Woman sentenced to 5 years after framing husband's ex-fiancee for stalking, attempted rape in O.C.
10/18/2017 11:00 am PDT
By Marissa Wenzke, KTLA
LOS ANGELES -- (KTLA) -- A woman was sentenced to five years in prison on Tuesday after she framed her husband's ex-fiancee for stalking and attempted rape, the Orange County District Attorney's Office said.
Angela Maria Diaz, 32, created an elaborate scheme -- one in which she faked cervical cancer and a pregnancy by forging doctor's notes, pretended to be an attorney and posted “rape fantasy” ads online -- all to frame the ex-fiancee of her husband, the D.A.'s office said.
She pleaded guilty to multiple felony and misdemeanor charges before receiving a five-year prison sentence.
Diaz tried to make it appear as if Michelle Suzanne Hadley, the ex-fiancee of her husband, was harassing her and even posting “rape fantasy” ads online that would solicit men to go to Diaz's home and try acting out the forcible sex acts, prosecutors said.
All of it resulted in two arrests for Hadley and nearly three months spent in jail, before she was eventually released and proven innocent through investigations, prosecutors said. However, she could have faced up to life in prison if convicted.
Diaz has been married to her husband, described only as “John Doe” by authorities, since February 2016. Hadley previously had a romantic relationship with the same man from August 2013 to August 2015.
Not too long after marrying her husband, in the summer of 2016, Diaz began making false accusations against her husband's ex-lover, prosecutors said.
On June 1 of that year, Diaz falsely reported harassing messages -- which she claimed were from Hadley -- to the Anaheim Police Department, prosecutors said. She wrote the messages to herself and tried to make it appear as if Hadley wrote them, and the false reports and calls to police went on for over a month.
But the accusations she threw against Hadley didn't end there.
She said Hadley threatened her life and even the life of her unborn child, though she wasn't actually pregnant, prosecutors said, ultimately managing to get a restraining order against the woman she was falsely accusing.
Throughout June 2016, Diaz took her actions a step further -- she posted ads online for “rape fantasies” while posing as Hadley, prosecutors said.
By routing emails to herself and using different servers to avoid detection of her IP address, Diaz actually made it appear as if Hadley was posting the ads about her, prosecutors said.
When replying to men online about the ads, Diaz sent photos of herself and details about her personal routine to make it look like she was the one being targeted, prosecutors said.
She told men she wanted them to have forcible sex with her, even if she screamed or resisted, prosecutors said, and at least two men planning to take part in these “rape fantasies” were intercepted by law enforcement.
Meanwhile, Diaz told Anaheim police that Hadley was stalking her and insisted didn't know anything about the online ads, prosecutors said.
Then, on June 24, 2016, Diaz called 911 and said a man entered her garage and attempted to rape her -- an attempt to validate her claims Hadley was posting the ads basically setting her up to be raped, prosecutors said.
That same day, Hadley was arrested by Anaheim police and later released from custody on $100,000 bail.
When Hadley was arrested, Diaz said the threatening emails suddenly stopped coming in, prosecutors said.
But once Hadley was released, Diaz started sending herself threatening emails again and responding to the online ads soliciting rape all while “pretending to be the victim,” the DA's office said in a news release.
Violent language and photos were included in the emails to make them appear as legitimate threats, prosecutors said. And weeks later, Hadley was again arrested on July 14, 2016 and held on $1 million bail.
Hadley remained in custody for nearly three months, until October 7, 2016, when investigators gathered enough information allowing for her release.
Diaz was finally arrested on January 6 of this year by the Phoenix Police Department in Arizona.
“If not for the hard work of law enforcement continuing to investigate and seek the truth in this case, Ms. Hadley could have continued to face life in prison,” DA Tony Rackauckas said in a statement.
“Even while pleading guilty, Diaz showed no remorse, compassion or empathy for the victim,” he said, adding that he hopes the conviction can help Hadley “move forward in her life.”
Through a victim impact statement, Hadley's attorney reminded the court of how Diaz's actions led to her spending 90 days in custody along with damaging her credit and how her job and apartment applications “still prompt questions about crimes she did not commit,” as the DA's office said in a news release.
He said he experience has left Hadley with nightmares and post-traumatic stress disorder.
In court, a deputy D.A. read a statement from Diaz -- given before she was identified as the true suspect -- in which she said Hadley should register as a sex offender and that she ruined her life. As the statement was read, Diaz laughed, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors said Diaz also impersonated two of her husband's ex-girlfriends over email.
Along with two counts of kidnapping and false imprisonment by menace, fraud or deceit, Diaz was charged with two counts of forgery and possession of a forged check worth over $950 for adding $2,000 to a payment from her employer in April 2016 and forging a paycheck from the County of Orange later that year, in September.
Diaz has also been charged with one count of perjury and grand theft and misdemeanor charges of falsely reporting a crime to police and falsely reporting a crime to a peace officer.
FULL STORY: Woman sentenced to 5 years after framing husband's ex-fiancee for stalking, attempted rape in O.C. - KTLA