logo
Adult accused of enrolling as teen at Ohio high school

Adult accused of enrolling as teen at Ohio high school

The Hill21-05-2025
PERRYSBURG, Ohio (WJW) — A Wood County, Ohio, school district is investigating after a 24-year-old was accused of enrolling in high school, allegedly posing as a teenage boy for more than a year and a half.
The suspect, identified in Perrysburg Municipal Court records as 24-year-old Anthony E. Labrador-Sierra, even played on the school's JV soccer and swim teams, according to the school district.
Perrysburg police arrested Labrador-Sierra on Monday on felony charges of forgery, accusing him of using fake documents to enroll at and attend Perrysburg High School between January 11, 2024, and May 14 of this year, according to a statement on the school district's website.
Labrador-Sierra is accused of enrolling in the district as a 16-year-old unaccompanied minor, under federal and state rules for students experiencing homelessness or who do not have a legal guardian, according to the school district.
He had obtained several pieces of identification that 'further complicated the situation,' including an Ohio driver's license and a federal Social Security number. He also had been issued Temporary Protected Status by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, according to the district.
The Wood County Juvenile Court had placed him in guardianship with a Perrysburg family. That family learned May 14 that he was not a minor, but a 24-year-old man, according to the district.
District administrators met with Labrador-Sierra the following day, May 15, and he claimed the birth certificate he used to enroll was accurate and that he was 17 years old. He was barred from school grounds while the investigation continued.
School officials reviewed social media posts, including posts from people claiming to be Labrador-Sierra's family members. They then contacted Perrysburg police, who began their investigation, leading to Labrador-Sierra's arrest on Monday.
School officials said the alleged fraud slipped past several federal, state and local agencies, and that the school district had acted in accordance with the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, which regulates education for students experiencing homelessness.
'While the deception was complex and far-reaching, Perrysburg Schools acted swiftly and appropriately once concerns were raised,' reads the district's statement.
'What's most heartbreaking is how many responded in good faith. Staff and local families offered support to someone they believed was a vulnerable teen. Their compassion reflects the best of our community. Though trust was violated, we remain proud of those who chose to help.'
Labrador-Sierra was jailed on a $50,000 bond, court records show. If released, he won't be able to leave Wood County. He's due back in court for a preliminary hearing on May 29. A judge also issued a no-contact order.
The suspect's athletic involvement was reported to the Ohio High School Athletics Association, according to the district.
Nexstar's WJW reached out to Perrysburg police for more information on the investigation, but did not receive a response before publication.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

McKinney man charged with murder after his wife was found dead in a closet, police say
McKinney man charged with murder after his wife was found dead in a closet, police say

CBS News

time2 days ago

  • CBS News

McKinney man charged with murder after his wife was found dead in a closet, police say

A 42-year-old McKinney man has been charged with murder after firefighters responding to a welfare check found his wife dead in a closet with a stab wound on Friday. Around 6 p.m., McKinney firefighters and police were called to the 5700 block of Broken Spur Drive after a family member in Dallas requested a welfare check. According to police, overseas relatives believed Eslam Mohamed may have been having a medical emergency. The McKinney Fire crew arrived at the home first and forced entry, police said. They found Mohamed on the living room couch with minor injuries and saw blood on his hands. When asked if anyone else was in the home, he mentioned a woman in a closet, the report states. Firefighters found a dead woman in the master bedroom closet with a stab wound to her neck, later identified as Mohamed's wife, 40-year-old Kubra Zafer. Police said a knife was found nearby. The firefighters immediately exited the home and waited for police to arrive. Mohamed was taken into custody and taken to the hospital for treatment, police said. He was later booked into the Collin County Jail for murder. The investigation is ongoing.

Feds move to deport 82-year-old convicted IRA terrorist after decades in the United States
Feds move to deport 82-year-old convicted IRA terrorist after decades in the United States

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • New York Post

Feds move to deport 82-year-old convicted IRA terrorist after decades in the United States

A convicted terrorist and boss of the Irish Republican Army in North America may finally be getting booted from the United States. Gabriel Megahey, 82, lived in New York for decades but a June 20 letter from the US Department of Homeland Security warned his 'parole' was being terminated, nearly 30 years after he and other IRA members were given dispensation to stay in the country. 'Do not attempt to unlawfully remain in the United States — the federal government will find you. Please depart the United States immediately,' reads the one-page letter, which Megahey shared with the Irish Echo. Advertisement The Belfast native was convicted in 1983 in Brooklyn Federal Court for conspiring to buy missiles to shoot down British helicopters amid the violent clashes in Northern Ireland known as 'The Troubles.' Gabriel Megahey was convicted in 1983 of conspiring to buy weapons to shoot down British helicopters. Gabriel Megahey /Facebook At the time, federal authorities considered Megahey 'the officer commanding (OC) of America and Canada' for the IRA, he told PBS's Frontline. The married father of six served five years in federal prison for conspiracy and arms shipments. Advertisement Megahey, known by the nickname 'Skinny Legs,' was convicted with three others, with then U.S. Attorney John Dearie describing him at the time as 'the most culpable of these defendants,' and the group as a whole as 'a network of men who sought to use this country as a base of terrorist activities,' according to reports. 'No one wants peace more than us,' Megahey, who first settled in Jackson Heights, Queens in 1975, insisted at the sentencing hearing. He was released from prison in 1988 — but never deported. Advertisement Megahey and four other IRA members were then allowed to remain in the country as part of the Good Friday Agreement, the historic April 1998 accords which ended decades of violence in Ireland between those who wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom and those who didn't. Now the grandfather of 14 and great-grandfather of five, who records show moved to Delaware in 2019, is reeling after DHS warned he would be fined and criminally prosecuted if he stays in the United States. Now 82, Megahey is facing deportation decades after he served his sentence. Gabriel Megahey /Facebook 'DHS is terminating your parole,' according to the one-page letter, which Megahey shared with the Irish Echo. 'Do not attempt to unlawfully remain in the United States — the federal government will find you. Please depart the United States immediately.' Advertisement Megahey, who relies on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid to pay for expensive medicine necessary to treat a heart ailment, also faces the loss of his benefits. 'It would cost me $4,000 to $5,000 a month to pay for it on my own,' he told Straus News. 'I can't afford that. I'll have to go home.' DHS and Megahey declined comment.

'Doomsday mom' Lori Vallow Daybell now faces two more life sentences
'Doomsday mom' Lori Vallow Daybell now faces two more life sentences

USA Today

time3 days ago

  • USA Today

'Doomsday mom' Lori Vallow Daybell now faces two more life sentences

Lori Vallow Daybell was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences in Arizona for conspiring to kill her estranged husband and attempting to murder her niece's ex-husband. Lori Vallow Daybell, the Idaho woman serving life in prison for the murders of her two youngest children and a romantic rival, was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences in Arizona for conspiring to kill her estranged husband and attempting to murder her niece's ex-husband. Vallow Daybell, often referred to as "Doomsday mom" because of the apocalyptic beliefs that fueled her string of grisly murders, was convicted earlier this year for the murder of her former husband, Charles Vallow, and the attempted murder of Brandon Boudreaux in 2019. "The amount of contemplation, calculation, planning and manipulation that went into these crimes is unparalleled in my career," Judge Justin Beresky said before sentencing Vallow Daybell on July 25. "It will take an act of god for you to go free." Vallow Daybell is already serving multiple life sentences in Idaho for the 2019 murders of her children, Joshua 'J.J.' Vallow and Tylee Ryan, along with the killing of her current husband's former wife, Tammy Daybell. Her two life sentences in Arizona will run consecutively. Family members of Vallow Daybell's victims testified for more than an hour at the July 25 sentencing hearing about harm she caused. Her only surviving child, Colby Ryan, described the moments when he found out his father had been shot and killed and then later, when he learned his 7-year-old and 16-year-old siblings had been murdered. "I had to do something I've never done, and that was fight to stay alive after the pain," Ryan said. Boudreaux, the victim of attempted murder, told the judge he "choose to forgive" Vallow Daybell, but would "never feel safe if she has freedom." Prosecutors alleged Vallow Daybell and her husband, Chad Daybell, believed an apocalypse was imminent and people around them were evil zombies. They accused Vallow Daybell of manipulating her brother, Alex Cox, and husband, Chad Daybell, into carrying out the crimes to cash in on her husband's life insurance policy and Social Security survivor benefits from her children. Victims Charles Vallow and Brandon Boudreaux Vallow Daybell met her current husband, Chad Daybell, in 2018 at a religious conference in Utah. The pair bonded over their shared religious beliefs, including that an apocalyptic doomsday would soon arrive. Shortly after, in 2019, Charles Vallow filed for divorce, claiming that his wife had threatened to kill him and believed she was a godlike figure preparing for the second coming of Christ. Vallow was shot at Vallow Daybell's rental home in Chandler, Arizona, in July 2019. Months later, her niece's ex-husband, Brandon Boudreaux, was shot at while driving in Gilbert, Arizona. The shooting was later tied to Vallow Daybell's brother who had begun to share her apocalyptic beliefs. Boudreaux survived the shooting. The murders of Joshua Vallow, Tylee Ryan and Tammy Daybell Vallow Daybell moved in September 2019 with her children to the small Idaho town where Chad Daybell lived with his then-wife, Tammy Daybell. Weeks after the move, Tammy Daybell was found dead. Relatives of Vallow Daybell soon after told police they had not seen her children in awhile. Vallow Daybell was arrested on child abandonment counts in Hawaii in February 2020. She was extradited to Idaho, and in early June of that year, authorities found the bodies of her children buried on Chad Daybell's property. (This story has been updated to add new information and because an earlier version included an inaccuracy.)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store