New court documents have just revealed that former “Fuller House” star Lori Loughlin and her designer husband Mossimo Giannulli forced their daughter Olivia Jade to lie to her high school guidance counselor in an attempt to hide their involvement in the college admissions scandal.

Fox News reported that the court documents state that back in 2018, Loughlin and Giannulli had a conversation with Olivia about keeping their scheme a secret from her guidance counselor. When Olivia asked them if she should list the University of Southern California as her top school choice, Loughlin is quoted as replying, “Yes…. But it might be a flag for the weasel to meddle.”

Prosecutors claim that Giannulli then chimed in to say, “F— him,” going on to call the counselor a “nosey bastard.”

In March of that year, when Olivia was flagged as a member of the crew team, the counselor contacted USC to say that he had “no knowledge of [her] involvement in crew and based on what I knew of her video blogging schedule [I] highly doubted she was involved in crew.”

Olivia had been a popular YouTube video blogger and social media influencer before the scandal hit.

The documents added that Giannulli then confronted the guidance counselor and “aggressively asked what [the counselor] was telling USC about his daughters and why [the counselor] was trying to ruin or get in the way of their opportunities.” He is then said to have “bluntly stated that [his younger daughter] was a coxswain.”

A short time after this confrontation, the counselor emailed Giannulli saying that he had advised USC that Olivia Jade was “truly a coxswain,” and the matter appeared to be closed.

Loughlin and Giannulli are due to be officially sentenced on Friday months after they took plea deals after finally pleading guilty to the charges against them.

Under the terms of Loughlin’s deal, she would serve two months in prison and two years of supervised release, pay a $150,000 fine, and complete 100 hours of community service. As for Giannulli, he would serve five months in prison and two years of supervised release, pay a $250,000 fine, and complete 250 hours of community service. However, a judge still needs to officially approve these sentences for them to go into place.

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