x
Breaking News
More () »

College Admissions Scandal: Elisabeth Kimmel among 16 parents indicted by federal grand jury with money laundering

Sixteen parents involved in the college admissions scandal, including La Jolla resident Elisabeth Kimmel, were charged Tuesday in Boston in a second superseding indictment.

SAN DIEGO — Sixteen parents involved in the college admissions scandal, including La Jolla resident Elisabeth Kimmel, were charged Tuesday in Boston in a second superseding indictment with conspiring to commit fraud and money laundering in connection with a massive college admissions scandal.

Actress Lori Loughlin and her husband were also among those charged.

The sixteen defendants, all of whom were arrested last month on a criminal complaint, are charged with conspiring with William “Rick” Singer, 58, of Newport Beach, Calif., and others. Some bribed SAT and ACT exam administrators to allow a test taker to secretly take college entrance exams in place of students, or to correct the students’ answers after they had taken the exam.

The second superseding indictment pertaining to Elisabeth Kimmel appears below:

Kimmel was arrested on Tuesday, March 12 in the morning at her home in the La Jolla area of San Diego and is appeared in court on March 29 in Boston. She appeared briefly in a San Diego federal court on March 18 where she was ordered to give up her passport. 

According to records, Kimmel's mansion in La Jolla is worth $7 million. Kimmel also owns an 8,000 square foot penthouse in Las Vegas. Real estate records show Kimmel and her husband purchased the penthouse in August 2018 for $5.5 million. Nevada is one of several states where residents do not have to pay for personal income tax.

RELATED: College Admissions Scandal: Elisabeth Kimmel appears in Boston court Friday

According to the criminal complaint, Kimmel participated in the scheme using bribery to get her daughter into Georgetown as a tennis recruit and her son into USC as a track recruit. 

According to federal authorities, Kimmel paid a $275,000 bribe through her charity, Meyer Charitable Foundation to get her daughter into Georgetown under a fake tennis profile. Her daughter was never on the team. 

Authorities also say Kimmel paid a $250,000 bribe to get her son into USC and falsely claimed he was a pole vaulter. 

RELATED: Who is Elisabeth Kimmel? Former owner of KFMB Stations in San Diego named in college admissions scandal

The second indictment also charges the defendants with conspiring to launder the bribes and other payments in furtherance of the fraud by funneling them through Singer’s purported charity and his for-profit corporation, as well as by transferring money into the United States, from outside the United States, for the purpose of promoting the fraud scheme.

The following defendants were charged in the second superseding indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and honest services mail and wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering:

  1. Gamal Abdelaziz, 62, aka “Gamal Aziz,” of Las Vegas, Nev.;
  2. Diane Blake, 55, of Ross, Calif.;
  3. Todd Blake, 53, of Ross, Calif.;
  4. I-Hsin “Joey” Chen, 64, of Newport Beach, Calif.;
  5. Mossimo Giannulli, 55, of Los Angeles, Calif.;
  6. Elizabeth Henriquez, 56, of Atherton, Calif.;
  7. Manuel Henriquez, 56, of Atherton, Calif.;
  8. Douglas Hodge, 61, of Laguna Beach, Calif.;
  9. Michelle Janavs, 48, of Newport Coast, Calif.;
  10. Elisabeth Kimmel, 54, of Las Vegas, Nev.;
  11. Lori Loughlin, 54, of Los Angeles, Calif.;
  12. William McGlashan, Jr., 55, of Mill Valley, Calif.;
  13. Marci Palatella, 63, of Hillsborough, Calif.;
  14. John Wilson, 59, of Lynnfield, Mass.;
  15. Homayoun Zadeh, 57, of Calabasas, Calif.; and
  16. Robert Zangrillo, 52, of Miami, Fla.

An arraignment date has not yet been scheduled.  

Case information, including the status of each defendant, charging documents and plea agreements are available here

Before You Leave, Check This Out