The 34-year-old from Texas accused of enrolling as a high
school sophomore even fooled a man who said he was her boyfriend into
thinking she was an innocent teenager, the man said.
Rickie Williams told KLTV,
the ABC News affiliate in East Texas, that he had been dating Charity
Anne Johnson since last summer. The 23-year-old said he learned of her
arrest on Thursday.
Woman Accused of Posing as High School Student
“My best friend showed me and I was shocked,” he told the station.
Williams
said Johnson, accused of posing as a 15-year-old sophomore at New Life
Christian School in Longview, Texas, told him she was 18 years old.
New
details continued to emerge days after Johnson, who allegedly enrolled
at the high school in October using the name Charity Stevens, was
arrested after allegedly giving Longview Police a fake name and age.
Osarieme
Obaseki, who runs What About Us, a non-profit group for women and girls
in need, told ABC News Johnson first called her last month, claiming to
be a 14-year-old who needed help. The pair began talking on the phone
and Obaseki, who lives in Dallas, gave Johnson advice and became a
motherly figure during their conversations, she said.
Obaseki, 40, said she never spoke to Tamica Lincoln, who was Johnson’s guardian in Longview at the time.
“Soon, I began to be called, ‘Mom,’” Obaseki said. “I would hear her say little things like, ‘What if I popped up in Dallas?’”
That’s exactly what happened, Obaseki said.
Johnson
took a train to Dallas to visit Obaseki for Mother’s Day, even bringing
her a homemade, construction paper card, Obaseki said. Over the
weekend, Obaseki became suspicious.
“I can’t really explain it,
but I listened to her and knew something wasn't right. Her stories were
changing,” Obaseki said. “When my sister saw her, she said, ‘That is not
a child, look at her body!'”
Obaseki said she suspected there were other people Johnson called “Mom.”
“It’s
just been a lot of lies and cover-up,” she said. "Nobody I spoke to has
said it’s ever been a financial situation. She had money! It’s not
that, at all."
Obaseki contacted Lincoln and the pair determined
Johnson was lying about her age after calling McDonald’s, where Johnson
worked, she said.
“The manager verified she had two applications
on file," Obaseki said. "One birthday was 1982, the other was 1979.
Either way, it proved she’s too old to be in high school.”
Johnson’s real birthday was November 1979, police said.
ABC
News could not reach Johnson or any of her family members for comment.
Police said she was being held on $500 bond at Gregg County Jail,
accused of failure to ID herself and giving false and fictitious
information, and had not yet had a lawyer appointed to represent her.
In the meantime, other people who knew Johnson have been coming forward.
"We
have all wondered about her because she's always quiet and to herself,
you know," Roshunda Floyd, who works at the Walmart in Longview, told
KLTV.
Johnson worked at the McDonald's inside the Walmart.
Obaseki
was eager to warn people about the woman she believed had lied about
her age, on the possibility there might be prior cases.
“I want people to be aware of what she has done,” she said. "This goes farther than Longview and Dallas."
Obaseki added that there’s one moment from Johnson’s visit she can’t forget.
“The
irony of it is that she writes," Obaseki said, "and she would say,
‘Momma, I’m going to be famous one day.’ And well, you’re famous! She’s
famous!”