
Kidnapping hoaxer Sherri Papini back in court for child visitation battle with ex-husband
The California mother who pleaded guilty in 2022 to charges related to faking her own kidnapping six years prior is back in court, this time fighting her ex-husband for visitation rights with their two children.
"For eight years our family has been followed, stalked, harassed and bullied by the media," Sherri Papini said in a court filing for a Friday visitation hearing according to KRCR. "I have done my best to stay private to focus on my children and healing from the events that transpired. For many years after my arrest, I was the primary caregiver of our children before serving my time in prison. My children have always been my primary focus."
Papini wants to be able to see the children again after an eight-year saga that has garnered international press attention and was even the subject of a Hulu documentary.
Her ex-husband, Keith Papini, is fighting to shelter the pair's children from their mother.
Attorneys for both sides pleaded their case in front of Judge Kathryn J. Barton of the Shasta County Superior Court.
In November 2016, Sherri Papini left her Redding, Calif. home for a jog and did not return. She reappeared 22 days later bound, beaten and with a brand on her shoulder 150 miles from her home, claiming that she had been abducted at gunpoint by two Hispanic females weeks prior.
For years, local and federal law enforcement spent a vast amount of resources trying to solve the alleged crime, only to find that Papini had been staying in Costa Mesa with an ex-boyfriend during the three weeks she was missing.
She was finally linked to her ex-boyfriend through DNA evidence, and he came clean with authorities, and charged in March 2022 with 35 counts of mail fraud and one count of lying to a federal officer.
Her husband, Keith Papini, filed for divorce and custody of their children immediately thereafter.
Later in the year, she accepted a plea deal and admitted to her guilt on one count of mail fraud and to the charge of lying to a federal officer.
She was sentenced to 18 months in prison, but released in 2023 after about 11 months behind bars.
Fox News Digital reached out to the attorneys for both parties.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Immigration raids continue, sparking more anxiety
Immigration raids continuted to spark anxiety and anger over the weekend across Southern California. Armed, masked ICE agents executed a raid Saturday afternoon at a swap meet in the city of Santa Fe Springs hours before a concert was to begin, witnesses said. The agents arrived at Santa Fe Springs Swap Meet around 3:30 p.m., according to eyewitness Howie Rezendez, who filmed armed agents hop off their vehicles and head into the venue. 'There were around 50 to 80,' Rezendez said. 'They had more than 30 cars and vans packed with agents, and three helicopters up there too.' A concert featuring musical acts like Los Cadetes De Linares, Los Dinamicos Del Norte and La Nueva Rebelión was scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. But online footage from witnesses show a nearly vacant venue, a stark contrast to the large crowds the venue typically attracts. Rezendez said the agents left around 4:30 p.m. Omar Benjamin Zaldivar, who also recorded the agents, said ICE took 'a bunch of people.' 'If you looked Hispanic in any way, they just took you,' Zaldivar said. The number of people swept up from the raid remains unclear. Shortly after the raid, swap meet officials postponed the concert. 'Later we will provide details,' the Instagram post said. Swap meet officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The 17-acre outdoor hub first opened in 1965. Known as a hot spot for música Mexicana, the Santa Fe Springs Swap Meet hosts an outdoor concert every weekend. Other popular Latino swap meets in Los Angeles appeared similarly vacant amid the ongoing ICE raids. The Whittier Swap Meet closed last week in preparation for possible raids. The Whittier Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The tensions were also felt at a major soccer game Saturday evening. Waving Mexican flags and signs criticizing President Trump, about 300 people overtook sidewalks in Inglewood on Saturday afternoon in the hours leading up to the soccer game between the Mexican and Dominican Republic national teams. Esmeralda Sanchez, who was not attending the game at SoFi Stadium, said she came to the rally to support family members and friends who are not in the country legally. 'We are the voice that our parents and the older generation couldn't be today,' Sanchez said over the sound of horns and cheers. The parking lot outside the stadium felt relatively subdued, with some fans making carne asada on portable grills and others waving Mexican flags. Emilio Estrada and Ashley Ruiz from Bakersfield posed for a photo in front of the lake by the stadium, saying their parents had been fretting about their visit to L.A. 'My mom kept calling me as we drove down,' Estrada said. Jesse Murillo of Orange County said attending the game to support the Mexican national team felt like a clear sign of protest against the federal government. 'We're not afraid to come out here and show our colors,' he said. 'No matter what, our people have always found a way to be here.' His friend Richard Barrera said many people were afraid because so much information, and misinformation, is ricocheting around social media. 'So many people are living in fear and that seems unfair, because you see so much online and then it turns out ICE isn't there,' Barrera said. Across the street from the stadium, Inglewood native Jorge Gomez said he had been nervous about attending any protests because of the immigration raids playing out across Southern California. 'I've been trying to be more wary, be more careful,' he said. 'I shouldn't be out here, but I am — because deep down inside is something that keeps telling me that this is wrong and I need to stand up.' Taqueros, fruteros and other street vendors are emptying the streets of Los Angeles amid widespread immigration sweeps, fearing their own arrest and deportation. But a Koreatown-based nonprofit recently launched a fundraiser to offset lost wages, donating to cover rent, utilities and other necessities — and allowing vendors to stay home. 'The reason they were out there, even though it's so dangerous to their safety right now,' is because the rent is so high and they have bills,' said Andreina Kniss, an organizer and longtime volunteer at Ktown for All. 'We got together and we said, 'Every day we can keep them off the streets is a day they're safer.'' Ktown for All is sourcing donations through Venmo, with account information posted to Instagram, then discreetly distributing them to dozens of street vendors to cover 30 days of rent and bills. According to Kniss, they've raised more than $50,000 in the last week. Since its founding in 2018, Ktown for All has focused most of its efforts on advocating for Koreatown's unhoused population and distributing resources such as water, blankets, laundry kits and prepared foods. In the course of feeding this demographic, members of Ktown for All built connections with the neighborhood's street vendors. In times of economic vendor hardship such as rainy seasons or emergencies like January's fires, the nonprofit launched a 'vendor buy-out' initiative to help sustain them. Donated funds 'buy out' food such as tamales and tacos from the vendors, then Ktown for All's volunteers distribute them to those in the nonprofit is approaching vendors in Koreatown and asking, 'What would it take to get you off the street?' Many vendors are simply being paid without supplying food.'We're street vendors,' one donation recipient told Ktown for All. Their name was withheld to maintain anonymity. 'We're afraid to go out, and all we want is to work for our families.' 'A lot of them are in hiding with no financial support right now,' said Kniss. 'It's really nauseating having to pick [between] paying your bills or being kidnapped.' For Kniss, the cause is personal. She was raised in a family of immigrants and farm workers on the Central Coast, and became a U.S. citizen herself five years ago. 'Having been one of those families that had lived in fear, seeing the way that our street vendors were living in terror, really struck my heart,' she said. The nonprofit plans to fundraise for the 'vendor buy-out' until ICE leaves Los Angeles or until the money runs out, and is regularly finding new street vendors to support through its network. The program's reach is already expanding beyond Koreatown, aiding a frutero in Echo Park, a hot dog seller in downtown and response from the community, Kniss said, is overwhelming. She hopes other mutual-aid organizations will 'copy' the method.'I thought the extreme 'fears' of having my family ripped apart from me as a little boy were just exaggerations,' another anonymous vendor wrote to Ktown for All. 'But now this administration [has] resurfaced those same fears and have terrorized the most genuine, kind and hard-working immigrants I've known for my entire life.'
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Gov Newsom ‘handcuffed' police as LA riots expose ‘reactionary' leadership failure: former sheriff' s deputy
As violent protests erupted in Los Angeles, Calif., L.A. County GOP Vice Chair and former L.A. County sheriff's deputy Patrick Gipson issued a scathing rebuke of state and local leadership, accusing officials of negligence and political opportunism. "These riots, they're completely unnecessary," Gipson told Fox News Digital. "We didn't have to go to this length to see cars burning, businesses looted, livelihoods destroyed. It could've all been avoided." Gipson pointed the finger squarely at Calif. Gov. Gavin Newsom, blaming him for failing to deploy the National Guard in time to prevent chaos. "Newsom is reactionary instead of pro-action," he said. "If he had called in the National Guard earlier, we would've saved billions of dollars in insurance claims and protected our small businesses." California Candidate For Governor Blasts Newsom While Walking Through La Riot Aftermath The protests, which began as demonstrations against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), escalated into street violence and theft. The protests highlighted, for many conservatives, the consequences of the state's left-leaning approach to progressive criminal justice reform and immigration. Read On The Fox News App "ICE is here to enforce federal law. And if we can't enforce federal law in this state, what does that say about us?" he asked. Gipson also alleged that Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass was unable to act independently, suggesting that she has been taking her queues from Newsom. "I know Karen Bass did go in and said, 'this is not the way to protest.' They wanted peaceful protest, but that's not what we had," Gipson said. "She's taking her instructions from Sacramento and Gavin Newsom. If she had better leadership from him, I think we would have been off a lot better that we are now." WATCH: Newsom says people will be prosecuted to fullest extent of law Newsom attempted to cast blame on President Donald Trump for escalating the protests, claiming that they were peaceful demonstrations before the National Guard and his rhetoric accelerated the conflict. "Gavin Newsom does not have a handle on California," he said. "If he had said, '[President] Trump, can you come and help us prepare for this? I think he [Trump] would have helped. "Newsom is obviously setting up for his race in 2028 and he is going to cast the blame on Trump, saying that Trump didn't do his job." Steve Hilton: How One-party Democratic Rule Led To Riots, Burning American Flags And Attacks On Police In La The consequences of what Gipson described as "soft-on-crime" policies are, in his view, compounding the unrest. He cited the state's failure to properly fund Proposition 36, which was overwhelmingly passed in 2024 to curb back the radical policies of Proposition 47, as proof of Sacramento's disregard for public safety. "Gavin Newsom is not funding Prop 36. Store owners can't even go after criminals. Patrons are scared to shop. People won't even get on the freeway toward LA now," Gipson said. "They're afraid a brick's going to come flying through their car window." Reflecting on his experience as a former sheriff's deputy, Gipson said the state of law enforcement morale in L.A. is dire. "Law enforcement has not been able to do their job," he said. "Officers are afraid, literally afraid, to do their jobs because they don't want to go to jail for following their training. There's no backing from Newsom, none from Bass." "They're handcuffed," he added. "For over 10 years, Gavin Newsom has not protected law enforcement in California. They've been defunded, defamed and demoralized. And now they wait. They hesitate. And when you hesitate in this line of work, people get hurt." Gipson also faulted the bureaucratic chain of command for paralyzing law enforcement at critical moments. "The sheriff answers to the Board of Supervisors. The LAPD chief answers to the mayor. And when they can't arrest people right away, the violence just keeps going," he said. The solution, Gipson argued, is straightforward: consequences. In a statement to Fox News Digital, Newsom's office said that the Trump administration "didn't even tap into the additional resources available to clean up their mess." "Let's be clear: The National Guard wasn't needed in Los Angeles. State and local law enforcement were responding, and federal agencies didn't even tap into the additional resources available to clean up their mess. Calls for troops to handle a protest show a basic misunderstanding of how public safety works — which is rather shocking for someone who used to have a badge." Fox News Digital reached out to Bass' office for article source: Gov Newsom 'handcuffed' police as LA riots expose 'reactionary' leadership failure: former sheriff' s deputy
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Florida sheriff fires off blunt message to violent anti-Trump protesters: 'We will kill you graveyard dead'
A Florida sheriff has issued a stern warning to protesters planning violence towards law enforcement officials as the United States braces for a wave of anti-Trump administration demonstrations. Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey cautioned against violent behavior during the upcoming "No Kings" protests expected across the country this weekend during a news conference alongside Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier. "Throw a brick, firebomb or point a gun at one of our deputies, we will be notifying your family where to collect your remains at," Ivey said. "Because we will kill you graveyard dead. We're not going to play." Doj Warns Us Attorneys To Prepare For Criminal Investigations Ahead Of Nationwide Anti-trump Protests Uthmeier also weighed in on the upcoming protests, urging Floridians to prioritize their safety if they get caught in the middle of a demonstration. "If you're a family out there, you're driving and all of a sudden you get surrounded by one of these angry demonstrations that's turned violent," Uthmeier said. "You don't need to sit there and wait while people smash your window and damage your vehicle and put your family in jeopardy. Just drive, get yourself out of harm's way." Read On The Fox News App Ivey pointed to the ongoing chaos at anti-immigration protests throughout major cities across the country, before saying he "doesn't want to hear any whining later saying 'we didn't know.'" Anti-ice Riots Reveal The Left Has Learned Nothing. It's Just Handed Trump A Gift "As you watch these riots unfold across the country," Ivey said, "what you are seeing is buildings being burned down, police cars being bricked, having explosive devices thrown at them, having guns pointed at them, bricks thrown at them." Uthmeier went on to echo the statements from Ivey, adding, "we're grateful to have a great president and a governor that respects rule of law. In Florida, you're not going to see anything like you're seeing in California." The words of warning from officials come as authorities around the country are gearing up for a weekend of "No Kings" protests, which were organized by the 50501 Movement in response to President Donald Trump's inauguration earlier this year. The protests are scheduled to coincide with Trump's 79th birthday and an Army parade on Saturday, with organizers vowing the movement will remain peaceful. The 50501 Movement did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Newsom Says Los Angeles Rioters Will Be Prosecuted, Slams Trump For 'Traumatizing Our Communities' "President Trump wants tanks in the street and a made-for-TV display of dominance for his birthday," the organization's website states. "A spectacle meant to look like strength. But real power isn't staged in Washington. It rises up everywhere else." Officials are expecting two protests within Brevard County, according to Florida Today. "Florida will never be California," Uthmeier said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "Rioting is illegal in our state and our law enforcement are on full alert this weekend. If anyone participates in violent rioting, threatens or injures law enforcement, damages businesses or property or obstructs traffic, we will ensure you will see the back of a jail cell and prosecute you to the fullest. Florida stands by President Trump, ICE and the rule of law." The Brevard County Sheriff's Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Ivey closed the department's warning by acknowledging that peaceful protests "are part of our democracy." "Stand on the mountaintops and yell your opinion," Ivey said. "We invite that. But don't go breaking the law, because it won't go well for you."Original article source: Florida sheriff fires off blunt message to violent anti-Trump protesters: 'We will kill you graveyard dead'