Adviser involved in college admissions probe revealed as Oppenheimer rep

Adviser involved in college admissions probe revealed as Oppenheimer rep
Qui Xue Yang works at firm's Summa Group unit in Los Angeles.
APR 30, 2019

A financial adviser working at a unit of Oppenheimer & Co. in Los Angeles has been identified by The Wall Street Journal as having helped facilitate a $1.2 million payment by a Chinese family to a college counselor at the center of the college admissions cheating scandal. The Journal said the adviser, Qui Xue Yang, works at Summa Group, a small unit of Oppenheimer that noted Ms. Yang's work with Chinese clients on its website. Ms. Yang joined the firm in 2015, according to her BrokerCheck record. (More:Millionaires flee homelands as tensions rise, taxes bite) According to Federal court filings, a Los Angeles-based adviser whom the newspaper identified as Ms. Yang, allegedly coordinated for the family to pay William Singer, who has admitted to managing the scheme, for securing a spot for a young woman at Yale University. The Journal said that Ms. Yang didn't respond to requests for comment and that Oppenheimer referred to a previous statement in which it said it maintained a "very limited" relationship with Mr. Singer's foundation under the impression it was a college tutoring service, but that the relationship has since been severed.

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