[ad_1]
Devin Sloane, the founder and CEO of a provider of drinking water and wastewater systems, also must serve 500 hours of community service and pay a $95,000 fine, the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts said.
Sloane pleaded guilty to conspiracy fraud in May. Prosecutors had recommended he be sentenced to one year and one day in prison, a year of supervised release, a fine of $75,000, forfeiture and restitution.
As described in the complaint, Sloane carried out some of the more egregious — and comical — actions of the scam.
As part of his and Rick Singer’s plan to get Sloane’s son into USC as a water polo recruit, Sloane purchased water polo gear, including a ball and cap, on Amazon, the complaint says. He then emailed a graphic designer a photo of his son purporting to play water polo wearing that gear.
Sloane then sent Singer an edited photo of his son in water polo gear with his right arm and upper torso above the water line of a pool.
“Does this work??” Sloane wrote in the June 2017 email.
“Yes but a little high out of the water- no one gets that high,” Singer replied.
Sloane then sent another version of the photo in which his son appears to be lower in the water. Singer said that was “perfect.”
This false profile was presented to the USC subcommittee for athletic admissions in November 2017, and the son was accepted to the university.
In exchange, Sloane sent $50,000 to Donna Heinel, the former senior associate athletic director at USC, and wired $200,000 to Singer’s fake charity, Key Worldwide Foundation.
The acceptance raised eyebrows, though. Sloane’s son’s high school did not have a water polo team, and one of the high school counselors questioned his college acceptance, the complaint states.
Heinel, who was fired by USC in March, has pleaded not guilty to racketeering conspiracy.
[ad_2]
Source link