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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Jennifer Sinco Kelleher

Jury finds Hawaii couple guilty for stealing identities of dead babies

United States District Court

A Hawaii couple who once posed in “KGB” uniforms have been convicted of stealing the identities of dead babies and living under their names for decades.

Bobby Fort and Julie Montague, whom prosecutors before the trial claimed said things “consistent with espionage” have always denied being Russian spies.

They were never charged with anything associated with espionage but a jury in Hawaii took two hours before convicting them of conspiracy, passport fraud and identity theft.

Prosecutors told the trial that the real Bobby Fort died at the age of three months from a “bad cough” more than five decades ago.

Witness Tonda Montague Ferguson told the jury that her sister Julia had been born in 1968 but had birth defects and only survived for three weeks. Both babies were buried in Texas cemeteries just miles apart.

Prosecutors say that the couple’s real names are Walter Glenn Primrose and Gwynn Darle Morrison.

Bobby Fort and Julie Montague have been convicted of stealing the identities of dead babies and living under their names for decades.
— (Department of State)

Assistant US Attorney Tom Muehleck said that the couple had gone to the same Texas high school and that a classmate recalled they said they were going to change their names because of financial debt.

The court was told that Fort used his fake identity, which made him 12 years younger, to join the US Coast Guard.

They will both be sentenced in March and face up to 10 years in prison.

Authorities say that Primrose was issued five US passports under the Bobby Fort identity, while Morrison received three US passports under the name of Julie Montague.

Early in the investigation, prosecutors had introduced polaroids of the couple dressed in KGB uniforms, an invisible ink kit, coded documents and maps of military bases.

But in the end, prosecutors backed away from prosecuting anything related to “Russian spy intrigue”, reported The Associated Press.

Lawyers for the couple said they had once worn the same jacket for fun.

“She is not a spy,” Morrison’s attorney Megan Kau told Hawaii News Now last year.

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