As part of a deal to plead guilty for bypassing the admission process of the college, the actress of “Full House”, Lori Loughlin, has agreed to serve two months in prison while her husband, Mossimo Giannulli, has agreed to serve five months in prison.
Loughlin, 55, and Giannulli, 56, were scheduled to plead guilty yesterday through video conference before Boston’s federal judge, who will approve the deal.
It’s a incredible reversal for the popular couple who claimed to be innocent last year and that investigators had framed up evidence against them. The couple’s decision came around two weeks after the judge turned down their bid to cancel the case over allegations of gross misconduct by federal authorities.
While talking about the case, former federal prosecutor, Bradley Simon said: “I think they made a calculated assessment that the risks were just too great” to bring the case to trial.
They were lined up for trial in October allegations that they paid $500,000 bribe to get their two daughters into University of Southern California as crew team recruits, even though both of them did not play the sport. Authorities said they helped in creating fake athletic profiles for their daughters by forwarding photos of the girls posing on rowing machines to the admitted leader of the scheme, admissions consultant Rick Singer.
Loughlin and Giannulli’s lawyers had stated that the couple felt the payments were “legitimate donations” that was expected to go to USC as a fundraising gift or support Singer’s charity directly. They also alleged prosecutors of hoarding criticial evidence that could prove the couple’s innocence as it would undermine their case.
They both agreed to plead guilty for conspiring to commit wire and mail fraud in a plea agreement to be filed in Boston’s federal court. Also, the prosecutor said Giannulli will also plead guilty to a charge of honest services wire and mail fraud. Prosecutors have agreed on dismissing money laundering charges and federal programs bribery that were attached after the case was filed.
Loughlin will also pay a $150,000 fine and execute 100 hours of community service under her plea deal. Giannulli has agreed that he would to pay a fine of $250,000 and carry out community service of 250 hours.
Simon said the lawyers of the couple may think that Loughlin and Giannulli stand a chance of not going to prison and serving their punishments at home due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Attorney General William Barr has directed the Bureau of Prisons to increase home confinement’s usage and fast track the release of high-risk inmates that are eligible owing to the virus crisis. Already, the pandemic has stalled the prison sentences of some parents who had pleaded guilty in the case of college admissions and permitted others to go home early.
Simon said: “It may have been a very clever move by the lawyers.”
The former assistant U.S. Attorney, Jeff Cramer said prosecutors were facing embarrassment risk if they lost the case, and the couple’s lawyers raised some valuable lines of defence for trial.
“For both sides, from the prosecutors’ side and the defence side, I think this is a fair outcome.”
Loughlin and Giannulli were part of the 50 people apprehended last year in the case titled “Operation Varsity Blues” that plunged the world of higher education. They happen to be the 23rd and 24th parents that are pleading guilty in the case.









