N.H. woman allegedly accesses state court system, drops charges against herself
Lisa Landon now faces charges related to impersonation and falsifying evidence.
A New Hampshire woman is facing new charges after she allegedly pretended to be a prosecutor and attempted to submit documents to have charges against her dropped.
Lisa Landon, 33, of Littleton, has been indicted by a Hillsborough County Grand Jury on six counts of falsifying physical evidence and one count of false personation, according to the New Hampshire Union Leader.
Last November and December, Landon allegedly tried to submit phony documents for three different cases and in some cases used the state’s digital system to submit them, the paper said. Landon had been facing charges related to drug possession and stalking.
In November, a forensic examiner contacted county prosecutors to ask if Landon’s competency evaluation should proceed since in the court system it appeared that the charges against her had been dropped, according to the Union Leader. This made prosecutors skeptical.
Landon also allegedly submitted a fake decision made by a superior court judge that would have eliminated the filing fees for a lawsuit she submitted, as well as an order to stop moving forward with a guardianship for her child.
A Littleton woman allegedly impersonated a Hillsborough County prosecutor when she filed bogus documents with court officials declaring that the drug possession and stalking case against her had been dropped, according to recently released indictments.https://t.co/UqeigpmHs4 pic.twitter.com/gUBcMsSSyN
— UnionLeader.com (@UnionLeader) October 27, 2020
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