KEY POINTS
  • A man who spoke with college admissions fraudster William "Rick" Singer in 2011 says Singer casually floated the idea of having the man's son pose as a water polo player to ease his acceptance by a top California university.
  • Singer has pleaded guilty to a wide-ranging scheme that allegedly involved wealthy parents — including actresses Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin, top CEOs and a lawyer — getting their children accepted to high-ranking colleges through bribery, false representations and test cheating.
  • The schools allegedly victimized in the scheme include Yale University, Georgetown, Stanford and the University of Southern California.
William "Rick" Singer leaves the federal courthouse after facing charges in a nationwide college admissions cheating scheme in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., March 12, 2019.

A man who talked to college admissions advisor William "Rick" Singer eight years ago about getting his son into a top California school says Singer matter-of-factly raised the idea of using fraud to make that happen — for a whopping $100,000 fee — less than two minutes after their conversation began.

"I think there was 90 seconds of asking about his grades and his SATs and his extracurricular activities, and then it shifted" into how to have his son win admission by pretending to be a water polo team recruit and making a "contribution" to the water polo team, recalled the man.