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William 'Rick' Singer founder of the Edge College & Career Network, departs federal court in Boston, on March 12, 2019.Steven Senne/The Associated Press

The mastermind of the nationwide college admissions bribery scheme that ensnared celebrities, prominent business people and other parents who used their wealth and privilege to buy their kids’ way into top-tier schools was sentenced to 3 ½ years in prison Wednesday.

The punishment for Rick Singer, 62, is the longest sentence handed down in the sprawling scandal that embarrassed some of the nation’s most prestigious universities and put a spotlight on the secretive admissions system already seen as rigged in favour of the rich.

Prosecutors had sought six years behind bars, noting Mr. Singer’s extensive co-operation that helped authorities unravel the entire scheme. Mr. Singer began secretly working with investigators in 2018 and recorded hundreds of phone calls and meetings that helped authorities build the case against dozens of parents, athletic coaches and others arrested in March, 2019.

Those sent to prison for participating in the scheme include Full House actor Lori Loughlin, her fashion designer husband Mossimo Giannulli, and Desperate Housewives star Felicity Huffman. Coaches from schools including Yale, Stanford, Georgetown University and the University of California, Los Angeles, admitted to accepting bribes.

“It was a scheme that was breathtaking in its scale and its audacity. It has literally become the stuff of books and made-for-TV movies,” assistant U.S. attorney Stephen Frank told the judge Wednesday.

The prosecutor called Mr. Singer’s co-operation in the case “unparalleled” but said it was also problematic, noting that Mr. Singer admitted to obstructing the investigation by tipping off several of his clients who were under government scrutiny.

Defense attorney Candice Fields said Mr. Singer took great personal risk by wearing a wire to record meetings and “did whatever was necessary” to assist the government in its investigation. Ms. Fields had requested three years of probation, or if the judge deemed prison time necessary, six months behind bars.

Mr. Singer apologized to his family, the schools he embarrassed in the public eye and others. He also promised to work every day of his life going forward to make a positive impact in people’s lives.

“My moral compass was warped by the lessons my father taught me about competition. I embraced his belief that embellishing or even lying to win was acceptable as long as there was victory. I should have known better,” he said.

Mr. Singer pleaded guilty in 2019 – on the same day the massive case became public – to charges including racketeering conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy. Dozens of others ultimately pleaded guilty to charges, while two parents were convicted at trial.

Authorities in Boston began investigating the scheme after an executive under scrutiny for an unrelated securities fraud scheme told investigators that a Yale soccer coach had offered to help his daughter get into the school in exchange for cash. The Yale coach led authorities to Mr. Singer, whose co-operation unravelled the entire scheme.

For years, Mr. Singer paid off entrance exam administrators or proctors to inflate students’ test scores and bribed coaches to designate applicants as recruits in order to to boost their chances of getting into the school.

Coaches in such sports as soccer, sailing and tennis took bribes to pretend to recruit students as athletes, regardless of their ability. Fake sports profiles were made to make students look like stars in sports they sometimes didn’t even play. The bribes were typically funnelled through Mr. Singer’s sham charity, allowing some parents to disguise the payments as charitable donations and deduct the payments from their federal income taxes.

Mr. Singer took in more than $25-million from his clients, paid bribes totalling more than $7-million, and used more than $15-million of his clients’ money for his own benefit, according to prosecutors.

“This defendant was responsible for the most massive fraud ever perpetuated on the higher education system in the United States,” Mr. Frank told the judge Wednesday.

Before Mr. Singer, the toughest punishment has gone to former Georgetown tennis coach Gordon Ernst, who got 2 ½ years in prison for pocketing more than $3-million in bribes.

Punishments for the parents have ranged from probation to 15 months behind bars, although the parent who received that prison sentence remains free while he appeals his conviction.

One parent, who wasn’t accused of working with Mr. Singer, was acquitted on all counts stemming from accusations that he bribed Mr. Ernst to get his daughter into the school. And a judge ordered a new trial for former University of Southern California water polo coach Jovan Vavic, who was convicted of accepting bribes.

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