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		Ex-coach of Yale women's soccer team 
		plans guilty plea in admission scandal 
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		 [March 28, 2019] 
		By Nate Raymond 
 BOSTON (Reuters) - The former head coach of 
		women's soccer at Yale University on Thursday is set to admit he took 
		bribes to help the children of wealthy parents get into the Ivy League 
		school, becoming the third person to plead guilty to a role in the 
		largest U.S. college admissions scandal.
 
 Rudolph "Rudy" Meredith, 51, is scheduled to appear in federal court in 
		Boston and plead guilty to conspiracy and wire fraud charges as part of 
		an agreement to cooperate with prosecutors in their ongoing 
		investigation, according to court records.
 
 He is among 50 people charged with participating in a scheme that helped 
		parents buy admission to universities such as Yale, the University of 
		Southern California and Georgetown University. The wealthy parents who 
		were charged in the wide-ranging case included the actresses Lori 
		Loughlin and Felicity Huffman.
 
		
		 
		
 The scheme, headed by college admissions counseling service operator 
		Rick Singer, involved paying $25 million in bribes to coaches including 
		Meredith who helped parents secure spots for their children as fake 
		athletic prospects, prosecutors said.
 
 Prosecutors said Singer also facilitated cheating on college entrance 
		exams for his clients. Singer pleaded guilty on March 12 to charges 
		including racketeering conspiracy and is cooperating with investigators.
 
 Meredith beginning in 2015 agreed with Singer to accept bribes to 
		designate applicants as recruits to the Yale women's soccer team 
		regardless of their athletic abilities, according to charging documents.
 
 Prosecutors alleged that in one instance, Meredith in 2017 in exchange 
		for $400,000 designated the daughter of a Los Angeles-based financial 
		advisor as a soccer recruit even though she did not play competitive 
		soccer.
 
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			Students walk on the campus of Yale University in New Haven, 
			Connecticut November 12, 2015.REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo 
            
 
            Singer sent Meredith a fabricated athletic "profile" for the student 
			that claimed she was co-captain of a prominent California club 
			soccer team, prosecutors said.
 Investigators uncovered the scheme while conducting an unrelated 
			probe into Morrie Tobin, a Los Angeles resident who prosecutors said 
			engaged in "pump-and-dump" stock market schemes, according to a 
			person familiar with the matter.
 
 Tobin, who pleaded guilty on Feb. 27 to conspiracy and securities 
			fraud charges, told authorities that Meredith had sought a bribe in 
			exchange for helping his daughter get into the Ivy League school, 
			the person said.
 
 The Federal Bureau of Investigation, after receiving the tip, 
			secretly recorded a meeting in which Meredith sought $450,000 in 
			exchange for designating Tobin's daughter as a soccer recruit, 
			according the person and related court records.
 
 Yale on Monday said it had rescinded the admission of a student 
			linked to the scandal but did not name the student.
 
 (Reporting by Nate Raymond; Editing by Scott Malone and David 
			Gregorio)
 
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