Sherri Papini’s abduction hoax ‘cost taxpayers $230,000 and countless hours’ of manpower

California mom Sherri Papini’s alleged abduction hoax cost taxpayers more than $230,000 and ‘countless’ hours of manpower, according to authorities.
Thirty-nine-year-old Papini, due in court today at 2pm local time, was arrested last Thursday for faking her disappearance in 2016.
Papini vanished from her home in Redding, California, on November 2, 2016, while out for a run and reappeared on November 24, after a highly publicized search.
She told the world she had been kidnapped by two Hispanic women who beat her and tortured her. In reality, according to the police, she convinced an ex-boyfriend to pick her up and drive her to his apartment in Southern California, by falsely claiming her husband was ‘abusing’ her.
Her fake abduction claims cost the public more than $230,000 and police time that could have been employed solving ‘actual crimes,’ CNN reported Tuesday.
In a cautious estimate last week, Shasta County Sheriff Michael Johnson said Papini cost public safety ‘in excess of $150,000 dollars in resources to investigate her knowingly false claims and staged abduction.’
Federal prosecutors, in a 55-page criminal complaint against Papini, also detailed how the public raised $49,000 for the supposedly traumatized Sherri and her husband.
The complaint states the couple withdrew $11,000 to pay off their credit cards and spent the rest on ‘personal expenses.’
Papini has been charged with making false statements to a law enforcement officer, mail fraud, and fraudulently claiming more than $30,000 from California’s Victim Compensation between 2017 and 2021.
Sherri Papini’s alleged abduction hoax cost taxpayers more than $230,000 and ‘countless’ hours of manpower, CNN reported on Tuesday. Papini and her husband Keith (pictured together) spent money raised to ‘bring her home’ on GoFundMe to pay off their credit cards

Papini vanished from her home in Redding, California, on November 2, 2016, while out for a run and reappeared on November 24, after a highly publicized search. Federal prosecutors she was hiding with an ex-boyfriend during the 22-day search

In a cautious estimate last week, Shasta County Sheriff Michael Johnson said Papini cost public safety ‘in excess of $150,000 dollars in resources’

Prosecutors also detailed how Papini and her husband spent $11,000 of the $49,000 raised to ‘bring her home’ on GoFundMe to pay off his own credit cards
If convicted of making false statements, Papini could face up to five years in prison and a fine up to $250,000. If convicted of mail fraud, she faces a maximum of 20 years in prison and a fine up to $250,000.
‘Not only did this charade take valuable resources away from real criminal investigative matters,’ Sheriff Johnson wrote in a statement on Facebook.
‘But in a time where there is serious human trafficking cases with legitimate victims Sherri Papini used this tragic societal phenomenon to gain notoriety and financial gain.’
‘Ultimately, the investigation revealed that there was no kidnapping,’ a press release by the Department of Justice said.
‘And that time and resources that could have been used to investigate actual crime, protect the community, and provide resources to victims were wasted based on the defendant’s conduct.’
Johnson said on Monday that other charges against people close to her may be looming, and that she did not ‘pull it off on her own’.
DailyMail.com revealed the ex-boyfriend Papini stayed with during the time she claimed to be abducted to be James Reyes, a 37-year-old sports shop worker.
He confessed the plot to police after being identified by DNA found on Papini’s clothes through a familial match. Reyes has not been charged, and neither has her husband Keith.
Local police say Keith was just as duped by his wife as the public was.
Sheriff Johnson did not name who else may face charges on Monday, but he said: ‘It’s got to go to a grand jury. I certainly wouldn’t be surprised.
‘She didn’t pull it off by herself. There are other people involved.’
He slammed Papini as a ‘selfish narcissist’ who wasted precious police resources and needlessly frightened a community.
‘It is a case of calculated deception driven by her narcissistic behavior. It really had an impact on this community and nationwide. That is the big problem. There was a lot of time, effort, resources, money and multiple agencies coming together, putting forth this effort to try to help a victim and solve a case that was tragic.
‘Human trafficking is a real thing and there are victims that need our help and budgets are tight. When we put all that effort into a case and find out we’ve been duped, it’s really taxing on everybody.

On Monday, Shasta County Sheriff Michael L. Johnson appeared on Good Morning America where he said other charges ‘wouldn’t surprise’ him

Papini has been charged with making false statements to a law enforcement officer and mail fraud

Sherri Papini with her husband Keith. Keith has not been charged and it’s unclear if is a suspect
‘You have a story of a typical American mom, abducted by what seemingly is a cartel-type of human trafficking operation which is just not true,’ he fumed.

James Reyes, 37, is the ex-boyfriend who hid California ‘super mom’ Sherri Papini for 22 days
Papini is currently being held in the Sacramento County Jail where her attorneys say she is not able to eat because of her food allergies.
Her preliminary hearing is scheduled for March 18.
In their criminal complaint, police detail how Papini and her husband spent money donated to them by strangers on her therapy and improving their home.
FBI agents revealed how he deposited the $49,000 raised by a GoFundMe page designed to help find Papini into his bank account after she returned home on November 24, 2016.
He first wrote a check to himself for $31,000, then another for over $1,000. In total, Keith used around $8,000 of the money to pay off his personal credit cards.
Papini used some $3,000 paying off her own credit card, and the pair used the rest of the GoFundMe money on ‘personal expenses’, according to the indictment.

Reyes said the pair spent three weeks hiding out at his apartment in Costa Mesa and helped her fabricate the injuries she had when she returned home

Papini’s inmate information from the Sacramento County Jail. Her attorneys say she has not eaten anything but an apple

Prosecutors have also charged Sherri with fraudulently claiming more than $30,000 from California’s Victim Compensation Board between 2017 and 2021
Prosecutors also claim that Sherri – who is described as pathological liar and attention-seeker by ex-boyfriends and bosses – fraudulently claimed over $30,000 in payments from California’s Victim Compensation Board between 2017 and 2022.
She claimed 35 payments from the board and said the payments were for things like therapy and going to the doctor.
She also spent $1,000 on blinds for her home which she claimed back from the compensation board.
The ex-boyfriend told police how he and Sherri dated in 2006 and ‘loved’ each other. She randomly got in touch with him in 2016 again, he said, and told him that her husband was abusing her.

Sherri’s husband Keith (shown in 2017) used $8,000 of the GoFundMe money paying off his personal credit card, according to the indictment
The pair then spoke on pre-paid cell phones, arranging for her to run away for months before November 2, when he collected her from Redding and the alleged hoax began.
The ex-boyfriend admitted to investigators that he thought their relationship would become romantic once they were back at his apartment in Costa Mesa, but that it never did.
Instead, Sherri took over his bedroom and he slept on the couch. She locked herself away in the room, starved herself and cut off her hair then started inflicting injuries on herself.
He told how she convinced him to brand her with a hot tool, then asked him to drive her seven hours north, back to her home in Redding, on November 24.
He was unaware of the media storm that had brewed over the three weeks because he did not have a TV, he said.