US prosecutors have agreed to聽drop charges against a聽defendant for the first time in the college admissions scandal, sparing a聽former Wake Forest University volleyball coach shortly before he was due聽to face聽trial.
The former coach, William Ferguson, will have if he pays a聽$50,000 (拢40,000) fine and meets other legal conditions over the next two years, the US聽Department of聽Justice said. The government prosecutors, in聽announcing their decision, gave no聽reason for聽it.
Most of the 57 parents and other alleged participants charged in the scandal have pleaded guilty and received jail terms averaging a聽few months.
The scandal centred on a California admissions consultant who helped children of wealthy families gain admission to elite US institutions by routing payments to university officials 鈥 usually sports officials who are allowed a limited number of admissions slots for applicants they present as top players.
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Mr Ferguson was given the deal just days after the first court trial in the scandal ended with the convictions of two parents, and a聽few weeks before he was scheduled to stand trial alongside two sports officials from the University of Southern California.
He resigned as coach of the Wake Forest women鈥檚 volleyball team in August 2019 after pleading not聽guilty to聽charges of聽conspiracy to聽commit racketeering. Prosecutors later added mail and wire fraud charges.
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Mr Ferguson was alleged to have helped a single student gain admission to Wake Forest as a volleyball recruit. In return, the admissions consultant, William Singer, allegedly relayed $100,000 from the parent, with $40,000 going to the Wake Forest volleyball programme, $10,000 to a Wake Forest sports booster club, and $50,000 to a private volleyball camp that Mr Ferguson ran.
At the time the coach was charged, Wake Forest鈥檚 then-president, Nathan Hatch, said the student in the case was admitted to the university and remained enrolled, having been unaware of the alleged payments by her family.
The only other person so far to escape from prosecution in the scandal is Robert Zangrillo, a Miami investor pardoned by Donald Trump just before he left the White House. Mr Zangrillo was accused of paying $250,000 to help get his daughter admitted to聽USC.
Federal prosecutors in Massachusetts who agreed to drop the charge against Mr聽Ferguson are 鈥渘ot commenting beyond the court documents鈥, their spokeswoman said.
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