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FraudNews
06-01-2013, 01:53 PM
A Las Vegas, NV . woman is accused of creating a fake marriage license in an effort to gain possession of her dead racecar-driving boyfriend’s estate and possessions.

Allison Lear faces forgery and perjury charges for allegedly drafting up a marriage certificate to Alexander Djordjevic, who died in a traffic accident in northern Nevada. He was 37. She was recently arrested on some outstanding warrants at the MGM Grand’s Hakkasan nightclub.

Djordjevic’s family said Lear was gold-digging for his material possessions, and wasn’t done out of love for the deceased family member.

The couple started dating in 2009, after Lear posted a profile on a millionaires-matching making website. According to family members, they were dating for a few months when Djordjevic’s silver Porsche ran off the side of a mountain highway June 26, 2010 while he was taking part in the Speed by Spectre 341 Challenge near the Virginia City area.

In court, Lear presented a marriage certificate that showed her and Djordjevic had gotten married five days before he died at her parents’ Las Vegas home. Relatives, who also included Lear’s own father, questioned if the event even happened.

John Lear, according to the probate court documents, said he would have remembered his daughter getting married on June 21, 2010 at 4 a.m. at his home.

Police said there are two issues with the document Lear brought forth:

First, the Idaho minister who allegedly carried out the ceremony never got a temporary permit to do the Nevada wedding. He also said he was asked to sign a marriage certificate that was back-dated but refused to do so upon learning of the racecar driver’s death.

Second, police have not been able to find the witness listed on the marriage certificate.

Court documents state Lear said she was not clear about how the legal process worked for getting married.

Lear was employed as a constable’s deputy for a Las Vegas Township since autumn 2010 but recently resigned when felony arrest warrants were found during a recent background check.

Djordjevic’s family has had a difficult time getting over the loss of their family member. And, according to his father, what Lear has done has made it even more difficult.

Being the widow, Lear kept her deceased “husband’s” family from seeing the body at the coroner’s office in Washoe County. It took a court battle and three months for them to finally bury the body.

Court documents list Djordjevic’s estate to be around $100,000 to $200,000. Lear possesses many of his items that include a gun collection and two sports cars.