Rachel Dolezal appears in court to answer charges of felony welfare fraud

NewImageThe ongoing saga of Rachel Dolezal who pretended to be black.

Now she’s alleged to be a Welfare queen.

The state accuses Dolezal of illegally receiving about $9,000 in food assistance and $100 in child care assistance in 2017, all while failing to report her actual income, according to the Washington Department of Social and Health Services. If convicted, she would face a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison and could be ordered to repay the money.

Priceless. Via the Spokesman Review

SPOKANE – Rachel Dolezal made her first public appearance in court Wednesday morning on accusations of stealing from the Washington welfare system.

It was the first time she’d seen a judge since being charged with two counts of felony fraud in late May.

Dolezal, who legally changed her name to Nkechi Diallo two years ago, pleaded not guilty again to both counts. Within minutes of entering the courtroom she was whisked away by her defense attorney, Bevan Maxey, to avoid television cameras.

Dolezal, 40, was thrust into the national spotlight in 2015 when it was revealed she was a white woman who for years passed herself off as black while serving as president of the Spokane chapter of the NAACP. The controversy has spawned many news articles, a book deal and a recent Netflix documentary “The Rachel Divide.”

As part of her release conditions, and because she was already out of custody, Spokane County Superior Court Judge James Triplet required Dolezal to check in July 2 to the Spokane County Jail, where she will be booked and photographed, but not sent to a cell.

Right-Mind