Airman 1st Class Charged With Identity Theft
The Austin
American-Statesman reported last week that Liliana Plata, known to the Air
Force as Cristina Alaniz, surrendered to authorities in Valdosta, Ga. on Tuesday
and was released on bail the same day. She
is charged with fraudulent use or possession of identifying information.
A hearing set for next month will decide the punishment she faces of two
years behind bars, a dishonorable discharge from the Air Force, and deportation
to Mexico.
According to the American-Statesman
report, Plata came to the U.S. illegally from Mexico City and hoped to join the
military. After learning she needed
a Social Security card to join, she borrowed $2,000 from her mother and
purchased documents from a man in Los Angeles who sold new identities.
After being assured that her new identity was that of a deceased person,
Liliana Plata became Cristina Alaniz.
She went through basic
training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio and served as part of the 822nd
Security Forces Squadron with Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Alaniz (Plata) has consistently been praised for her performance on duty
as well as earning an Air Force Achievement Medal.
During these 2½ years of
military service, the real Cristina Alaniz, a 22-year-old Texas State University
student, found out from the Social Security offices that her identity had been
stolen. Her credit report led her
to Moody Air Force Base, and after a full investigation the fraud was uncovered.
A written statement from
spokeswoman Capt. Erin Dick of Moody Air Force Base said that military policy
makes discharge mandatory for undocumented immigrants in service.
Plata is assigned to administrative duties pending the outcome of her
hearing, and her security clearance has been revoked.
Plata is now fighting to stay
in the Air Force and avoid deportation. Her
military lawyer, Capt. Randy Hicks said to the press, “I don’t condone
fraudulent enlistment, but when all the mitigating factors are considered, her
service in the war and the fact that she was brought to this country at age 10,
she is by and large a victim of the circumstances she was in.”
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