Washington state -- Rachel Dolezal [aka Nkechi Diallo] has a new court date for her welfare fraud case.
Well here we are in the beginning of a new year and the world still hasn't come to an end with President Trump in the White House, in spite of what the media and the left [but I repeat myself] would have you believe.
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Dolezal, you may remember, is the white woman who identified as a black woman like Elizabeth Warren who identifies as a Native American [to land a better job] but is actually less Native American than most Europeans.
Rachel Dolezal, the former president of an NAACP chapter in Washington state made headlines in 2015 after her parents debunked her claims of being African-American. She is actually of German descent and is as white as Liz Warren.
FOX 28 Spokane reported that the case will be heard March 4th.
Dolezal, 41, changed her name to Nkechi [without the clicking sound] Diallo in 2016, in order to enhance her delusion of being black or perhaps her deception to land the NAACP job. She was arrested in May 2018 on charges of first-degree theft by welfare fraud, perjury in the second degree and false verification for public assistance, FOX 28 reported.
Rachel Dolezal, the former president of an NAACP chapter in Washington state made headlines in 2015 after her parents debunked her claims of being African-American. She is actually of German descent and is as white as Liz Warren.
FOX 28 Spokane reported that the case will be heard March 4th.
Dolezal, 41, changed her name to Nkechi [without the clicking sound] Diallo in 2016, in order to enhance her delusion of being black or perhaps her deception to land the NAACP job. She was arrested in May 2018 on charges of first-degree theft by welfare fraud, perjury in the second degree and false verification for public assistance, FOX 28 reported.
Rachel as a kid and her parents |
Investigators claim that several years ago Dolezal-Diallo began falsifying reports of her income so that she could qualify for public assistance, the station reported. She claimed she was living on just a few hundred dollars a month, donated by friends, the report said.
Due to her claim, she collected nearly $9,000 in state financial assistance from August 2015 to November 2017, Spokane's KHQ-TV reported, citing court documents. But a state investigation of her banking records discovered that she deposited over $80,000 in that same time period, the report said.
The welfare fraud case began in March 2017 after a state investigator received information that Dolezal-Diallo had written a book -- her autobiography, titled "In Full Color." It's about her struggle with being a white-black person in a full color world.
Due to her claim, she collected nearly $9,000 in state financial assistance from August 2015 to November 2017, Spokane's KHQ-TV reported, citing court documents. But a state investigation of her banking records discovered that she deposited over $80,000 in that same time period, the report said.
The welfare fraud case began in March 2017 after a state investigator received information that Dolezal-Diallo had written a book -- her autobiography, titled "In Full Color." It's about her struggle with being a white-black person in a full color world.
The investigator reviewed Dolezal-Diallo's records and found that she had been receiving money from book sales, speaking engagements, soap making, doll making and the sale of her art, according to the case file.
After the notoriety that followed the June 2015 disclosure by her parents, with whom she has long feuded, Dolezal-Diallo (then only Dolezal) resigned as Spokane NAACP president, was kicked off a police oversight commission, lost a position as a freelance columnist for a weekly newspaper in Spokane and was fired from her job teaching African studies at nearby Eastern Washington University.
After the notoriety that followed the June 2015 disclosure by her parents, with whom she has long feuded, Dolezal-Diallo (then only Dolezal) resigned as Spokane NAACP president, was kicked off a police oversight commission, lost a position as a freelance columnist for a weekly newspaper in Spokane and was fired from her job teaching African studies at nearby Eastern Washington University.
Hopefully the welfare fraud case will be all straightened out and Nkechi will be allowed to go back to the life of a white black woman or man, whatever she chooses this time, and once again go on making soap and dolls, and maybe even strudel and wurst.
I hope that you will follow Brain Flushings throughout the year and feel free to comment on any issues of concern. Please subscribe and check out the sponsors on these pages too.
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