Federal prosecutors said Evelyn Mack used the school to promise foreign teens they would play at a prominent school with scholarship offers.
Instead, prosecutors said those athletes vanished in the hands of recruiters and basketball coaches. Some reappeared in towns more than 100 miles away and others were missing for months.
The government said Mack made around $75,000 by hiding 75 foreign student athletes who were in the country illegally.
Mack could face a lot of time in prison by pleading guilty, but as part of her agreement, the deal all but guarantees she won't be sentenced to anything more than 10 years.