University Bribery Scandal Gives Life to Rejected Students' Lawsuits
University Bribery Scandal Gives Life to Rejected Students' Lawsuits
In the wake of a recent university bribery scandal, students are suing Yale, Georgetown, Stanford and other schools involved in the case, claiming corruption cost them a fair chance at admission.The Associated Press reports that a group of students lodged a class-action complaint on Wednesday. Filed with a federal court in San Francisco, the plaintiffs are demanding unspecified damages and refunds on application fees.Working on behalf of the jilted students, attorneys from Zimmerman Reed and the Medler Law Firm have constructed two theories. First, they suggest colleges’ misconduct is akin to racketeering conspiracy; their civil claims are purportedly aligned with aspects of the government’s criminal RICO case.Secondly, says Reuters, the class action asserts ‘consumer claims against the universities whose coaches accepted bribes in exchange for admissions slots.’They claim that ordinary students were undermined when wealthy parents paid off school officials, enabling under-qualified applicants’ acceptance otherwise selective universities.At stake for the two lead plaintiffs is a dilemma that many Americans might find enviable: the contention that they were ‘forced’ to attend Stanford after being rejected by Yale’s allegedly corrupt admissions system.“Each of the universities took the students’ admission application fees while failing to take adequate steps to ensure that their admissions process was fair and free of fraud, bribery, cheating and dishonesty,” the lawsuit says.But legal experts consulted by Reuters and the Associated Press are skeptical of the class action’s prospects for success.
Gavel with law books; image by wp paarz, via Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0, no changes.
Sources
Admissions scandal class action is ‘fascinating’ but likely doomed - expertsStudents target colleges in lawsuit over bribery scheme
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.