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Who is the other Alianiss Nunez Morales?
Minnesota Public Radio ^ | 2/23/2008 | Laura Yuen & Ambar Espinoza

Posted on 02/23/2008 8:33:36 AM PST by cll

St. Paul, Minn. — A public records search turned up a 23-year-old woman named Alianiss Nunez Morales in Chester, Connecticut. The records indicate her Social Security card was issued in Puerto Rico.

Alianiss is not a common name. Two Spanish linguistics professors contacted for this story say they've never heard of it. They say it could be a name created by parents.

Friday the prosecutor in the Cottonwood case said immigration officials went to Puerto Rico to talk to the grandmother of a person named Alianiss Nunez Morales. They showed her a mug shot of the woman now sitting in the Lyon County jail.

"He showed me an ID with the picture of a dark woman with dark eyes," says the grandmother, Alejandrina Correra. "And he asked me if that was Alianiss, and I said, 'No, that's not Alianiss. Alianiss is blonde with green eyes.'"

Correra told Minnesota Public Radio she raised Alianiss from the age of 1 after her parents died. Correra doesn't know where her granddaughter lives, only that she moved to the continental U.S. with her two daughters and a friend. She doesn't know her granddaughter's phone number and doesn't have a way to make contact.

The grandmother said the investigator who came to her door said Alianiss had apparently lost some documents and that another person used them.

The Web site MySpace has a page belonging to an Alianiss Nunez who lives in the same Connecticut town, Chester. She lists her age as 23 and describes herself as a single mom from Puerto Rico who likes soap operas.

In photographs, the woman partially fits the grandmother's description. Her eyes are green, but her hair is brown, not blond. The page is decorated with pink fairies. This Alianiss says she wants to give her two children opportunities she never had.

We received no response to several emails to the MySpace account. Outside of Puerto Rico, there is no working listed phone number for Alianiss Morales in the U.S.

Authorities won't say if there's any link between the Alianiss in Connecticut and the woman who drove a mini-van into the school bus in southwestern Minnesota on Tuesday.

That woman told officers she lives in a Minneota trailer and is originally from Mexico. She was driving without a license. Authorities say she has been uncooperative in revealing her true identity.

Immigration officials haven't said for sure whether this is a case of identity theft. But Puerto Rico is a big source of fake documents for illegal immigrants in the United States.

Tim Counts with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement wouldn't give any specifics on the Morales case. But he did say identities from Puerto Rico are highly sought in the underground identity trade.

"Many times illegal aliens will assume the identity of a Puerto Rican U.S. citizen because of the commonality in the language and will use that identity. It's difficult to say exactly how it happens, how those identities are channeled here, but we do find that's a fairly common occurrence," he says.

In 2006, a Worthington man was indicted on charges that he was selling Puerto Rican birth certificates and Social Security cards to illegal immigrants in search of work.

Authorities say sometimes the identities are stolen. In other cases, the true owners of the identities will sell their documentation for a few hundred dollars to illegal immigrants or document dealers.

"The reason Puerto Rican birth certificates are so valued in the community is that enables the person to claim they're a United States citizen," says Mark Cangemi, a former ICE special agent who now works as an attorney focusing on immigration issues. He says illegal immigrants can buy packets of Puerto Rican documents that he calls "legitimate paper."

"And what I mean by that are legitimate Puerto Rican birth certificates that have the appropriate biographical data, with a supporting Social Security number issued to that individual. These packets were being sent to Worthington and other areas in that part of the state and being sold for upwards of $1,700 a package," Cangemi says.

Speaking generally about stolen-identity cases, Cangemi says officials must thoroughly investigate a suspect's background. He says while all of a suspect's documents may be consistent with one another, it still doesn't prove that's the person's true identity.

Investigators will ask where someone went to school, and for parents' names, and will interview neighbors. Then they'll compare what they've learned to information in federal government databases.

"There's a lot of information that can be verified, and with some effort, you can determine whether the person is the rightful holder of that identity. Or if not, you can establish that that is not the person to whom the identity was issued. But it still does not tell you who that person is," Cangemi says.

Investigators apparently will need to consider the possibility there are two women who share the name of Alianiss Nunez Morales--one in Connecticut, and one in the Lyon County jail.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: alianissmorales; aliens; diversity; idtheft; illegals; immigrantlist; immigration; olgamarinafranco; puertorico
Authorities say the woman charged with killing four children in a fatal bus crash is living in the country illegally and using someone else's identity. They did not identify the other Alianiss Nunez Morales. But documents indicate there's a woman in Connecticut of the same age with the same uncommon name. She's apparently from Puerto Rico, a leading source of stolen identities.
1 posted on 02/23/2008 8:33:38 AM PST by cll
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To: Aaron0617

Ping.


2 posted on 02/23/2008 8:34:23 AM PST by cll (Carthage must be destroyed)
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To: rrstar96; AuH2ORepublican; livius; adorno; Teófilo; wtc911; Willie Green; CGVet58; Clemenza; ...
Puerto Rico Ping! Please Freepmail me if you want on or off the list.


3 posted on 02/23/2008 8:35:49 AM PST by cll (Carthage must be destroyed)
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To: cll

Re: # 1 - Not my words. That should have been posted as a quote from the article.


4 posted on 02/23/2008 8:36:59 AM PST by cll (Carthage must be destroyed)
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: cll
Yesterday someone one of the news services wrote that the FBI had interviewed the woman in Puerto Rico. There may be three women using the ID, or the news people had it wrong yesterday.
6 posted on 02/23/2008 8:57:36 AM PST by org.whodat (What's the difference between a Democrat and a republican????)
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To: org.whodat

In the past year, I’ve had to vouch for three former employees whose id’s were stolen and used in Florida and Nevada.


7 posted on 02/23/2008 9:08:12 AM PST by cll (Carthage must be destroyed)
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To: cll
...there's a woman in Connecticut of the same age with the same uncommon name. She's apparently from Puerto Rico, a leading source of stolen identities.

Not to mention a leading source of highly uncommon "Spanish" names. Growing up in PR, I knew a kid named Usaf and his little brother was Usmail.

8 posted on 02/23/2008 9:14:31 AM PST by JRios1968 ("If you go over a cliff with all flags flying, you are still going over a cliff"—Ronald Reagan)
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To: cll

But, ominously, it seems nobody can contact the woman in Connecticut, if she exists.


9 posted on 02/23/2008 9:36:52 AM PST by Christopher Lincoln
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To: cll

So, FReepers, what do you think? Will this person, whatever her given name actually is, ever be released on her own recognizance anytime in the trial process? I’d say the odds are 1 in 3, myself. Illegals have more rights than native citizens.


10 posted on 02/23/2008 9:45:58 AM PST by Pearls Before Swine (Is /sarc really needed?)
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To: cll
What a mess our government and greed has wrought upon our country.

We have people here who are criminals, and the immmigrations says that this is common, we have no idea what their real identity is.

Besides the terrible deaths of the four children, we are now spending taxpayers money to investigate this woman. All the way to Puerto Rico. And now more money will be spent to prosecute and house this criminal.

We are footing the monetary and social bill for the greed of politicians and companies.

11 posted on 02/23/2008 11:26:05 AM PST by Lijahsbubbe
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To: Christopher Lincoln

Yes, that fact is ominous. And despite the suspect’s supposed grief, she remains uncooperative in identifying herself. This smells bad. A lady with a myspace account and two school aged children should not be hard to trace. That her grandparents have lost contact with her, plus this new information, should light a fire somewhere and get this person’s whereabouts determined quickly.


12 posted on 02/23/2008 11:26:36 AM PST by bajabaja
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To: Pearls Before Swine

Why aren’t Freepers that live near where this criminal worked protesting the hiring of illegals? It won’t bring back the 4 innocent lives lost but it could prevent more innocent lives being lost.


13 posted on 02/23/2008 11:33:13 AM PST by muggs
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To: cll
nothing bad ever happens with illegal immigrants....only cheap labor.

why are you picking on them?

Are you a racist?

Poor lady, she's just killing kids in school busses that Americans aren't willing to kill.

14 posted on 02/23/2008 12:42:54 PM PST by Dick Vomer (liberals suck....... but it depends on what your definition of the word "suck" is.,)
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To: All

This one probably has several faked identities.

She then collects welfare, UI, Workmen’s Comp, and gets EITC refund checks under every one of the fake ID’s.

If she has children, she may be collecting ADD disability checks.

She may also have bank loans and federally-subsidized mortgages in different names.

She is probably registered to vote in several districts under different names, and votes all her identities come election day.

Authorities should also check out Western Union to find out how much money she has been wiring back to Mexico, Puerto Rico, and to other latin hellholes. She probably has a bundle stashed all over the place.....probably owns condos and beachfront property that she plans to retire to.


15 posted on 02/23/2008 3:28:08 PM PST by Liz (I spent $60 million and got one lousy delegate. Rudy Giuliani)
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To: All

16 posted on 02/23/2008 3:51:18 PM PST by Liz (I spent $60 million and got one lousy delegate. Rudy Giuliani)
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