Via video, Lori Loughlin and her husband get agreed fixed short prison sentences in college admission scandal
As reported in this CBS News piece, headlined “Lori Loughlin gets 2 months in prison in college admissions scandal. Her husband Mossimo Giannulli will serve 5 months,” a high-profile (but low-drama) sentencing took place in federal court yesterday. Here are the basics:
Actress Lori Loughlin will serve two months in prison and her husband, fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli, will serve five months after the couple pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges in the college admissions scandal. A federal judge on Friday accepted plea deals from the famous couple in a video sentencing hearing.
After initially vowing to fight the charges, Loughlin and Giannulli reversed course after a judge denied their motion to dismiss the case in May. Prosecutors said the couple paid $500,000 to secure their daughters’ admission to the University of Southern California by masquerading them as fake athletic recruits.
“I made an awful decision. I went along with a plan to give my daughters an unfair advantage in the college admissions process. In doing so, I ignored my intuition and allowed myself to be swayed from my moral compass,” Loughlin said in the video call.
Loughlin, 56, will also pay a $150,000 fine, serve 100 hours of community service, and be under supervised release for two years. Giannulli, 57, is required to pay a fine of $250,000, serve 250 hours of community service, and serve two years of supervised release.
Earlier in the day, Giannulli apologized for the harm his decisions caused his family. “I’m ready to accept the consequences and move forward with the lessons I’ve learned from this experience,” he said. Prior to rendering the sentence, U.S. District Court Judge Nathaniel Gorton ripped into Giannulli for committing a “crime motivated by hubris” that is “defined by wanton arrogance and excessive pride.”
In addition to really liking the aesthetic of this “courtroom sketch” of this video sentencing, I reprinted the picture here in order to wonder aloud whether the US Sentencing Commission is keeping track of which sentencings are taking place via video these days and which ones are taking place in person. Because six months into this pandemic the USSC still has not even reported how many sentencings are taking place, I am not especially optimistic the USSC is collecting, or will anytime soon be reporting, special granular data on COVID-era sentencing realities. But my hope for the USSC springs eternal.
A few prior posts focused on these defendants:
- US Attorney in college admission scandal makes plain how trial penalty works even for celebrity actresses
- The trial penalty on fine display as parents in college admissions scandal get hit with new federal bribery charges
- Notable Wall Street Journal commentaries decry injustices highlighted by college admission scandal prosecutions
- After extended resistance (and likely lots of legal fees), Lori Loughlin and her husband agree to plead guilty in college admission scandal with fixed short prison sentence
A few of many prior posts on other defendants in college admissions scandal:
- Mapping out next possible celebrity sentencings in wake of indictment in college admissions scandal
- Big batch of federal plea deals (with relatively low sentencing ranges) in college admissions scandal
- Federal district judge rejects feds request for significant prison term in first sentencing of college bribery scandal
- Feds recommending incarceration terms from 1 to 15 months for parents involved college bribery scandal
- Noticing the interesting (but perhaps not too consequential) guidelines “loss” issue lurking in the college bribery cases
- Next parent sentenced in college admission scandal gets four months in federal prison
- Next parent up in college admission scandal sentencing also gets four months in federal prison
- BigLaw partner gets one month federal time as latest parent sentenced in college admissions scandal
- Napa Valley winemaker gets five months of imprisonment, the longest sentence so far in college admissions scandal
- Catching up with another round of sentencings in “Operation Varsity Blues”
- Reviewing the sentencing dynamics as more parents get (minimal) prison time in “Operation Varsity Blues” college admissions scandal
- Longest prison sentence (six months) imposed in college admission scandal on big-spending dad
- Nine-month federal prison term (the longest yet) given to former CEO who paid nearly $1 million to benefit four kids in college admission scandal