|
- Ex-Yale coach gets 5 months in college admissions bribery scandal
The former Yale University women’s soccer coach whose cooperation with authorities helped blow the lid off the nationwide college admissions bribery scandal by leading the FBI to the scheme’s
- Ex-Yale soccer coach in college admissions scandal to serve 5 months in . . .
Meredith was the head coach for the Connecticut Ivy League university’s women’s soccer team from 1995 to 2018 He was sentenced in a Boston federal court on Wednesday to five months behind
- Ex-Yale Coach Rudy Meredith Gets Jail in Varsity Blues Case
The former head coach for women's soccer at Yale University will spend five months behind bars for accepting $860,000 in bribes to falsely designate as recruits for her team
- District of Massachusetts - United States Department of Justice
Rudolph “Rudy” Meredith, 54, of Madison, Conn , was sentenced by U S Senior District Court Judge Mark L Wolf to five months in prison and one year of supervised release
- Former Yale soccer coach implicated in “Varsity Blues” scandal . . .
Rudolph Meredith, who gained $860,000 by facilitating side-door admissions deals, was sentenced to 5 months in prison Wednesday afternoon after his prosecutors had previously advocated no prison time
- Ex-Yale coach to serve 5 months in prison in Varsity Blues case
Meredith accepted $860,000 in bribes for efforts to get students accepted into Yale University, including by designating them as fake recruits to the women's soccer team, according to court
- Ex-Yale coach receives 5 months in prison in college admissions . . . - Yahoo
A former Yale University women's soccer coach who cooperated with authorities investigating the U S college admissions scandal was sentenced on Wednesday to five months in prison for accepting
- Ex-Yale Soccer Coach Sentenced in Bribery Scandal
The Associated Press reported that Rudolph "Rudy" Meredith, 54, the former Yale women’s soccer coach, was sentenced Wednesday to five months in prison Federal prosecutors and Meredith’s defense lawyers had recommended no additional prison time beyond the one day he spent in custody
|
|
|