
Former TV anchor facing years in prison over shocking Covid lies
The scandal involved photos of her holding cash in a bathtub, luxury beachfront apartments, and a billion-dollar fintech scheme that left American taxpayers footing the bill. A federal jury found the 42-year-old former KNXV-TV anchor guilty concluding that she orchestrated a vast scheme to exploit the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) during the height of the pandemic. Hockridge's sentencing is scheduled for October 10, and she faces up to 20 years in prison for the conspiracy conviction.
The verdict caps a dramatic fall from grace for the Emmy-nominated journalist who once graced magazine covers as 'Arizona's Favorite Newscaster.' But behind the studio lights and on-air smiles, federal prosecutors say Hockridge was running a Covid cash-grab empire alongside her husband, fintech founder Nathan Reis, 46. The US government's case centered on Blueacorn, the fintech firm Hockridge co-founded with Reis in April 2020 just weeks after leaving her anchor job at ABC15.
The company claimed to help small businesses navigate the PPP loan process, a lifeline created by Congress to keep workers employed during the Covid crisis. In reality, investigators say Blueacorn became a fraud factory. According to a congressional subcommittee, the company processed over $12.5 billion in loans and pocketed up to $300 million for its ownership group, including Hockridge, while spending virtually nothing on fraud prevention.
Another text cited by prosecutors reportedly described her as 'the MVP' of the operation. According to court filings, Hockridge and her husband submitted fraudulent PPP applications for themselves, including one claiming Reis was both African American and a military veteran - both lies. The couple received at least $300,000 in personal PPP funds.
They also charged borrowers illegal 'success fees,' violating SBA rules, and even struck kickback deals with banks, collecting percentages of loans that were funded, prosecutors alleged. Blueacorn's practices were so brazen that Congress launched a formal investigation, revealing that while the company collected over $1 billion in taxpayer-funded processing fees, it spent only $8.6 million on fraud prevention - less than 1 percent of its intake. One congressional report summarized the company's internal directive succinctly: Speed over accuracy. Some employees, with zero financial training, were reportedly processing hundreds of loans in under 30 seconds each.
'This was not about helping small businesses,' a federal official close to the investigation said. 'It was about siphoning off a national crisis for personal gain.' Hockridge transformation from trusted journalist to convicted felon has gripped Arizona's media community. She spent seven years as a respected anchor for KNXV-TV, and previously worked for CBS News Radio in London. Her career accolades include an Emmy nomination and features in local lifestyle publications. But prosecutors painted a starkly different portrait in court: not a broadcaster-turned-entrepreneur, but a co-conspirator in one of the biggest pandemic profiteering cases to date.
The couple allegedly rerouted money through a chain of bank accounts, using interstate wires to disguise their tracks. 'Nathan Reis and Stephanie Hockridge… knowingly devised and intended to devise the scheme to defraud,' the indictment states. 'To obtain money and property by means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses.' At the heart of the prosecution's case was an alleged attitude of impunity. Prosecutors said Hockridge once described the PPP program as '$100 billion of free money'. Her husband's trial is scheduled for August where he faces similar charges.
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