PICTURED: Boston social worker, 32, charged with posing as a teenager

PICTURED: Boston social worker, 32, charged with posing as a 16-year-old from a foster home to attend three local HIGH SCHOOLS for an entire academic year

  • Shelby Hewitt, 32, was charged with fraud and forgery after school officials spotted inaccuracies in her paperwork
  • She reportedly asked to be called ‘Daneilla’ and ‘Ellie Alessandra Blake’ while attending multiple high schools as an adult 
  • Police have not revealed a motive behind the alleged con, but students became to unravel her claims after her story kept changing

A social worker has been accused of posing as a teenage student in order to enroll in three local high schools for an entire year.

Shelby Hewitt, 32, has been charged with identity fraud and forgery after administrators at English High School in Boston, Massachusetts, spotted several inaccuracies on her paperwork.

Hewitt, who has a counselor’s license until 2025, attended three Boston public schools from September 7 to June 14 this year, according to prosecutors.

Shelby Hewitt, 32, (pictured in 2007) has been charged with identity fraud and forgery after administrators at English High School in Boston, Massachusetts, spotted several inaccuracies on her paperwork

Police have given no information about why Hewitt would pose as a teen to attend high school.

She allegedly asked pupils at the Jeremiah E. Burke High School to call her ‘Daneilla,’ and also attended Brighton High School during the same period.

At English High school, she apparently went by Ellie Alessandra Blake.

According to court documents, she used forged documents to enroll in the district, including fake Department of Children and Families documents.

DailyMail.com has attempted to reached Hewitt for comment.

Police reportedly found five forged documents at Lowell Juvenile Court in the names of people referred to as DBH and EAH, which matches the initials for the name Hewitt allegedly used at Burke High School and English High School

Police have requested an arrest warrant but Hewitt has not been arrested yet, per the criminal complaint.

A search warrant was executed at a Jamaica Plain home Hewitt shared with the two people who allegedly posed as her parents in the fake documents. 

Hewitt is also charged with two counts of ‘uttering false or forged records, deeds or other writings’ – meaning she used forged documents to enroll in the district.

She faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted of forgery. 

Hewitt attended multiple Massachusetts’s high schools in the last school year, including Jeremiah E. Burke High School (pictured) 

Hewitt’s cover was blown after multiple Burke students were shown a yearbook photo of the social worker from her days at Sharon High School and started to notice the holes in her everchanging story. 

But at first, students just thought she was a lonely newbie. 

‘I thought that she was 16, 17 – at least [that’s] what she told me – and she was super smart,’ Burke student, Janell Lamons, 15, told the Boston Globe, who sat with the fake student during lunch. ‘Whenever we needed help with math, she would help us during math class.’ 

But now students and parents are wondering why Hewitt did it. 

‘What was her intent? What did she get out of it?’ Templar Kinney, parent to 16-year-old student Isaiah Price wondered. ‘I find it disturbing.’ 

Hewitt used her background in social work to help weasel her way in, known that by claiming she was a foster child, the school would have to immediately enroll her under federal law – which does not require the waiting period for documentation like a typical enrollment. 

She also attended English High School (pictured). The former social worker claimed to be a foster child, which bypasses the traditional waiting period for documentation, as federal law calls these students be immediately enrolled 

At one point, Hewitt told students her parents died from a drug overdose, but then later claimed her father was in prison, that she was homeless, and even claimed to be an immigrant from Colombia.

‘She did say that she does speak Spanish, but I never heard her speak Spanish,’ Lamons told the Globe. 

Despite claiming to be a foster child, students would often catch her talking to her ‘mom’ on the phone and claiming her foster mother was ‘controlling.’  

Students also started to questioned her outfits, which looked too old for a high schooler, and noticed she drove a car to school and looked too old to be in her teens. 

‘It was always in the back of my mind,’ Price told the Globe. ‘It was low-key like she was lying about something.’ 

Hewitt reportedly told students she had been held back to cover up for her aging appearance and for the fact that she was taking freshmen math and history. 

While at Burke, Hewitt joined the girls basketball team and ironic choose number 32 as her jersey number, her former teammates Zahkia Warren, 17, and Janice Mendes, 18, told the Globe. 

She also went to Brighton High School (pictured). Her story became to fall apart after students became questioning her everchanging story, the way she dressed, and the fact that she drove a car to school 

However, when picture day arrived, she avoiding the spotlight, opting to stand off to the side by the coach because her foster parents wouldn’t allow her to be in the photos, the Boston Globe reported. 

When Hewitt’s former classmates heard about her tale, they were shocked and ‘disturbed’ to know that the former social worker, who worked for the state until February, would do it. 

‘We all want to know why…somebody that old would choose to go back to high school to do the work,’ Mendes told the outlet. 

Lamon’s mother Robin Williams said she ‘just can’t wrap my mind around it.’ 

‘She’s a grown woman and she’s friends with kids Janell’s age. And she’s taking a seat from a child that should be there,’ she told the Globe. 

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