Former World Surfing League executive Jeffrey Bizzack was sentenced Wednesday to two months in prison after he paid $250,000 in bribes to get his son into the University of Southern California, federal prosecutors revealed.

Bizzack, 59, was said to have been overcome with shame when he watched on as 33 parents, including the likes of Lori Loughlin, were arrested and charged crimes he knew he’d committed back in March.

The entrepreneur then turned himself into the government soon afterwards and pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud in July.

On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Douglas P. Woodlock condemned the 59-year-old to two months in prison, making him 12th parent to be sentenced in the USC college admissions scandal.

As part of the sentence, Bizzack will also be forced to pay a $250,000 fine, remain on supervised release for three years at the end of his jail term, and carry-out 300 hours of community service.

On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Douglas P. Woodlock condemned 59-year-old Jeffrey Bizzack to two months in prison, making him 12th parent to be sentenced in the USC college admissions scandal

Bizzack was said to have been overcome with shame when he watched on as 33 parents, including the likes of Lori Loughlin (right), were arrested and charged crimes he knew he’d committed back in March

Just as the 11 other parents – such as Felicity Huffman – who have since admitted guilt, Bizzack conspired with the now infamous fixer William Singer, a Newport Beach-based consultant who rigged SAT and ACT test results for his client’s children and touted them as top athletes for sports they didn’t play.

Bizzack, who also worked as an executive for the clothing company Outerknown and the Kelly Slater Wave Co., met singer in April 2017, having been introduced by a mutual friend.

As part of Bizzack’s bribe, Singer agreed to misrepresent his son to USC as a nationally ranked volleyball star.

In addition to fabricating information on his recruiting profile, the image used on the document wasn’t even Bizzack’s son, rather a photograph of a real volleyball player. His son was accepted to USC as a recruited athlete in late 2017.

Bizzack intercepted the acceptance letter so that his son had no knowledge he was presented as a fake athlete. He then paid $50,000 to an account operated by former USC athletics official Donna Heinel and $200,000 to a sham charity set up by Singer, court documents show.

‘Rick, A big thank you for all your help with [my son]! He is thrilled about U.S.C. and is still on cloud nine!’ Bizzack wrote in a check to Singer.

Prosecutors say Singer engineered dozens of similar ruses that allowed him to sneak his clients’ children into USC, UCLA, Georgetown and other elite schools, undetected for so long.

Just as the 11 other parents – such as Felicity Huffman – who have since admitted guilt, Bizzack conspired with the now infamous fixer William Singer (above), a Newport Beach-based consultant who rigged SAT and ACT test results for his client’s children and touted them as top athletes for sports they didn’t play.

Bizzack intercepted the acceptance letter so that his son had no knowledge he was presented as a fake athlete. He then paid $50,000 to an account operated by former USC athletics official Donna Heinel and $200,000 to a sham charity set up by Singer, court documents show

However, what makes Bizzack’s case unique is that he was the only one to surrender in the scandal. His lawyers said in a sentencing memorandum that he decided to contact federal prosecutors because he was so overcome by shame.

From there on in, he ‘engaged in truthful, complete and candid discussions of his actions’, his counsel said.

It remains unclear whether Bizzack knew he had been under investigation for months or not. At the request the FBI, Singer had called Bizzack in October 2018 and tried to elicit a recorded confession from him.

Of his own volition, Bizzack also met with USC investigators to assist their probe. For a number of hours he ‘spoke openly and honestly about everything he knew about the scheme and his participation in it,’ documents obtained by the LA Times show.

His lawyers said that given Bizzack’s ‘extraordinary acceptance of responsibility’, he should be spared prison and punished instead with probation, a $75,000 fine and community service.

From the opposing bench, prosecutors argued he should receive a nine month sentence because his crime corroded public trust and ‘caused concrete harm: the theft of an admissions spot, and the lifelong opportunities associated with it, from a more deserving student.’

Singer, meanwhile, has pleaded guilty to several conspiracy charges and has been cooperating with prosecutors. Heinel, who was fired by USC in March, has pleaded not guilty to conspiracy to commit racketeering and was charged last week with additional conspiracy and fraud charges.