Scandalous Yours, Stanford Universtity
Admissions Scandal: When âHard Workâ (Plus $6.5 Million) Helps Get You Into Stanford
Yusi Zhao is the ‘Pornstar’ of the $6.5 Million College Admissions Scandal

Yusi Zhao in a screenshot from a video in which she offers advice about getting into prestigious American universities. Her family is said to have paid $6.5 million to help secure her admission to Stanford. Credit YouTube screenshot
Billionaire Tied to $6.5 Million Payment for Stanford Is Window Into Chinaâs Elite
Pharmaceutical executive Zhao Tao led delegation of entrepreneurs to event in Washington and met with President Trump
Looks like no scandal is complete without Donald Trump?

Shandong Buchang Pharmaceuticals Chairman Zhao Tao with Donald and Melania Trump in 2017.
While many condemned Chinese drug lord Zhao Tao for paying $6.5 Million to secured a spot for her girl at Stanford, this is in fact not exactly that scandalous considering Chief Adviser of Trump’s nepotistic Administration, Jared Kusher also paid an arm and a leg ($1.2 million) to get into Harvard. That’s not all, Allegedly Avi Berkowitz is yet another “paid elite bum” of Harvard. Avi who? Avi Berkowitz is not a dude. He is Jared Kushner’s 28 years old protĂ©gĂ© and right-hand man. That’s right, Jared Kushner is advised by a fresh graduate of Harvard.
Now you know why Trump is a laughing stalk of the world?
Well, add up IQs of all the key players behind America’s presidential decision, we shouldn’t be surprised if the number doesn’t exceeds 300… Is that’s why?
Back to the biggest fish of the College Admissions Scandal, the parents behind the largest-known payment in the scandal offer a window into the elite world of the ultrawealthy Chinese business class.
Like many affluent Chinese, pharmaceutical billionaire Zhao Tao cultivated close ties with Beijing while also seeking to move in influential circles abroad and securing a top-flight foreign education for his child.
Sitting in a plush chair and wearing a white blouse buttoned up to the neck, the young woman looks into the camera, smiles and offers advice about getting into a top American university.
âSome people think, âDidnât you get into Stanford because your family is rich?ââ the woman, Yusi Zhao, says in a video posted on social media. It wasnât like that, she says. The admissions officers âhave no idea who you are.â
A Chinese billionaireâs Stanford bribe shows how the college admissions scandal makes both zero and complete sense
How much is too much for an elite US credential?
What has never made sense about the college admissions scandal is that seemingly smart businessmen couldnât find a better return on their investment.
And we may now have found our least-savvy palm greaser.
Meet Chinese billionaire Tao Zhao, whose family reportedly funneled the largest check received by William âRickâ Singer, the admissions consultant at the center of the explosive case brought by federal prosecutors. The pharmaceutical executiveâs daughter, Molly, earned a spot at Stanford University by casting herself as a recruit for the schoolâs sailing team, according to the Los Angeles Times, which broke the story, at a cost $6.5 million. There is âno indicationâ the young woman ever participated in competitive sailing.
Zhao was not charged in the first round of indictments â in fact, the $6.5 million figure isnât mentioned in the actual charging documents; it was spoken in court. Courtroom bombs like that are just another indication there are more shoes to drop in this case, and itâs got Silicon Valleyâs mega-rich on edge.
What the Zhao family did not fully appreciate is that there are cheaper so-called âside doorsâ to an elite institution like Stanford.
The special consideration given to âdevelopment casesâ â in the parlance of high-end college admissions, that means the children of prominent donors â is well documented. Daniel Golden, an author who spoke with Stanford University officials as part of his book on these special admissions arrangements, told the Stanford Daily a few years ago that existing or potential donors could see the admissions benefit of something equivalent to hundreds of extra points on their SAT score.
And for how much? Well, there arenât exactly how-to guides for quid pro quos, but the Palo Alto Patch reported that a $500,000 donation to the school was about the amount needed for an applicant to receive special consideration.
âThe threshold to make a difference in admissions is very high given the incredible amount of money in this area,â Marci Reichelstein, a former Stanford admissions official, told the outlet.
This wouldnât be the first time a wealthy person paid even bigger money. The father of presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner, now a senior adviser to Donald Trump, infamously pledged $2.5 million to Harvard just before Kushnerâs acceptance to the school, a gift Golden speculates played a role in his admission.
Thatâs what has never made total sense about the college admissions scandal. It has always seemed like amateur, ham-handed behavior by some of the worldâs most privileged and in-the-know people. College development offices welcome major gifts like these: Stanford, for instance, lists how much you must donate to qualify for various levels of âgift opportunitiesâ on its website. Stanford has a $27 billion endowment, but the money drawn from that each year only covers about a fifth of the schoolâs expenses, which means it relies on income sources like gifts and tuition to run school operations.
Thatâs a long way of saying: $6.5 million stands out on a financial statement.
Which brings us back to the Zhao family: For far less than $6.5 million, a billionaire couldâve found a far more legal way to influence-peddle his way into good favor with one of Americaâs elite universities. After all, Singerâs other clients paid typically $250,000 for access to one of his side doors â about 26 times cheaper a rate.
But hereâs another way to look at it: For the wealthiest people in the world, who retain their standing in the upper crust through credentials like elite schools, it is perhaps surprising that someone like Tao Zhao wouldnât pay more.
After all, the $6.5 million reportedly offered by his family is only 0.4 percent of his total net worth, according to Forbesâ latest estimate. Zhao is the founder of Shandong Buchang Pharmaceuticals and one of the 200 richest people in China.
And the gift speaks to just how much value Chinese billionaires place on US credentials and social signifiers like a Stanford diploma. Alibaba founder Jack Ma has said that he was rejected by Harvard 10 times, but Chinese billionaires have long been known for their âlove affairâ with Ivy League schools.
âWe work with many wealthy Chinese families who feel that sending a child to an elite Western university is a way of signaling status and prestige â yet âanother luxury brand purchase,ââ says college admissions consultant Paul Lowe. âFor wealthy families seeking a safe haven for their assets â by one estimate more than $1 trillion in capital left China in 2015 â a US college education for a child can serve as a first step toward addressing capital flight, foreign investment, and even eventual emigration.â
When you look at it that way, a price tag of $6.5 million makes total sense.
Money, money, money.
Life of Yusi Zhao @ Standford
I imagine identity of such a high profile girl must be concealed, that she is likely have to wear face mask wherever she goes… like this: –
And she would have to be heavily guarded during her enrollment at Stanford like this …
Turned out my imagination is no longer valid these days…Hope she grows up to become a real Lady like this beauty someday…
Manami Hashimoto
Japanese: æ©æŹæćź (ăŻăăăš ăŸăȘăż)
Birthdate: August 8, 1984
Birthplace: Yamagata Prefecture, Japan
Education: Horikoshi High School
Height: 168 cm.
Blood Type: AB

























































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