-ordered disclaimer |url=https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/24/us/william-rick-singer-college-admissions-business |work=CNN |date=2025-07-24 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
<ref name="cbsnew">{{cite news |title="Varsity Blues" mastermind opens new college counseling service, but must disclose criminal past, judge rules |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/varsity-blues-rick-singer-new-college-counseling-disclose-criminal-past/ |work=CBS News |date=2025 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
<ref name="ieca">{{cite web |title=IECA Responds to Rick Singer's Release from Prison and Plan to Resume College Counseling |url=https://www.iecaonline.com/blog/ieca-responds-to-rick-singers-release-from-prison-and-plan-to-resume-college-counseling/ |publisher=Independent Educational Consultants Association |date=2024 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
</references>


</html>
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:White_Collar_Crime]]
[[Category:Racketeering]]
[[Category:Released_Federal_Offenders]]


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[[Category:High-Profile Federal Offenders]]
{{MetaDescription|William "Rick" Singer organized the 2019 Operation Varsity Blues college admissions bribery scheme. Charges, guilty plea, cooperation, and his 42-month federal sentence on Prisonpedia.}}
[[Category:Varsity Blues Scandal]]

Revision as of 13:25, 3 June 2026

William Rick Singer
Born: 1960
Santa Monica, California
Charges: Racketeering conspiracy, Money laundering conspiracy, Conspiracy to defraud the United States, Obstruction of justice
Sentence: 42 months federal prison, 3 years supervised release
Facility: Federal Bureau of Prisons custody
Status: Released; on supervised release


William Rick Singer (born 1960) is an American former college admissions consultant who organized the bribery scheme at the center of the 2019 federal prosecution the government code-named "Operation Varsity Blues." Prosecutors described it as the largest college admissions fraud case ever brought in the United States. Singer ran a Newport Beach counseling business called The Key and a related nonprofit, the Key Worldwide Foundation. He used both to move money from wealthy parents to corrupt athletic coaches and test administrators. Some children were admitted to selective universities as fabricated athletic recruits. Others received inflated scores on the SAT and ACT through a corrupt proctor.

Singer took in more than $25 million from clients between 2011 and 2019 and paid more than $7 million of it in bribes. On March 12, 2019, the day the case became public, he pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and obstruction of justice.[1] He had begun cooperating with the FBI months earlier and recorded calls with parents and coaches that became central evidence against dozens of defendants.[2] On January 4, 2023, U.S. District Senior Judge Rya W. Zobel sentenced him to 42 months in federal prison and three years of supervised release. The court ordered $10,668,841 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service and forfeiture of more than $5.3 million in assets plus a $3.4 million money judgment.[1][3] He was released to a halfway house in 2024 and finished his term of imprisonment in 2025. He later announced plans to return to college counseling under court-ordered disclosure conditions.[4] See Varsity Blues Scandal.

Background and Career

Singer was born in 1960. Before he moved into private college counseling he coached high school basketball and worked in athletics. He shifted into the admissions advising business in the 1990s, as competition for spots at selective universities intensified and families began paying for outside help.

He built his practice in Newport Beach, California, under the name The Key. The company sold college counseling, test preparation, and tutoring. It presented itself as an ordinary advising service. Singer charged large fees and told parents he could deliver results that legitimate counselors could not promise. The Key was the public face of the operation. Behind it ran a second business built on bribery and fraud.[1]

Around 2012 Singer set up the Key Worldwide Foundation, a nonprofit he registered as a 501(c)(3) charity. On paper it funded programs for disadvantaged students. In practice it was the channel for the bribes. Parents wrote checks to the foundation and treated the payments as charitable donations on their taxes. Singer then routed the money to coaches and test administrators. The structure let clients claim tax deductions on what were in fact bribe payments, which is why the Internal Revenue Service became part of the investigation and later the recipient of court-ordered restitution.[1][3]

Between approximately 2011 and February 2019, Singer collected more than $25 million from his clients. He paid more than $7 million of that total in bribes and kept the rest.[3]

The Scheme

Singer described his service to parents as a "side door" into selective colleges. He laid out three paths for a family. The "front door" was ordinary admission earned on merit. The "back door" was a large donation to a university, legal but with no guarantee of a result. The "side door," his term, was a fixed payment that bought an outcome through bribery.[2] The scheme had two main parts.

The first was the fake athletic recruit. Universities give recruited athletes preferential treatment in admissions. Singer paid coaches and athletic administrators to designate his clients' children as recruits in sports many of them had never seriously played. His staff built false athletic profiles with invented statistics and honors. In some cases students were photographed in athletic gear, or their faces were edited onto images of real athletes, to make the profiles look credible. A bribed coach would then flag the applicant to the admissions office as a recruit. Coaches were typically paid through the Key Worldwide Foundation, which disguised the payments as donations to athletic programs.[1]

The second part was test fraud. Singer arranged for students to take the SAT or ACT at testing sites where he controlled the proctor. He bribed Igor Dvorskiy, who administered a site in West Hollywood, California, and Mark Riddell, a counselor and skilled test-taker. Riddell either took the exam in a student's place, fed answers during the test, or corrected answer sheets afterward. He could hit specific target scores so the results would look plausible against a student's record rather than suspiciously high. Singer often arranged fraudulent learning-disability diagnoses for clients so the students qualified for extended time and could test at the controlled locations.[1][2]

Singer's clients included business executives, financiers, lawyers, physicians, and entertainers. Actress Lori Loughlin and her husband, designer Mossimo Giannulli, paid $500,000 to have their two daughters admitted to the University of Southern California as crew recruits, though neither rowed. Actress Felicity Huffman paid $15,000 to have her daughter's SAT answers corrected. Prosecutors charged 50 people in the case, including 33 parents.[2] Targeted athletic programs included those at the University of Southern California, Yale University, Stanford University, Georgetown University, the University of Texas at Austin, Wake Forest University, and UCLA.[1]

Charges and Guilty Plea

The investigation reached Singer through an unrelated matter. In 2018, a Los Angeles financial executive under investigation for securities fraud told investigators that Yale women's soccer coach Rudy Meredith had solicited a bribe to help a daughter gain admission. That tip led agents to Meredith and then to Singer.[2] The FBI's Boston field office and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts ran the case under the name "Operation Varsity Blues."

Agents confronted Singer in September 2018. He agreed to cooperate and began recording his calls with parents and coaches. Those recordings ran for months before the case was unsealed.[2]

On March 12, 2019, the day the indictments were announced, Singer pleaded guilty in federal court in Boston to four felony counts:[1]

  • Racketeering conspiracy
  • Money laundering conspiracy
  • Conspiracy to defraud the United States
  • Obstruction of justice

The obstruction count stemmed from conduct after he began cooperating, including a warning he gave to clients.[2]

Cooperation

Singer was the government's central witness. After agreeing to cooperate, he placed recorded calls to parents at investigators' direction, often steering the conversations toward statements about the payments. Those recordings became the core of the cases against parents who had not dealt directly with the coaches.[2]

His cooperation also created problems for the prosecution. Defense lawyers argued that Singer, acting on instructions from agents, told some parents their money was going to support athletic programs or the university generally, rather than stating plainly that it was a bribe. That ambiguity gave several defendants an argument that they did not understand they were paying for fraud. In the trials of John Wilson and Gamal Abdelaziz, defense attorneys pressed this point. U.S. District Judge Nathaniel Gorton, who presided over Varsity Blues trials, was critical of how the government handled Singer's recorded statements.[2]

Even with those disputes, Singer's testimony, his recordings, and the foundation's financial records produced guilty pleas or convictions from most of the defendants. Of the 50 people charged, the great majority resolved their cases without an acquittal.[2]

Sentencing

Singer's sentencing was delayed for years while related cases moved through the courts and the government continued to use his cooperation. He was finally sentenced on January 4, 2023, nearly four years after his plea.[5]

U.S. District Senior Judge Rya W. Zobel sentenced him to 42 months in federal prison, the equivalent of three and a half years, followed by three years of supervised release. Prosecutors had asked for six years. Singer's lawyers had asked for probation or a short term, citing his cooperation and his health.[5][3]

The financial penalties were larger than the prison term. The court ordered Singer to pay $10,668,841 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service, covering the tax losses from the fraudulent charitable deductions his clients claimed. He was also ordered to forfeit assets worth more than $5.3 million and to satisfy a money judgment of approximately $3.4 million. The combined financial orders came to more than $19 million.[3][1]

Release and Aftermath

Singer was released from the federal prison to a halfway house in 2024 and completed his term of imprisonment in 2025. He remained on supervised release after that.[4]

He announced plans to return to college admissions consulting. In 2025 a federal judge ruled that he could resume that work but had to disclose his criminal history to clients. The decision drew criticism from people who objected to a convicted fraudster re-entering the field he had corrupted.[6] Independent educational consulting groups issued statements urging families to use vetted advisers.[7]

The case left a mark on the universities involved. Several reviewed and tightened the link between athletic recruiting and admissions, increased oversight of donations, and removed coaches and administrators who had taken part. In March 2021, Netflix released Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal, which dramatized Singer's operation with actor Matthew Modine reading from his recorded calls.[2]

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Who is Rick Singer?

William "Rick" Singer is the former college admissions consultant who organized the bribery scheme prosecuted in 2019 as "Operation Varsity Blues." He ran a Newport Beach counseling business called The Key and a related nonprofit, the Key Worldwide Foundation, and used both to bribe college coaches and test administrators on behalf of wealthy parents.


Q: What did Rick Singer do?

Singer bribed athletic coaches to admit students as fake recruits and arranged for a corrupt proctor to fix SAT and ACT scores. He took in more than $25 million from clients between 2011 and 2019 and paid more than $7 million of it in bribes, routing much of the money through his nonprofit so parents could deduct it as charity.


Q: What did Rick Singer plead guilty to?

On March 12, 2019, Singer pleaded guilty to four felony counts: racketeering conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and obstruction of justice.


Q: How long was Rick Singer's sentence?

On January 4, 2023, U.S. District Senior Judge Rya W. Zobel sentenced Singer to 42 months in federal prison, the equivalent of three and a half years, plus three years of supervised release. The court also ordered $10,668,841 in restitution to the IRS and forfeiture of more than $5.3 million in assets along with a $3.4 million money judgment.


Q: Did Rick Singer cooperate with the FBI?

Yes. After agents confronted him in September 2018, Singer cooperated and recorded calls with parents and coaches. He was the government's central witness, and his recordings became key evidence against many defendants. Defense lawyers later argued that some of his recorded statements were misleading.


Q: Is Rick Singer still in prison?

No. Singer was released to a halfway house in 2024 and completed his term of imprisonment in 2025. He remained on supervised release and announced plans to return to college counseling, which a federal judge permitted on the condition that he disclose his criminal history to clients.


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 "Architect of Nationwide College Admissions Scheme Sentenced to More Than Three Years in Prison". U.S. Department of Justice, District of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 "William 'Rick' Singer sentenced to 3.5 years in college admissions scandal".del Valle, Lauren.CNN.2023-01-04.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 "Architect of nationwide college admissions scheme sentenced to more than three years in prison". Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "William 'Rick' Singer: Mastermind behind college admissions scam is back in business with a court-ordered disclaimer".CNN.2025-07-24.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Rick Singer, mastermind of the "Varsity Blues" college cheating scandal, sentenced to 3.5 years in prison".CBS News.2023-01-04.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  6. ""Varsity Blues" mastermind opens new college counseling service, but must disclose criminal past, judge rules".CBS News.2025.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  7. "IECA Responds to Rick Singer's Release from Prison and Plan to Resume College Counseling". Independent Educational Consultants Association. Retrieved 2026-06-03.