The college admissions scandal is becoming a limited television series



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Annapurna Television will perform a limited one-hour series on the scandal after opting for the rights of the book "Accepted" Melissa Korn and Jen Levitz, Wall Street Journal journalists.

The book details the criminal conspiracy to influence the admission decisions of undergraduate students at several major American universities, said Ashley Momtaheni, Annapurna's vice president of communications.

In March, 50 people across the country were charged with the biggest scam on college admissions ever prosecuted by the Justice Department, officials said. The trick was either to cheat on standardized tests or to bribe college coaches and school officials to accept students as university athletes – even if the student had never practiced the sport .

Loughlin pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy to commit fraud and conspiracy to launder money. Huffman agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud.

D.V. DeVincentis will write the limited series of one hour. DeVincentis had already won an Emmy for "American Crime Story: The People vs. OJ Simpson". According to a press release from the production company, he has written and produced film scripts for himself and with others, including "High Fidelity", "Grosse Pointe Blank" and "Lay the Favorite".

Levitz covers general news from the newspaper's office in Boston, and Korn has written extensively on university admissions and has covered articles on higher education for the newspaper since 2011, according to their biographies.

"Accepted" will be published by Portfolio, a division of Penguin Random House.

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