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Audrey Francisquini Instagram: Ex cop poses as student for moodwtn page.
Audrey Francisquini Instagram: Florida ex cop poses as Hialeah High School student to get more followers for her moodwtn page. Police bookings photo.
Audrey Francisquini ex cop poses as a Hialeah Florida high school student in a bid to get Instagram followers for her moodwtn account.
A 28 year old
Florida woman who used to work as a police officer before an episode saw her being forced out is alleged to have posed as a high school student in a bid to boost her followers on social media.
Audrey Francisquini allegedly snuck into
28-Year-Old Woman Infiltrates High School to Beef Up Her Instagram and Seriously, WTF?
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Screenshot: WSVN/CBS Miami, Fair Use
Surely there are easier ways to pad your following on Instagram than trespassing on high school grounds while disguised as a teenager. That apparently did not occur to a 28-year-old Florida woman who was arrested after infiltrating a school in Miami-Dade County for the Gram on Monday.
Really? That was your plan?
Really?
The grown-arse woman in question, Audrey Francisquini, allegedly snuck into American Senior High School with a backpack, a “painting under one arm and a skateboard under the other,” according to the Washington Post. Police say she walked the halls of the school handing out fliers advertising her Instagram account before her cover was blown. Police reports state she was confronted by school security and gave the excuse that she was looking for the registration office, but continued to prowl the halls
The district, the fourth largest in the country, was one of only a few in Florida to receive permission from Governor Ron DeSantis to begin the 2020-2021 school year virtually due to the severity of the COVID-19 outbreak in the area. Before they could make a decision on reopening, however, the trustees had 18 hours of pre-recorded public testimony to hear.
“The board unanimously felt that if an individual took that time to leave that message and felt that it was important for them to speak on this subject that we wanted to have their voices heard,” Steve Gallon, the vice chair of the Miami-Dade school board, says.