A woman is being investigated for posing as the heiress of the Rothschild family to infiltrate Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.
Inna Yashchyshyn, 33 years old, Ukrainian. She was the daughter of an Illinois trucker but impersonated the heir to the powerful Rothschild family in the banking industry. The family is known to have a very good relationship with billionaire, former president Donald Trump, South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham and many other politicians.
Yashchyshyn infiltrated Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s resort in May last year. The very next day she was able to take a photo with Mr. Trump and Senator Graham.
Yashchyshyn is currently being investigated by the FBI for forging documents and impersonating another person. She was also accused by the Canadian government of several illegal financial transactions.
The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), in association with the Pittsburgh Gazette, reported that Yashchyshyn had falsified his identity and deceived the security system at the Mar-a-Lago resort in an extreme way. simple and neat. The specific method has yet to be announced.
Mar-a-Lago resort is becoming the focus in recent days when public opinion is buzzing about the case that the FBI has arbitrarily searched this place and collected many important documents of Mr. Trump.
Responding to the press, the FBI said it suspected billionaire Trump had violated the Espionage Act by illegally storing many classified national documents.
In 2019 there was also an unauthorized entry into the Mar-a-Lago resort.
Yujing Zhang, a Chinese man, pretended to be a security guard to get inside. She then said that she had come to attend an Event organized by the Chinese American Association and asked to use the swimming pool.
However, security officers saw suspicious signs, so they detained and searched, discovered Zhang carrying many fake passports, cash, a phone and a laptop and a hard drive containing the code. poison.
Yujing Zhang was arrested and jailed for eight months before being deported to China.
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