Lori Loughlin has been released from prison after serving two months for her involvement in the college admissions scandal Operation Varsity Blues.
Loughlin was sentenced to two months in federal prison and fined $150,000. She was additionally ordered to fulfill 150 hours of community service upon release.
In May, she and her husband, fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud.
Giannulli was also charged with one count of honest services wire and mail fraud and was sentenced to five months in prison.
Over 50 parents were accused of bribing their children’s way into elite universities.
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Both Loughlin and Giannulli were accused of paying $500,000 to falsely portray their daughters, Olivia Jade Giannulli and Isabella Rose Giannulli, as talented rowers to the USC crew team.
Neither of them had any previous experience participating in said sport.
Olivia Jade, 20, made the family’s first public appearance since being accused of the crime when she to speak on the Red Table Talk earlier in the month.
“We messed up,” she admitted to hosts Jada Pinkett Smith, Willow Smith, and Adrienne Banfield-Norris.
“I just want a second chance to be like, ‘I recognize I messed up.’ I never got to say ‘I’m really sorry that this happened,’ or, ‘I really own that this was a big mess-up on everybody’s part,’ but I think everybody feels that way in my family right now.”
You can say that again.