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  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    6:50pm, EST

    Dream girl: A portrait of Manti Te'o's imaginary girlfriend

    /

    Manti Te'o claims he was tricked into falling for a woman who didn't exist.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    She was beautiful, brainy, brave — and really unlucky.

    A tantalizing portrait has emerged of Lennay Kekua, the doomed character at the center of the Manti Te'o hoax.

    Te'o says he now knows his online girlfriend was "someone's sick joke," and Notre Dame says she was "fictitious." Muddying the waters, an NFL player claims to have met the woman, or at least someone using her name, in the flesh.


    Imaginary or real, this much can be said about Lennay Kekua: She was a dream.

    "Looked like a model," Arizona Cardinals fullback Reagan Mauia, who claims to have befriended her in 2011, told ESPN. "Volleyball-type of physique...She was athletic, tall, beautiful. Long hair. Polynesian."

    In an earlier ESPN interview, Te'o called her "the most beautiful" girl he had ever met -- never mind that he apparently never laid eyes on her.

    A seemingly invented account of a first meeting, offered by Teo's father to an Indiana newspaper, said the athlete was drawn to her "warm smile and soulful eyes" when they saw each other in 2009.

    Photos posted on Kekua's Twitter and Facebook accounts were reportedly of another good-looking woman.

    But Kekua was more than just a pretty face.

    According to a South Bend Tribune profile of Te'o, his 22-year-old girlfriend was a scholar at Stanford University, a gifted musician, and fluent in several languages. She was majoring in English “or something” and had a way with children, Te’o told Sports Illustrated.

    She was portrayed as a traveler, supposedly living and attending school in California, but popping off to Hawaii from time to time to see Te'o, according to Deadspin's pieced-together timeline of their relationship. He told Sports Illustrated she went to New Zealand to work with kids.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Mauia said he met her while doing charity work in American Samoa in June 2011. They became "good friends" and he consoled her after the death of her father, he said.

    "I offered a comforting shoulder and just someone to bounce her emotions off," Mauia said.

    The family was originally from Hawaii, Te’o told SI. They ran a construction firm where Kekua, naturally, also worked, he said.

    Her parents named her Melelengei at birth but also called her Lala for short, he said. She had a sister and a twin brother, Koa.

    Her father's death was the start of what could only be described as stunning run of rotten luck.

    By Te'o's account, she was nearly killed in a car accident in California sometime last year – she “flatlined” twice and was hooked up to machines for weeks, Te’o said -- and then battled back from her injuries.

    Then came an even bigger blow, as the story goes: a diagnosis of leukemia.

    Te'o and his family said she was treated at St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, Calif. She had a heart of gold, befriending a little girl who was terminal, Te'o claimed. And she had grit, enduring a bone-marrow transplant, according to Te'o's father.

    In June, she was doing "really well," the dad told an interviewer. By September, though, she was reported to be contemplating her demise with uncommon courage.

    The way the linebacker told it, Kekua was unselfish to the very end, making him promise that he wouldn't miss a game, even for her funeral. Instead, she said, when he learned from Koa that she was dead, he sent a bouquet of flowers.

    When he spoke about it, he revealed one more tidbit about Kekua: She really loved white roses.

     

    The inspirational story of Notre Dame's star linebacker Manti Te'o leading his team to glory despite his girlfriend's death made national headlines. But after Deadspin.com reported that the woman never existed, Te'o is now saying he was the victim of "someone's sick joke." NBC's John Yang reports.

    Related:

    The 9 biggest mysteries in the Te'o girlfriend hoax

    What is a 'Catfish' hoax?

    The cast of characters in the Manti Te'o saga?

    The legend of Manti Te'o just got more complicated

    102 comments

    This is such an odd story. I don't know what to really think.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: college-football, notre-dame, hoax, manti-teo, lennay-kekua
  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    11:36am, EST

    9 baffling questions in the Manti Te'o girlfriend hoax

    Mike Ehrmann / Getty Images

    Manti Te'o warms up before Notre Dame's game against the Crimson Tide on Jan. 7.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    College football star Manti Te'o says he was the victim of a cruel hoax, an elaborate scheme in which he fell for an imaginary girlfriend named Lennay Kekua and mourned her when she died of leukemia.

    But he still has a lot of explaining to do.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The narrative crafted before and after the expose is full of conflicting information and holes bigger than those in Notre Dame's defensive line during its loss to Alabama.

    If Te'o wants the public to believe that he was nothing more than a dupe, here are some of the questions and inconsistencies he'll need to clear up.

    1. Notre Dame says that Te'o never met Kekua, that their relationship was strictly online and by phone. But the player's father gave the South Bend Tribune a detailed account of how the couple first met at a Stanford game in Palo Alto in 2009 and rendez-voused in Hawaii after becoming a couple in early 2012. And Te'o himself told ESPN that she was the "most beautiful girl I ever met."

    2. Te'o called Kekua "the love of my life." His parents said they believed they would get married. Yet if Notre Dame's account is to be believed, they never met even once, or even Skyped. It beggars belief.

    3. Before her leukemia "diagnosis," Kekua supposedly was nearly killed in a car accident. But published profiles of Te'o have conflicting dates -- late 2011, last January, or as recently as April. Why the discrepancies?

    4. When did Kekua's fictitious death happen? Various interviews with Te'o have her succumbing to leukemia hours before his grandmother died on Sept. 12, soon after, or even days after. Assuming Te'o truly believed Kekua had passed away, wouldn't he remember the date? Or did all the reporters get the details wrong?

    5. After he supposedly received the shock of his life -- a call from someone using Kekua's voice and phone number while he was at the ESPN Awards on Dec. 6 -- Teo stayed quiet for three weeks. It wasn't until Dec. 26 that he told Notre Dame officials, who then hired private investigators to look into it.

    6. If Te'o was in on the deception, though, why wouldn't he just let Kekua rest in peace? Was he or someone else worried the hoax was about to come to light, prompting a fourth-quarter end-run to get ahead of the revelations?

    7. Hours after Deadspin's bombshell report and Notre Dame's press conference, when it seemed that everyone could agree on one thing -- there is no Lennay Kekua -- an NFL player claimed to have actually seen her in the flesh. Arizona Cardinals fullback Regan Mauia said he met her in American Samoa in 2011, before she started romancing Te'o, and is "close" to her family.

    8. Carrying out the hoax would have been a full-time job involving more than one person. Te'o claims he would spend all night on the phone with Kekua while she was in the hospital. There were purported communications from family members. Who would have had the time to orchestrate it? By the same token, how would Te'o have been able to create and maintain a social-media profile for Kekua on his own?

    9. Where's the motive? A central figure in the hoax is reported to be musician Ronaiah Tuiasosopo. Deadspin reported that he had contact with the woman, a former high-school classmate, whose photos were used to create Kekua's profile -- even obtaining one of the pictures from her directly. But the site also describes Tuiasosopo as a friend of Te'o, raising the question of why he would humiliate his buddy.

    Timothy Burke, a reporter with Deadspin.com, talks about breaking the story that Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o's girlfriend, famously portrayed as an inspiration to him after her death this past season, was never real. Burke says it would take "a great deal of faith" to believe all of Te'o's account.

    Related:

    The legend of Manti Te'o just got more complicated
    From Milli Vanilli to Balloon Boy: The greatest hoaxes in American history

    Reporter: Believing Manti Te'o makes a great deal of faith


     


     

    387 comments

    He's a little old for imaginary friends.

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  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    3:57am, EST

    Man must write 'sorry' letters to airplane passengers over explosives hoax

    View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

    By Dan Stamm and Jackie Gailey, NBC10.com

    A pizza cook who admitted making a hoax call warning of liquid explosives on a plane, causing the flight to be diverted, must write an apology letter to every delayed passenger.

    Kenneth Smith Jr., 26, pleaded guilty Monday to malicious false information about an explosive, and false information and hoaxes, according to a press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Eastern District of Pennsylvania Office.

    The Philadelphia man's call to airport police led to US Airways flight 1267, bound for Dallas-Forth Worth, being diverted back to Philadelphia airport shortly after take-off on Sept 6.

    Sixty-nine passengers and five crew members were on the plane.

    Smith faces up to 15 years in prison and fines of up to $500,000 when he is sentenced on April 16. He has agreed to pay restitution and write an apology letter to every passenger who was on the flight when it was delayed, and reimburse the emergency response costs, prosecutors said.

    Smith’s reasoning for the hoax, according to federal prosecutors, was to target a passenger on the flight, Christopher Shell, who was at the time identified as the ex-boyfriend of Smith’s girlfriend.

    Reportedly Shell had posted a compromising photo of the woman on Facebook.

    Shell was removed from the airplane in handcuffs. He later wound up making it to Dallas where we was arrested on two outstanding warrants, police said. NBC Dallas spoke to Shell in October about the plane hoax and how it derailed his career.

    152 comments

    Stupidity knows no bounds, nor the lengths others will go to, nor numbers they put others through for mind games.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: bomb, flight, philadelphia, dallas, hoax, aviation, us-news, featured, nbc10, crime-courts, nbcphiladelphia
  • 24
    Oct
    2012
    11:14am, EDT

    Police: Louisiana woman set herself on fire, wrote racial slurs

    Investigators say the woman who claimed she was the victim of a violent racially-motivated attack fabricated the claims and actually set herself on fire. Paige Brown reports.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The Louisiana woman who told police that she was set on fire by three men and that her car had racial slurs smeared on it did the heinous actions she described herself, authorities now believe.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    Follow @andrewjmach

    Sharmeka Moffitt, 20, told police she parked her car by a walking trail in Civitan Park in Winnsboro, La., on Sunday evening to go exercise when she was set on fire by three men who she described as wearing white hoodies. She was able to extinguish the flames herself and when police found her car, the letters "KKK" and the N-word had been scrawled across the hood.

    But what had the rumblings of a hate crime was all apparently a "self-inflicted situation," police said.

    “In less than 24 hours, the state crime lab was able to analyze the evidence found at the scene, including a cigarette lighter, lighter fluid and also the hood of the car that had a paste-like substance spread across it, and it identified [Moffitt’s] fingerprints as well as some female DNA,” Louisiana State Police Capt. Doug Cain told NBC News. “With this evidence, investigators were able to determine that she was alone in the park that night and made up the story.”


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    Authorities released their findings at a press conference Tuesday evening. The Louisiana State Police, the Winnsboro Police Department, the Franklin Parish Sheriff’s Department and the FBI were all assisting in the investigation.  

    “This has been a very disturbing case for all involved,” Franklin Parish Sheriff Kevin Cobb said. “All of the evidence indicates this was a self-inflicted situation.”

    Cain said police have not yet spoken with Moffitt, who underwent surgery Tuesday to treat burns covering more than 60 percent of her body on her chest, back, arms and legs. “We certainly hope to speak with her about it, but her health comes first,” Cain said. Moffitt remains in critical condition in the burn unit at Louisiana State University in Shreveport, the Shreveport Times reported.

    A few hours after police said Moffitt had lied, nearly 130 residents of the tight-knit Winnsboro community attended a candlelight vigil at Civitan Park Tuesday night to offer prayers and support to Moffitt and her family.

    In a statement, Moffitt’s family said, “Our family is devastated to learn the circumstances surrounding our daughter’s injuries. While this was not the resolution we had expected, it is a resolution, and we appreciate the thorough investigation by the local and state police, as well as federal agencies.”

    Val Horvath Davidson / The Shreveport Times

    Edna Moffitt, the mother of burn victim Sharmeka Moffitt, wipes away tears during a press conference at LSU Health Sciences Center in Shreveport, La., on Tuesday.

    “We are sincerely sorry for any problems this may have caused and wish to express our appreciation for the outpouring of love, prayers and support we have received from friends, acquaintances, church organizations and government officials.” 

    While Cain said he hasn’t seen anything of this nature in the area before, this isn’t the first time alleged hate crimes have been exposed as hoaxes.

    A Nebraska woman who claimed she was the victim of a homophobic hate crime in July was subsequently charged with making false claims to police after they spent three weeks investigating the case and discovered no clues or leads in the case.  

    The woman, Charlie Rogers, 33, told police three men wearing black ski masks broke into her home during the early morning hours, bound her wrists and ankles with zip ties, beat her and carved anti-gay slurs into her arms and abdomen. Because of inconsistencies in Roger’s various accounts of the attack and conflicting forensic evidence, police arrested Rogers.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    A Washington state woman who falsely claimed a stranger had thrown a cup of acid in her face in August 2010 later admitted her injuries were self-inflicted and part of an attempt to kill herself.

    28-year-old Bethany Storro was charged with three counts of felony theft for allegedly taking more than $28,000 in donations from people believing she had been assaulted by a stranger. When the acid proved not to be fatal, Storro told a detective that she could at least get plastic surgery on her face. 

    Police have not yet said whether Moffitt will face criminal charges due to the attack.

    Frankin Parish District Attorney Mack Lancaster told NBC News that “there is a distinct possibility that [Moffitt] might at this point be charged, but I have not yet received any investigative reports on the incident,” he said. “We will review those reports just as in all cases and determine what, if any, charges will follow.”

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    311 comments

    nothing to see here..the rev. al and rev. jessie can turn around and go back home...

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  • 3
    Oct
    2012
    11:18am, EDT

    Runaway New Jersey teen who caused Twitter stir found safe, police say

    nbcnewyork.com

    A person believed to be Kara Alongi is seen with a suitcase at a transit station in Rahway, N.J.

    By Brian Thompson, NBCNewYork.com

    The runaway 16-year-old New Jersey girl who set off a Twitter firestorm after she falsely indicated an intruder was in her home and then disappeared has been found safe, police say.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Kara Alongi was located walking along the side of the New Jersey Turnpike about 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, police said.

    "Kara Alongi was found safe and unharmed,” said Alan Scherb, spokesman for the Clark Police Department, in a statement. “She was discovered by troopers with the New Jersey State Police walking along the side of the Turnpike near Exit 1.”


    View NBCNewYork.com's complete coverage of Twitter hoax teen

    Alongi was transferred to a north Jersey hospital for evaluation and was released a short time later and returned home.

    Alongi gained thousands of followers after asking people on Twitter to call 911 Sunday because an intruder was in her home and then vanishing. People re-tweeted her message and #helpfindkara trended on the social network.

    Investigators later said it appeared Alongi had voluntarily called a taxi company and gotten a ride to the Rahway train station, which police say was confirmed by a surveillance photo captured of her at the depot.

    Police: No foul play in missing NJ teen Kara Alongi case

    Alongi's case continued to polarize the Twittersphere Tuesday, as some insisted she had met foul play and prayed for her safe return. 

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Others were skeptical from the get-go, pointing out a Tweet that allegedly popped up on Alongi's account shortly after her initial call for help that said: "Why is everyone saying I'm missing? I was jkin haha" and was deleted a short time later.      

    When NBC 4 New York called the missing girl's home, someone quickly answered "no comment" and hung up. No one answered the door at the Alongi's residence.

    NBC News' Sevil Omer contributed to this report.

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    212 comments

    Glad she is ok however, if this wasn't a scream for attention I don't know what is.

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    Explore related topics: hoax, nj, teen, twitter, commentid-twitter
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    1:04pm, EDT

    Hoax that grounded US Air jet apparently sparked by Facebook photo

    The FBI is looking into motive behind a plane hoax on Thursday that forced a US Airways flight to turn around and head back to the airport in Philadelphia. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    By Pete Williams, NBC News

    Be careful of what pictures of your ex you put on Facebook.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The boyfriend of Christopher Shell's ex-girlfriend has been charged with making Thursday's hoax phone call that forced a US Airways flight to return to the Philadelphia airport. Shell is the passenger who was removed at gunpoint by federal agents, after a caller falsely claimed he was carrying liquid explosives. 

    Kenneth W. Smith, Jr, 26, of Philadelphia, has been charged with making a hoax threat. He'll appear in court at 1:30 p.m. 

    The charge carries a maximum of 10 years in prison and up to a $250,000 fine.


    Court documents say Smith admitted yesterday that he got up Thursday, walked to a pay phone, and made the call to Philadelphia Airport police. His motive, according to investigators, "was to avenge (Shell's) ex-girlfriend" after Shell posted a compromising picture of her on Facebook.

    Shell gave investigators Smith's name after agents asked him who might have made the call. Text messages on Shell's cell phone included "recent hostile messages exchanged" between Shell and his ex about her relationship with Smith, investigators said. Shell told the FBI where to find Smith. 

    US Airways Flight 1267 was en route to Dallas-Fort Worth when law enforcement officials were tipped off to a possible suspicious item on board. The jet returned to Philadelphia International shortly before 9 a.m. ET out of a "abundance of caution," an airline spokesman said Thursday.

    US Airways rebooked passengers on later flights.

    In yet another wrinkle, when Shell arrived to Dallas late Thursday, he was arrested by local police.

    He was wanted on several existing warrants in Texas for offenses having nothing to do with the hoax. When he became famous Thursday because of the plane hoax, and police in Texas discovered he was coming their way, they prepared to meet him at the airport and take him into custody on unfinished business.

    Federal officials were not certain of the nature of the existing warrants.

    The cost of the hoax will cost US Airways "upwards of tens of thousands of dollars in direct and indirect costs," the airline said.

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    154 comments

    He should be made to pay for the cost of the aircraft diverting, the cost of the law enforcement response, the cost to the passengers for being diverted and missing connections, meetings, etc., and then he should be banned from flying for life.

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    Explore related topics: us-airways, threat, hoax, facebook, featured
  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    2:07pm, EDT

    Coast Guard suspicious of similarities between hoax distress calls in NJ and Texas

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Katherine Creag, Katy Tur and Shimon Prokupecz, NBCNewYork.com

    Coast Guard officials are investigating a possible link between last week's false distress call reporting a yacht explosion in Sandy Hook, N.J., and another recent distress call off the waters of Galveston, Texas, NBCNewYork.com reported Tuesday.

    Coast Guard officials said at a news conference Wednesday they are investigating suspicious similarities between the two calls and trying to see if they are connected, including whether the same male caller made them.

    In last Monday's false distress call, a man contacted the Coast Guard on a radio line, reporting an explosion on a boat called the Blind Date about 17 nautical miles east of Sandy Hook.

    The Coast Guard is investigating similarities between two false emergency calls in different states.

    The caller described himself as the captain in the 20-second call.

    "We have three deceased, nine injured. We've had an explosion on board, that's why we're taking on water ... I'm going to stay by the radio as long as I can before I have to go overboard," the caller says in the audio clip released by the Coast Guard. 

    Listen to the audio on NBCNewYork.com

    Read more, see video related to hoax calls on NBCNewYork.com

    In a similar distress call in Galveston, Texas in May, a man told the Coast Guard, "This is fishing vessel Scallywag. We're about two miles from the channel... We have an on-board emergency. We are taking on water, sir."

    Authorities point out the same terminology was used by both callers and included nonstandard nautical phrases like "taking on water" instead of "sinking." The callers also used terms such as "souls on board" elsewhere in the calls to describe the number of people aboard and "beacon" to described a supposed automatic signaling device on life rafts.

    In both cases, the callers specifically contacted a Coast Guard Vessel Traffic Service and said their GPS systems weren't working. The two hoax calls each sparked massive search and rescue efforts. 


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Coast Guard Capt. Gregory Hitchen said Wednesday that a reporter from the Houston area called its investigative unit after learning of the hoax call in New Jersey.

    Earlier report: Coast Guard believes NJ yacht explosion was 'hoax'

    NJ hoax distress call came from on land, Coast Guard says

    Coast Guard searched area the size of Delaware in Texas distress call

    The Texas case had not been declared a hoax when it was made in April, but was classified as an unresolved distress call, Hitchen said. Investigators listened to the audio and "put together enough similarities," he added.

    Dennis Walsh, a retired NYPD detective and a forensic audio expert, said while the voice print won’t necessarily identify the caller, it can help with the investigation.

    “It makes the interview evidence process easier because it’s really cogent evidence to lay a voice print in front of a suspect,” said Walsh.

    Hitchen urged anyone with information about either call to contact investigators.

    "These cases are very difficult to solve without help from the public," he said.

    There is currently a $3,000 reward for any information leading to the arrest and prosecution of someone involved in the New Jersey call.

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    11 comments

    Why release tell tale details about an ongoing investigation? I think somebody likes talking to reporters more than solving crimes. Sounds like a clever ruse for drug trafficing.

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  • 12
    Jun
    2012
    10:56am, EDT

    Coast Guard believes NJ yacht explosion was 'hoax'

    The U.S. Coast Guard says a distress call reporting an explosion on a yacht off New Jersey's coast was likely a hoax. WNBC-TV's Katy Tur reports.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The U.S. Coast Guard has suspended a search for 21 people who abandoned ship after a reported explosion Monday on a yacht off the coast of central New Jersey, saying the incident was believed to be a hoax.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The FBI in New Jersey has opened an investigation to determine whether any federal laws were violated, according to NBCNewYork.com. It is being conducted jointly with the Coast Guard. 

    The rescue mission was launched after authorities received an emergency radio transmission around 4:20 p.m. Monday from a boat identifying itself as Blind Date, according to a Coast Guard press release. The caller reported the yacht carrying 21 passengers, seven of whom were injured, sank about 17 nautical miles east of Sandy Hook, N.J., after an explosion destroyed the boat’s electronics and GPS. The caller said all passengers had made it on to life rafts.

    The Coast Guard deployed two boat crews and four helicopters in Monday’s search. Response units from the New York City Police Department, Fire Department, the New Jersey State Police and the Nassau County Police Department were also on the scene.


    Chip East/Reuters

    CW3 Troy Loining of the U.S. Coast Guard speaks to journalists outside the gates of the Coast Guard station at Sandy Hook, New Jersey, Monday. The U.S. Coast Guard has found no debris or survivors from a reported explosion aboard Blind Date, a yacht 17.5 miles (28 km) off the New Jersey coast, raising the possibility that the incident could have been a hoax, spokesman Petty Officer Erik Swanson said on Monday.

    Additionally, Commander Kenneth Pierro of Coast Guard Sector New York said that more than 200 first responders had assembled at mass casualty stations, and officials said several good Samaritans had assisted authorities in the lengthy search, reported NBCNewYork.com.

    But after hours of searching, rescue crews found no sign of any distress in the water, and it became clear there was no explosion.

    “We believe it was a hoax,” said Coast Guard Chief Warrant Officer Troy Loining. “We didn’t find anything.”

    Making a false distress call is a felony, with a maximum penalty of five to 10 years in prison, a $250,000 fine and reimbursement to the Coast Guard for the cost of performing the search.

    While no official cost estimates have been released, Coast Guard spokesperson Jetta Disco told msnbc.com that the price of covering the Coast Guard’s response in this rescue mission alone will be well over $100,000.

    So far, no state or local agencies have received any missing person reports, according to NBCNewYork.com.

    The Coast Guard and other state and local agencies responded last year to more than 60 suspected hoax calls in the northern Hudson River region, including one claiming a 33-foot sailboat was sinking, according to the Coast Guard press release. A 10-hour search costing almost $88,000 turned up no boaters, and an investigation was launched. No one has been prosecuted.  

    “Sham sinkings, like bomb threats and other hoaxes, needlessly risk the lives of first responders and waste resources dedicated to keeping the public safe from harm," Rebekah Carmichael, spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office in New Jersey, told NBCNewYork.com's Jonathan Dienst. "We are working with the Coast Guard and our other law enforcement partners who are looking into this matter, and urge anyone with leads to contact the Coast Guard or the New Jersey FBI immediately.” 

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    26 comments

    hopefully the person(s) calling in this hoax are caught and get the max penalty. The coast guard is spread so thin for everything they are responsible for the last thing they need is to tie up all these assets on a hoax when someone with a real emergency would need them.

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