Boston (AFP) - Actress Felicity Huffman was given two weeks jail time Friday for paying bribes to help her daughter gain admission to a prestigious American university, the first high-profile figure to be sentenced in a cheating scandal that rocked America.
The
"Desperate Housewives" actress, wearing a navy blue dress and
cardigan, looked ashen-faced as she left the federal courthouse in Boston,
Massachusetts, clutching the hand of her husband, actor William H. Macy.
Huffman,
56, was the first parent to be sentenced among 50 people indicted in an
elaborate and wide-ranging scam to help children of the elite secure places in
top US colleges.
The Oscar
nominee pleaded guilty in May during a tearful court appearance to paying
$15,000 to boost her daughter's SAT college entrance exam score.
Judge
Indira Talwani told Huffman it was important to send a message to other parents
that they can't use their wealth to cheat more deserving students.
"I
think without this sentence you would be looking at a future with the community
around you asking why you had gotten away with this," she said, according
to media outlets in the courtroom.
The judge
said Huffman can rebuild her life after serving the sentence, which also
includes a fine of $30,000 and 250 hours of community service.
"After
this, you've paid your dues," she said.
Huffman
must report for prison on October 25.
The actress
apologized to students and parents and said she accepted the judge's decision.
"I
broke the law. There are no excuses or justifications for my actions.
Period," the actress said in a statement.
"My
hope now is that my family, my friends and my community will forgive me for my
actions," Huffman added.
Federal
prosecutors had asked that Huffman be given a month in jail.
Her defense
team recommended a sentence of a year's probation and a $20,000 fine.
Her guilty
plea avoided what would have been a well-publicized trial and potentially
lengthier jail sentence.
The crime
is punishable by up to 20 years in prison and a fine of as much as $250,000.
Huffman
announced her intention to plead guilty in April, saying she was
"ashamed" of what she had done.
Lori
Loughlin
The scandal
erupted in March when the ringleader behind the scam, William "Rick"
Singer, admitted running the elaborate system which ranged from cheating in
entrance exams to bribing coaches to help non-athletic students get
scholarships.
Authorities
say he was paid about $25 million to bribe coaches and university
administrators. He has pleaded guilty and is cooperating with authorities.
His
sentencing will take place on September 19.
In June, a
former Stanford University sailing coach was the first to be sentenced,
receiving two years of supervised release.
John
Vandemoer, 41, had pleaded guilty in March for accepting payments to the
program totaling $610,000 "in exchange for corrupting the admissions
process of a major university," prosecutors said.
A Chinese
family admitted to paying Singer $6.5 million to guarantee their daughter
admission to Stanford, with Vandemoer's help, though the mother said she was
duped into believing the sum was a charitable donation.
Besides
Stanford, some of the universities targeted in the elaborate cheating scam
include University of Southern California, Yale, Georgetown and UCLA. None of
the schools or the students have been charged in the case.
Actress
Lori Loughlin from 1980s-90s sitcom "Full House" has also been
accused. She and her husband have pleaded not guilty and are awaiting trial.

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