Woman who scammed thousands of hopeful parents looking to adopt is sentenced to 20 months in prison

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating

By Hannah Rabinowitz, CNN

(CNN) — It was two years ago when a pregnant teenager first reached out to a Tennessee couple on Instagram who had desperately been trying to adopt a baby for nearly a decade. Their relationship would eventually devolve from designing a nursery over the phone to threats of murder and a horrifying revelation: The woman they were speaking to was never even pregnant.

A second couple too thought their prayers had been answered when a woman responded to their online pleas to adopt, saying that she was pregnant with twins. The three discussed names, the woman sent pictures of her “baby bump” and asked the couple’s two young sons whether they were excited to be big brothers.

But again, the promise of an adoption unraveled. The couple fielded so many phone calls from the woman — which often devolved into threats of drug use that could harm the baby or to kill their sons — that they had to buy a headset to free up their hands. Then, the couple’s friend discovered the pregnant woman’s social media, which made it clear she had no plans to give up the twins for adoption.

Over seven years, Gabryele Watson ran the same scam against thousands of couples looking to adopt, prosecutors alleged in court documents ahead of Watson’s guilty plea. She never asked for money, the documents said, but spent hours of every day stealing the identities of pregnant teens she found online and calling her victims pretending to be the teenager, their boyfriend or other family members in what prosecutors called a “sophisticated operation of heartbreak and terror.”

Now 30, Watson was sentenced Friday to 20 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to charges of stalking, identity theft and threats of kidnapping and murder.

Watson “cruelly led on couples seeking to adopt a baby, only to later emotionally abuse them, including threatening to terminate the pregnancy and mocking adoptive mothers for not being able to conceive,” A. Tysen Duva, the assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s criminal division, said in a statement. “Her sentence today accounts for the real-world devastation her unrelenting online harassment caused her victims.”

CNN has reached out to her attorneys for comment.

Pleas to stop

Three years before her arrest, Watson was publicly confronted about her scam on Dr. Phil. On the show, Watson’s father said that she has suffered from “severe mental problems” since her mother died in 2012. Her relentless campaign to harass prospective adopters, he said, began after she was told that she could not have children.

“She gets possessed by TV shows which show moms bearing children,” her father said on the show. “She just thinks that it’s not fair that she can’t experience that part of life.”

By that time, all five of Watson’s siblings had cut ties with her. A family blog described her behavior in detail, prosecutors say, and some siblings and her father had been publicly confronted by her victims — one of which was Watson’s own sister. Her father was pleading for help.

Watson assured her father that she would stop in her Dr. Phil episode, but prosecutors say she continued the scam up to the day of her arrest.

Beyond that, prosecutors say, Watson appeared to revel in the newfound media attention. She taped another television episode with an unnamed Lifetime show in which she boasted about regularly wiping her cell phone and using a voice changer while on the phone with couples to hide her identity — an allegation she later denied.

She also recorded multiple FaceTime interviews with a Netflix producer about a miniseries on her scam, prosecutors say.

Behind the scenes, however, prosecutors and defense attorneys describe a complicated person who knew what she was doing was w

Alejandra Navarro of Goleta Union School District Named 2027 Santa Barbara County Teacher of the Year

Kraig Pakulski 0 11 Article rating: No rating
Alejandra Navarro, a first-grade Dual Language Immersion teacher at Goleta Union School District’s El Camino Elementary School, was announced today as the 2027 Santa Barbara County Teacher of the Year. […]

The post Alejandra Navarro of Goleta Union School District Named 2027 Santa Barbara County Teacher of the Year appeared first on edhat.

El Departamento de Justicia de EE.UU. trabaja para imputar al expresidente de Cuba Raúl Castro

Kraig Pakulski 0 11 Article rating: No rating

Por Hannah Rabinowitz y Evan Perez, CNN

El Departamento de Justicia de EE.UU. está trabajando para asegurar cargos penales contra el expresidente cubano Raúl Castro, según fuentes familiarizadas con el asunto.

El alcance de la investigación no está claro. Pero los fiscales federales han examinado una serie de posibles cargos, incluidos algunos relacionados con el derribo en 1996 por parte de las Fuerzas Armadas cubanas de dos aviones pertenecientes a la organización de exiliados cubano-estadounidenses Hermanos al Rescate.

Cuatro hombres —tres de ellos ciudadanos estadounidenses— murieron en el ataque.

Si un jurado investigador lo aprueba, una acusación formal podría anunciarse tan pronto como la próxima semana.

En los últimos meses, fiscales de EE.UU. para el distrito sur de Florida han trabajado en la construcción de un caso penal contra líderes cubanos, según una persona informada sobre las discusiones. El fiscal federal Jason Reding Quiñones inició el impulso, aunque algunos fiscales de carrera en la oficina de Miami expresaron preocupaciones sobre si había pruebas suficientes para presentar un caso, dijo la persona.

Castro, el hermano de 94 años del histórico gobernante cubano Fidel Castro, era un objetivo principal en esa lista, dicen las fuentes.

El Departamento de Justicia no respondió de inmediato a la solicitud de comentarios de CNN. CBS fue el primero en informar sobre el esfuerzo del Departamento de Justicia para imputarlo.

Legisladores republicanos cubano-estadounidenses han presionado al Departamento de Justicia para que presente cargos. En una carta de febrero a la entonces secretaria de Justicia Pam Bondi, legisladores, incluido el representante Mario Diaz-Balart, instaron al Departamento de Justicia a procesar a Castro, citando pruebas que incluyen informes de esa época de que existe una grabación del tráfico de radio que incluye a los pilotos cubanos de MiG y que indicaría que Castro, entonces ministro de Defensa de Cuba, ordenó el derribo de los aviones en espacio aéreo internacional.

Los posibles cargos penales en EE.UU. se producen en medio de crecientes tensiones entre los enemigos de la era de la Guerra Fría. EE.UU. ha acusado a Cuba de representar una “amenaza extraordinaria” al aliarse con Estados hostiles y albergar activos militares y de inteligencia extranjeros, una afirmación que Cuba niega.

El director de la CIA, John Ratcliffe, viajó a Cuba el jueves para reunirse con funcionarios del Gobierno a medida que crece la tensión entre los enemigos de la era de la Guerra Fría.

Aunque los contornos de la conversación aún no se han discutido públicamente, La Habana dijo que sus funcionarios enfatizaron que Cuba “no constituye una amenaza para la seguridad nacional de EE.UU.” y que no hay “razones legítimas” para incluirla en la lista de EE.UU. de Estados que promueven del Terrorismo, como ha sido bajo el Gobierno de Trump.

El esfuerzo por presentar cargos también se produce en paralelo con la intensificación por parte del Gobierno de Trump de un embargo económico de décadas contra Cuba. A pesar de los llamados internacionales a levantar las sanciones, EE.UU. aumentó la presión durante el último año.

A principios de enero, EE.UU. cortó el principal proveedor de petróleo de Cuba, Venezuela, después de capturar a su presidente en una incursión militar y obligar a su gobierno a detener los envíos. Luego, EE.UU. amenazó con imponer aranceles a otros países si suministraban petróleo a la isla. El bloqueo ha llevado la economía de Cuba al borde del colapso, con la nación caribeña experimentando su peor era de incertidumbre económica en décadas y las Naciones Unidas advirtiendo de un posible “colapso” humanitario.

En febrero, el presidente Donald Trump dijo que Cuba estaba en un “g

RSS
First948949950951953955956957Last