Something would see Shonda Rhimes, the person in charge of series like the long-lived Grey’s Anatomy (since 2005) or scandal (2012-2018), both from the ABC network, in the story of Anna Sorokin to want to turn her into Who is Anna?the second Netflix project with which he has been involved after his agreement to make exclusive content from 2017 and his executive production in The Bridgertons (Chris Van Dusen, since 2020). A character in the style of Alessandro di Cagliostro or the Americans Frank Abagnale Jr. and Steven Jay Russell is always attractive.
The company hasn’t paid him for nothing. streaming $320,000 to count her on her platform, more than the Russian-born criminal swindled since 2013 the wealthiest in the city of skyscrapers, 200,000 greenbacks with the face of President George Washington for his non-existent Anna Delvey Foundation. Which includes several banks and hotels and institutions of various kinds, while he dedicated himself to falsifying millionaire bank statements from Swiss accounts and evading the payment of stays and feasts in restaurants.
Anna Sorokin, from one prison to another
Anna Sorokin was arrested in an undercover operation and locked up for two years in the maximum security prison on Rikers Island, between New York’s Queens and the Bronx, and tried in March 2019 by a popular jury in Manhattan. The sentence was four to twelve years in prison, in addition to a fine of 24,000 dollars and restitution of the capital that had been defrauded. And it wasn’t until February 2021 that she was put paroled. But a week later it was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement for exceeding the period of your visa.
Now, is in the Orange County Correctional Facilityin upstate New York, waiting to know if she will be deported to Germany. On February 2, he decided to publish an article in Insider in which he explains what his position is. “While I was in prison, I paid the restitution of my criminal case in full to the banks from which I took money,” says the protagonist of the Netflix miniseries. “I also accomplished more in the six weeks that they considered long enough to keep me free than some people in the last two years.”
“My visa stay was involuntary and largely out of my control. I served my prison sentence, but I am appealing my criminal conviction to clear my name. I didn’t break a single New York State or ICE parole rule,” Anna Sorokin continues. Something that, of course, the US authorities are not sure.
Questions from a cell
“The court finds that, even if released from detention and ordered to report regularly to ICE, Respondent would have the ability and inclination to continue committing fraudulent and dishonest acts,” an immigration judge ruled. “She clearly possesses the knowledge to do so and she has shown no remorse.” Sorry, am i on trial for this again?”, asks the current inmate for Who is Anna?
“It doesn’t make sense for me to stay here long after numerous violent criminals (burglars, rapists, would-be murderers) and people with a variety of DUI felony offenses have been brought in and released. [conducir bajo la influencia de sustancias] and grand theft”, continues Anna Sorokin. “Do they not “clearly possess the knowledge” to re-commit the same crimes they have been charged with before, or different rules apply?”
A chapter that we will not see in ‘Who is Anna?’
“Just when I thought it couldn’t get any worse, on January 19, I tested positive for COVID-19. I’m sure I’ll live, but I haven’t been this sick in years. The prison’s response to a positive test is to lock you up,” says the scammer about a chapter that will not be added to Who is Anna? “Most people here quickly caught on and stopped complaining of symptoms for fear of being locked up.”
“Staff insist on using the words ‘medical isolation’, even though there is nothing medical about it. One is simply forced to sit in a cell with a hole in the door. This place is like a petri dish for viruses and bacteria. The only fun thing is listening to dumb sergeants come up with fifty different ways to tell you no.” Because “they are understaffed and tired.”
A) Yes, “He hasn’t seen a real doctor in over four years.. Dismissive nurses who suspect everyone just wants to get high and would do anything to get generic drugs don’t count.” And Anna Sorokin ends by wondering: “Will I be judged forever by [lo que hice a] my twenty years? Is there anything else you could have done to close this episode? Will I be stuck forever in a past not entirely of my making with no chance to move on? Do you feel like the woman in the iron mask?