Federal prosecutors have asked for a sentence to sentence Lori Loughlin to two months in prison and her husband Mossimo Giannulli five months after her May guilty pleas in the infidelity scandal of admission to college.
The sentencing note filed through prosecutors on Monday follows the guilty plea agreements agreed by Loughlin and Giannulli.
In addition to the sentences, the memorandum recommends that the Fuller House actress pay a $150,000 fine and serve a hundred hours of network service. In the memorandum, prosecutors ask the U. S. District Court of Massachusetts to fine Giannulli with $250,000 and 250 hours of network service.
Loughlin and Giannulli were charged in 2019 with a conspiracy charge to engage bribes in federal programs, as well as conspiracy fees for cash laundering, conspiracy to engage in mail and cable fraud, and fair mail and cable fraud services.
Both, first of all, pleaded not guilty before even though they all decided to participate in a plea agreement.
On May 22, Loughlin, 55, confessed to a conspiracy charge to dedicate email and postal fraud, while Giannulli, 57, pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge to engage in postal and cable fraud and a charge of postal and cable fraud. in fair services.
According to the allegation of criminals against them, the actress and her husband were charged with paying $500,000 to Rick Singer and the Key Worldwide Foundation to falsely call their daughters Olivia Jade Giannulli, 20, and Isabella Rose Giannulli, 21, as recruits at the university. Southern Team California, although none of them have ever participated in the sport.
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In the sentencing note, U. S. Deputy Attorney General Justin O’Connell wrote that the alleged crimes were “serious” and deserved a sentence.
“They implicated their two daughters in the fraud, ordering them to pose in photographs to use on fake sports profiles and explaining to a woman how to hide the plan from her senior school counselor,” O’Connell wrote.
None of the couple’s daughters have been charged with investigative crimes.
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“Lori and Mossimo deeply regret what they did,” a source close to Loughlin told People in May. “This joy has had a massive emotional and physical effect on both. “
A source of the moment added: “At this point, they just want to know their destiny and purge the time they want to serve, so they can move on and close this chapter. “
Loughlin and Giannulli will be sentenced on Friday.