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Chinese teenager Sherry Guo’s parents paid US$1.2 million to get her into Yale. So why haven’t they been charged in US college admissions scandal?

  • Admissions consultant William ‘Rick’ Singer wrote fake application describing Guo as a top-notch soccer player and bribed US coach to submit it
  • Family’s lawyer James Spertus says they were duped by ‘bad actor’ exploiting language barriers and their unfamiliarity with US higher education system

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Sterling Memorial Library at Yale University. Photo: Stan Godlewski via The Washington Post

Sherry Guo came to California five years ago, a teenager from China with dreams of attending an elite university.

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Her lawyer does not dispute she got into Yale through the machinations of William “Rick” Singer, a Newport Beach consultant who defrauded the Ivy League school and similarly selective universities with bribes, rigged tests and bogus accolades.

Singer fashioned a fake application for Guo that described her as a top-notch soccer player, which was submitted to Yale by a soccer coach who took a US$400,000 bribe. Once she was admitted, Guo’s family paid US$1.2 million to Singer and a charity he used to launder the bribes and other illicit funds.

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But unlike dozens of parents swept up in the college admissions scandal, federal prosecutors have not alleged that Guo or her parents committed a crime in paying Singer – the scheme’s confessed mastermind – the seven-figure sum.

Guo’s Los Angeles lawyer, James Spertus, has offered a novel explanation for why they have not been charged. He says Guo’s parents forked over the US$1.2 million without a trace of unlawful intent, duped by a “bad actor” who exploited language barriers and an unfamiliarity with the US higher education system to lure them into his con unwittingly.

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