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Varsity Gray: A Times investigation into what really happened in the college admissions scandal

Lori Loughlin departs federal court in Boston, after a hearing in a nationwide college admissions bribery scandal in 2019.
(ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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When the Varsity Blues scandal hit in 2019, it rocked American academia in unprecedented ways.

The federal case alleged that wealthy parents cheated to get their kids into elite universities. The prosecution pulled in business titans as well as celebrities like Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman.

No university drew in more defendants than USC.

Five years later, a Times investigation revisited the scandal with a trove of new documents that offer a more complex view of Varsity Blues and deeper questions about universities like USC that claimed to be victims of fraud.

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The secret door at USC

photo illustration of USC logo with two hands holding money and a diploma
(Jim Cooke/Los Angeles Times; photos via Getty Images)

Well before Rick Singer’s scheme was underway, USC quietly offered wealthy and well-connected families an alternative route to admission with much lower academic expectations and an acceptance rate of 85% to 90%. Internal records show USC fundraisers anticipated significant donations from families of those admitted and, in some cases, became enraged when money failed to materialize.

Miller Moss was tackled as he released his final pass that had no chance of connecting, sealing USC’s 26-21 loss to Washington Saturday.

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The Mater Dei connection

Mater Dei high school logo
(Mater Dei High School)

Athletic powerhouse high school Mater Dei routinely sends athletes to fill the ranks of USC sports teams, but it also delivered at least half a dozen affluent students who were admitted through the athletic department but never appeared on team rosters.

The former president of this Orange County school helped affluent students enter USC as walk-on athletes — a route that the university now acknowledges as fraud.

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Reconsidering a central player in the scandal

USC logo at the Coliseum in 2018.
(Aaron M. Sprecher / Associated Press)

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In her first-ever interview, Donna Heinel recounted her time at the epicenter of the Varsity Blues scandal, four months in prison and her devotion to USC. Heinel told The Times she was scapegoated and detailed how she was schooled in the ways of admitting the children of donors and potential donors as walk-on athletes.

In her first-ever interview, Donna Heinel recounts her time at the epicenter of the Varsity Blues scandal, four months in prison and her continued devotion to USC.

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Related coverage

Dozens of individuals were allegedly involved in a nationwide conspiracy that facilitated cheating on college entrance exams and the admission of students to elite universities as purported athletic recruits.

Federal prosecutors say their investigation dubbed Operation Varsity Blues blows the lid off an audacious college admissions fraud scheme aimed at getting the children of the rich and powerful into elite universities.

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