A federal jury in Boston found Jovan Vavic guilty of conspiracy for taking more than $200,000 in bribes to falsify athletic credentials.
[Ads /]
U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Rachael Rollins said the verdict in Vavic's trial represents the final conviction in the headline grabbing case dubbed "Operation Varsity Blues."
The investigation announced in 2019 exposed corruption in the college admissions process at Yale, Stanford, Georgetown and other sought-after schools, and implicated wealthy and connected parents, including actors Felicity Huffman, Lori Loughlin and Loughlin's fashion designer husband, Mossimo Giannulli.
RELATED: Actress Lori Loughlin reports to California prison after plea in college admissions scandal
Inside Lori Loughlin & husband's guilty plea in college admissions scandal
Vavic is one of a number of coaches implicated in the scandal, but is the only one to stand trial. The others pleaded guilty.
Vavic, who coached USC teams to more than a dozen national championships, claimed the payments were not bribes, but donations to the water polo program.
[Ads /]
His lawyers maintained Vavic never lied, never took a bribe and argued he was a victim of USC's desire to cover up a "pervasive culture" of accepting wealthy students who could provide donation windfalls.
RELATED: College admissions scandal: 2 parents convicted of buying their kids' way into USC
College admissions scandal: 2 parents convicted of buying their kids' way into USC
"Every single person, from fake proctors to test-takers, to coaches, to the parents, to the mastermind and conman himself, Rick Singer, have been held accountable," U.S. attorney Rachael Rollins said.
Also, a former Florida prep school administrator was sentenced to federal prison and a decorated water polo coach at the University of Southern California was swiftly convicted by a jury in Boston federal court in another conviction in the long running college admissions bribery scandal.
WATCH: Olivia Jade Giannulli speaks out for the first time about her family's 'big mistake' on 'Red Table Talk'
[Ads /]
Olivia Jade Giannulli speaks out for the first time about her family's 'big mistake' on 'Red Table Talk'
Mark Riddell, who was paid handsomely to take college entrance exams for wealthy students, was handed a four-month prison sentence, ordered to serve two years of supervised release and forfeit nearly $240,000.
He was convicted of taking college entrance exams for students in exchange for bribes.
WATCH MORE: College admissions scam: USC announces changes to student-athlete admissions process
USC announces changes to student-athlete admissions process
The Associated Press contributed to this report