A 38-year-old Utah woman who said she was just 21 after being arrested was caught out when police unearthed records for her youthful alter ego, who turned out to be her daughter.
But it wasn’t long before officers unearthed records showing that the identity she had offered was actually that of her daughter, reported the news outlet, citing court documents.
When they managed to identify her real name, police discovered she had outstanding warrants for possession of a controlled substance, for driving on a denied license, and for marijuana possession of more than 16 ounces, according to jail records.
However, trying to mislead officers into believing that another person committed the crime with a real name and details is a Class A misdemeanor that carries a maximum fine of $2,500 and a possible jail sentence of one year.
15 Years for Posing as a Deputy
Maxine Feldstein, 30, will spend the next 15 years behind bars after pleading guilty to forgery, third-degree escape, and second-degree criminal impersonation.According to the Northwest Arkansas Gazette, Feldstein managed to free her boyfriend from a Washington County jail with nothing but a phone call and a follow-up email to which she attached an “authentic-looking form.”
But her boyfriend, Nicholas Lowe, remained in jail, on hold from Ventura County Sheriff’s Office in California for false impersonation.
But Lowe had a plan.
Identifying herself as “Deputy Kershaw with the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office,” Feldstein called the jail July 27, persuading the on-duty deputy that Lowe was to be released because Ventura County jail was overcrowded.
Feldstein claimed to have sent a fax with an official release form. When the deputy said he had not received the fax, she sent him an “authentic-looking form” via email, releasing Ventura County’s hold, according to the affidavit cited by KFSM.
The plan worked—until the couple were both captured less than three weeks later in Fayetteville and found themselves once again in a county jail.
They were both charged over the escape—but Feldstein bore the brunt of the charges.