GUILTY Nationwide College Cheating Scandal - Actresses, Business Owners Charged, Mar 2019 #4

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  • #721
Lori Loughlin gets judge approval to serve 2-month prison term close to home in Victorville, Calif.

Loughlin must surrender to the Bureau of Prisons by Nov. 19 at 2 p.m. And expect it to be sooner — so that paparazzi aren’t waiting at the gate when she arrives.

As of Thursday, Loughlin already has a profile set up on the Bureau of Prisons website — and has been assigned the inmate number 77827-112.

Mo is also headed to prison at FCI Lompoc and has the same surrender date and time, so the couple will be serving their sentences concurrently.

The coronavirus will impact their time in jail. The Bureau of Prisons puts all new inmates in quarantine for a minimum of 14 days — or until they are cleared by medical staff. So Loughlin and Giannulli won’t be with the general population at first. In Loughlin’s case, she’ll be isolated for about a quarter of her sentence. Both of their facilities have had positive COVID-19 cases, Victorville has had over 540 positive tests and Lompoc has had almost 1,000 positives in total.

This is so undermining to the central theme of this crime. For those who have lost possible acceptance into the Universities this just makes it worse. It emphasizes that the wealthy are above the law and are therefore able to negotiate consequences. I know it happens everyday but it is after all the wrong message to send.
 
  • #722
This is so undermining to the central theme of this crime. For those who have lost possible acceptance into the Universities this just makes it worse. It emphasizes that the wealthy are above the law and are therefore able to negotiate consequences. I know it happens everyday but it is after all the wrong message to send.
It's normal for Federal inmates to get put in facilities closest to their homes if available. Even in maximum security facilities they keep inmates no more than 500 miles away, but closer if possible, to their families.

What you might be relieved to know is that Lori and Mossimo did not get their way at all really. Both had asked for staggered sentences so one of them would always be home for their daughters for emotional support.

Instead the Judge is making them serve their sentences at the same time!

My opinion on this is because the daughters are full grown adult women now, not teenagers. It's common for judges to have parents serve staggered sentences, so one is always home with the kids, when the kids are teens or younger living at home and relying on their parents for support.

Teresa and Joe Giudice (RHONJ) are an example of this. With 4 young daughters at home Teresa served her time first and 3 months after she got back Joe went in to do his time.

Opinion only - without links
 
  • #723
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  • #726
If I were Lori I'd get myself to Victorville right away, sign up for those ukulele and Pilates classes, and be home by Christmas. Why wait until November?

I just noticed Bella's birthday was September 16 and Olivia's birthday is September 28, so maybe they are waiting until afterwards to report to prison?
 
  • #727
If I were Lori I'd get myself to Victorville right away, sign up for those ukulele and Pilates classes, and be home by Christmas. Why wait until November?

I just noticed Bella's birthday was September 16 and Olivia's birthday is September 28, so maybe they are waiting until afterwards to report to prison?

I bet that she will be released before Christmas. Because of the "holiday", you know...she will be isolated for first two weeks, that takes us December 4, and I bet she is out by December 24th.

Any takers?
 
  • #728
I bet that she will be released before Christmas. Because of the "holiday", you know...she will be isolated for first two weeks, that takes us December 4, and I bet she is out by December 24th.

Any takers?
I REALLY want to disagree with you, but [SIGH], you’re probably right. Doesn’t seem fair! Prob Mos won’t be though.
 
  • #729
I bet that she will be released before Christmas. Because of the "holiday", you know...she will be isolated for first two weeks, that takes us December 4, and I bet she is out by December 24th.

Any takers?
8 weeks is too short of time to get out early. She will serve the entire 2 months, minus one day because her arrest day is counted as one day, and only be released before Christmas if she surrenders 2 months before Christmas.

Felicity was sentenced to 14 days but only served 11. One day credit for the day she was in custody being arrested, then she was scheduled to be released on Sunday but the Federal Bureau of Prisons only releases inmates Monday through Friday so by law they could not keep her until Monday so let her go Friday. I'm sure it was planned this way. Smart.

I would not sit in prison for Christmas or Thaksgiving if I had the choice.
Felicity went in before her surrender date and was out before Halloween. Again, smart, no special occasions missed while sitting in prison which just makes it worse in my opinion.

2 Cents
 
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  • #730
Okay,

@Cool Cats is a "No Way" LL will be in for the full 2 months. From November 19th to January 19th.

@JudgeJoe is with Mickey2942, that LL will be out by 12/24.

The "winner" will get bragging rights for being right.
 
  • #731
Okay,

@Cool Cats is a "No Way" LL will be in for the full 2 months. From November 19th to January 19th.

@JudgeJoe is with Mickey2942, that LL will be out by 12/24.

The "winner" will get bragging rights for being right.
If Lori goes in November 19 she will miss Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years.

The Federal system does not let you out early for Christmas or any other Holiday. It's all calculated down to the day the same guidelines for everyone. There is no such thing as letting someone out just to be nice because they were on TV.

Disagree but totally respect your view on it.

The inmate locator I posted will show her release date, and that is what it will be unless the weekend and arrest day change it by a few days.

...2 Cents...
 
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  • #732
What you might be relieved to know is that Lori and Mossimo did not get their way at all really. Both had asked for staggered sentences so one of them would always be home for their daughters for emotional support.

Sorry , i still would feel much better if she actually rev'cd some time. Let's say 4-5 mos worth of time. None of this leaving early stuff. She's getting off way too easy.........jmo
 
  • #733
Okay,

@Cool Cats is a "No Way" LL will be in for the full 2 months. From November 19th to January 19th.

@JudgeJoe is with Mickey2942, that LL will be out by 12/24.

The "winner" will get bragging rights for being right.
I’ll celebrate more to be wrong! Keep her in as long as possible. If she misses Thanksgiving AND Christmas AND New Years, it’ll make up for the light sentence a teeny bit. Imo Plus spending all 3 holidays in used panties. Let’s not forget about that!
 
  • #734
Sorry , i still would feel much better if she actually rev'cd some time. Let's say 4-5 mos worth of time. None of this leaving early stuff. She's getting off way too easy.........jmo

There is actually a whole other way to look at it. Most of these parents probably would not have gotten any prison time at all, as non-violent first time offenders, if this whole thing wasn't National News.

Did Lori's pre-sentencing report even recommend prison? Felicity took a plea but still got a pre-sentencing report recommending no prison time. She only got prison time because she was part of this huge National News Case.

The Judge basically admitted it.

If Lori was Jane Doe and not the face of this college sting operation, she would have only gotten house arrest.

Opinion
 
  • #735
California executive linked to Lori Loughlin pleads guilty in college admissions plot

Mark Hauser, an insurance and private equity executive who was once head of the board at the high school the famous couple’s daughters attended, became the 29th parent to plead guilty to participating in the scandal involving top universities across the country.

Lawyers for Loughlin and Giannulli said at their sentencing hearings last month that Hauser was the one who recommended they work with the admissions consultant at the center of the scheme.

Hauser had not previously been publicly named in the case. Prosecutors unveiled the charge against Hauser hours after Loughlin and Giannulli’s sentencing hearings ended

Hauser, 59, of Los Angeles, paid $40,000 to William “Rick” Singer to have someone pose as his daughter’s ACT proctor and secretly correct her answers in 2016. The proctor, Mark Riddell, has also pleaded guilty in the scheme. Riddell got Hauser’s daughter a score of 31 out of 36.

Prosecutors believe Hauser’s daughter was unaware of the cheating scheme.

Hauser pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest services mail fraud. Prosecutors have said they will ask for a sentence of six months in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced in January.
 
  • #736
I still don’t understand why The College Board itself has not been charged. They are responsible for the security & reliability of SAT. The fact that wealthy people were able to hire others to take that test- or correct the test- astounds me. If you do not come from wealth, you do NOT get to test in a separate or private room & you’re ID is verified from your driver’s license. Very hard to cheat.

Apparently, in 2020 coronavirus days, TCB is, for the first time ever, allowing at-home digital versions of SAT for students from schools that haven’t reopened. So... guessing students from FL, where schools are open, will now score lower than students from states where schools are still closed. Because those students will be able to look up answers on their phones as they test. And the FL kids- who tested under supervision- will be competing for scholarships against the phone-assist test takers. SMH

In the spirit of transparency, I bet the CB will not allow the data comparing supervised vs online test scores to be seen. The amount of power this one company has is unacceptable. The entire process needs to be scrapped for MAJOR OVERHAUL. MOO. #DitchSAT
June SAT canceled: Here’s when future exams will be held
 
  • #737
I still don’t understand why The College Board itself has not been charged. They are responsible for the security & reliability of SAT. The fact that wealthy people were able to hire others to take that test- or correct the test- astounds me. If you do not come from wealth, you do NOT get to test in a separate or private room & you’re ID is verified from your driver’s license. Very hard to cheat.

Apparently, in 2020 coronavirus days, TCB is, for the first time ever, allowing at-home digital versions of SAT for students from schools that haven’t reopened. So... guessing students from FL, where schools are open, will now score lower than students from states where schools are still closed. Because those students will be able to look up answers on their phones as they test. And the FL kids- who tested under supervision- will be competing for scholarships against the phone-assist test takers. SMH

In the spirit of transparency, I bet the CB will not allow the data comparing supervised vs online test scores to be seen. The amount of power this one company has is unacceptable. The entire process needs to be scrapped for MAJOR OVERHAUL. MOO. #DitchSAT
June SAT canceled: Here’s when future exams will be held

Yes it does.
Where is Singer right now?
 
  • #738
  • #739



The prison where Lori Loughlin will likely serve her two-month sentence is sounding a little more luxe than your run-of-the-mill penitentiary.

This week, the actor’s request to be placed at the federal correctional institution that is a roughly two-hour drive from her new reported $9.5 million Hidden Hills “farmhouse,” was approved by a judge. The Bureau of Prisons still needs to sign off on Loughlin’s request, but it seems likely she will serve her time at the Victorville, California, facility as, according to Us Weekly, the federal prison records show she’s already had a registration number assigned to her.

But the appeal of this minimum-security satellite prison camp, which houses 300 inmates, may be more than just its proximity to her family. According to the FCC Victorville Satellite Prison Camp inmate handbook, the facility offers a wide array of recreational programs that wouldn’t look totally out of place at a wellness retreat.

The prison offers yoga, Pilates, painting, calligraphy, crochet, origami, ceramics, cartoon drawing, and music lesson for instruments such as the saxophone, accordion, and ukulele. Should Loughlin be considering a career change, there’s also vocational training available, including bicycle repair, forklift operations, dental assistant training, and waste management.

Well great and wonderful, my husband and I have some money schemes in mind. We can tolerate a few months in club meth..HA..try to catch us...

 
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  • #740
the handbook,

The prison where Lori Loughlin will likely serve her two-month sentence is sounding a little more luxe than your run-of-the-mill penitentiary.

This week, the actor’s request to be placed at the federal correctional institution that is a roughly two-hour drive from her new reported $9.5 million Hidden Hills “farmhouse,” was approved by a judge. The Bureau of Prisons still needs to sign off on Loughlin’s request, but it seems likely she will serve her time at the Victorville, California, facility as, according to Us Weekly, the federal prison records show she’s already had a registration number assigned to her.

But the appeal of this minimum-security satellite prison camp, which houses 300 inmates, may be more than just its proximity to her family. According to the FCC Victorville Satellite Prison Camp inmate handbook, the facility offers a wide array of recreational programs that wouldn’t look totally out of place at a wellness retreat.

The prison offers yoga, Pilates, painting, calligraphy, crochet, origami, ceramics, cartoon drawing, and music lesson for instruments such as the saxophone, accordion, and ukulele. Should Loughlin be considering a career change, there’s also vocational training available, including bicycle repair, forklift operations, dental assistant training, and waste management.
I’m guessing some or all of these activities may be currently curtailed due to coronavirus. Can’t imagine they’d put prison staff at risk for crochet & banjo bs. Jmo
 
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