Pennsylvania woman charged with faking her own kidnapping

MrDawn

Madly Diligent
Joined
Sep 2, 2014
Messages
8,935
Reaction score
676
FP$
294
Wow! What are your thoughts about this?

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

A 23-year-old Pennsylvania woman allegedly faked her own abduction earlier this week in a far-fetched effort to hide the fact that she dropped out of college and wasn't about to graduate, Pennsylvania State Police said.

Chloe Stein, 23, was arrested Tuesday evening and has been charged with four misdemeanors: false alarm to a public safety agency, falsely reporting an offense that did not occur, obstructing administration of law, and disorderly conduct, court records show.


Stein was last heard from Monday evening at 10:30 p.m. when she texted her boyfriend while driving home from work saying she was being pulled over by a police officer, state police said in a Monday evening news conference.

Her boyfriend tried to contact her again numerous times, but to no avail, police said.

State police later heard from her family who said they found her vehicle, a Volkswagen Beetle, abandoned on Radebaugh Road in the area of North Greengate Road.

It was at that time the family made a missing person declaration and an expansive search for Stein was launched.

State Police Trooper Steve Limani said in a news conference Tuesday evening that the department spent "tens of thousands" of dollars in the search which included flying a helicopter in the area.

But the case unravelled when a tip came in Tuesday night that Stein was actually at a home in Jeannette, about 30 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, Limani said. When officers arrived, they found her safe inside and she was taken in for questioning.

At the state police station, Stein told officers she was pulled over and abducted “by an unknown male who posed as a police officer,” the criminal complaint said. She said her abductor had a firearm, she was blindfolded and taken to various locations in the area, the complaint said.

But investigators were already suspicious of her account. Before they found her, they had received a call from Penn State University officials which said Stein was not a currently enrolled student, contrary to news reports that described her as a senior.

“During the course of that phone call we found out that she had not been attending college for quite some time — almost at the point where it’s over a year, maybe two — and graduation was right around the corner," Limani said.

"That really led us in the direction that at any point of time there was no police interaction, there was no pull over," he said. "None of that happened."
 
yet what was she thinking at the time, silly
 
This is a common thing in my place. Kids be staging their own kidnaps to extort parent.
 
I really don't get why these people own up to dropping out? Why do they have to pull stunts like this and waste the time of first responders who could have been working on other things? This reminds me of Chandler Halderson, though what he did was worse.
 
I wouldn't really want to judge someone for pulling what appears on the surface to be a pretty appalling stunt like this. Sometimes the pressure of failure in education can lead to horrible outcomes including suicide.

I think you would have to properly assess the mental health of a person before making a judgement.
 
I wouldn't really want to judge someone for pulling what appears on the surface to be a pretty appalling stunt like this. Sometimes the pressure of failure in education can lead to horrible outcomes including suicide.

I think you would have to properly assess the mental health of a person before making a judgement.
I don't share this sentiment. There are certain things that are just criminal and can't be justified with any kind f mental condition.
 
Back
Top Bottom