Man charged with posing as federal marshal to deport relative

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LOS ANGELES — A Southern California man has been arrested on suspicion of posing as a federal marshal to kidnap a distant cousin’s wife and put her on a plane to the Philippines, police said Wednesday.

Wearing a fake badge and a shirt imprinted with “U.S. Federal Agent,” Gregory Denny, 37, turned up at the Riverside County home of Craig Hibbard, a distant cousin, on Jan. 15, said Lt. Duane Wisehart of the Hemet Police Department.

Displaying what turned out to be a pellet gun, Denny reportedly handcuffed Hibbard’s wife, Cherrie Belle,
and told the couple she was being deported, Wisehart said. Denny
allegedly drove Belle, 28, south to the U.S. Border Patrol station in Murrieta.

When he was told there was no warrant for her in the computer system, Denny apparently returned to the couple’s house in Hemet and instructed her husband to purchase a ticket for her online to her home country, Wisehart said.

Police were told Denny drove the woman to San Diego International Airport,
where he flashed his fake badge to get through security. He allegedly
escorted her to the departure gate, uncuffed her and watched her board
a plane to San Francisco en route to Manila, where she remains.

When Hibbard reported the matter, police reached
Denny by telephone and asked him to come to the station for
questioning. Denny arrived wearing the “U.S. Federal Agent” shirt,
identified himself to police as a U.S. marshal and verified the
family’s general account of what happened, Wisehart said.

“This person is not and never was employed by the
U.S. Marshals Service, and as far as we can ascertain, has never been
employed by any law enforcement agency in any capacity,” the Hemet
Police Department said in a statement.

Police arrested Denny last month on suspicion of
kidnapping, false imprisonment, impersonating a peace officer, burglary
and false arrest, Wisehart said. He was released the next day on $50,000 bail and is expected in court Feb. 16.

The Riverside County district attorney’s office is considering whether to file charges, spokesman John Hall said. Hemet police also notified the FBI, U.S. Marshals Service, U.S. Border Patrol and the Transportation Security Administration.

Denny told the Riverside Press-Enterprise newspaper that the kidnapping claims are false but did not elaborate.

“There is no clear motive except that he felt he was
doing a ‘favor’ for the family, and that they, the family, wanted her
deported,” Wisehart said.

Three days after Hibbard’s wife was put on the
plane, Hibbard said, he called the U.S. Marshals Service and was told
that Denny was not an agent. He called Hemet police.

“I didn’t question it,” Hibbard was quoted as
saying. “He had the shirt on and a badge and everything. He looked real
and had an ID that said, ‘U.S. marshal.'”

Hibbard told the Press-Enterprise that his wife is
five months’ pregnant and that they have been married for three years.
He said she canceled her green card last year in a dispute with him,
saying she wanted to go home to the Philippines.

The couple later reconciled and she tried to renew
her immigration documents, the paper reported. Hibbard said they were
told by immigration officials that she was allowed to remain in the United States while her application was being processed.

(c) 2010, Los Angeles Times.

Visit the Los Angeles Times on the Internet at http://www.latimes.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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