The Florida couple is busted with fake vaccination letters

Image titled Tourists with Fake Vaccination Cards Didn't Do Enough Own Research, Bursting in Hawaii

photo: Robyn Beck (Getty Images)

A quick PSA for unvaccinated people looking for a weekend getaway – if you try to fake your travel records, you could end up with a hefty fine.

That’s what happened to a Florida couple who were arrested after getting off the plane in Honolulu last week. NBC Miami reported for the first time that the couple —43-course-old Enzo Dalmazzo i 31-course-the old Daniela Dalmazzo, both were accused of raping those in Hawaii Secure travel mandates counterfeiting their vaccine cards. In addition, Daniella was given two additional expenses to send additional fake documents for each of her children.

It is worth mentioning that those children, aged 4 and 5, were too young to be vaccinated (at least right now). Although many domestic airlines would allow it table anyway, their parents decided to leave the couple as two 12-year-old children vaccinated instead, with vaccine cards to prove it.

But because five-year-olds and 12-year-olds It seems very different, the airport authorities decided to examine the authenticity of their cards. “When he passed control of the airport, he noticed an anomaly about the children’s age and the vaccine, and that’s how we got involved,” a Hawaii attorney general’s representative told NBC.

The question of where he got the couple’s card is still open. Earlier this week, the Justice Department loaded a Chicago pharmacist who was supposed to sell on vaccine cards on eBay, just a month after the agency trapped a homeopathic doctor based in California selling blank cards to their patients.

Infringing anyone Hawaii’s COVID-19 protocols are classified into a fault by local authorities and that it can seal tourists with fines of up to $ 5,000 or a one-year prison term sentence. Hawaiian news reported that the of Dalmazzo he shared a $ 8,000 fine and filed a bail. Hopefully, they will consider getting the free before the next family vacation.

.Source