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The local school district superintendent said Shin went to classes for four days before she was caught. Photograph: Maskot/Getty Images
The local school district superintendent said Shin went to classes for four days before she was caught. Photograph: Maskot/Getty Images

Woman, 29, arrested for allegedly posing as high school student in New Jersey

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Investigators accuse Hyejeong Shin of providing fake birth certificate to enroll in New Brunswick high school

A 29-year-old woman who allegedly enrolled in a New Jersey high school and posed as a student has been arrested, authorities said this week.

The woman – identified by police as Hyejeong Shin – faces a charge of providing a false government document with the intent to lie about her age in a case which again demonstrates that officials in real life do not respond kindly to the plots of movies such as 1999’s Never Been Kissed and 1987’s Hiding Out being carried out under their watch.

Investigators accuse Shin of providing a fake birth certificate meant to convince officials that she was eligible to enroll at New Brunswick high school.

The local school district’s superintendent said at a public meeting on Tuesday that Shin had actually gone to classes for four days before she was caught. New Brunswick Today reporter Charlie Kratovil shared a video on Twitter of the superintendent’s remarks.

Shin spent most of her time at New Brunswick high meeting with counselors who were trying to learn more about her, superintendent Aubrey Johnson said. The school’s staff ultimately determined that Shin had used fraudulent information to gain enrollment and “immediately notified the appropriate authorities”, Johnson added in a statement on Wednesday that was reported on by NBC News.

Johnson’s statement added that Shin had been charged and that police were still carrying out their investigation. He also said that his school district would review its enrollment process in an effort to get better at detecting false documentation earlier.

A statement from police said that schools in New Jersey must “immediately enroll unaccompanied children, even the absence of records normally required”. However, school districts can then ask for documents meant to verify a student’s age, and it was that option which proved to be the downfall of Shin’s alleged ruse.

“This is an unfortunate event,” Johnson added. “Communication has been provided to the parents of individuals that the young lady may have come into contact with, and communication has been provided to all high school parents,” Johnson said.

New Brunswick Today reported that students feared Shin may have been trying to lure young people into sex work.

Attempts to contact Shin for comment were unsuccessful on Friday, and it was unclear if an attorney is representing her.

Her arrest came about four years after a man in his 20s posed as a high school student and was the best player on his campus’s basketball team.

The man in that case received a sentence of six years’ probation after he pleaded guilty to records tampering and indecency with sexual contact with a 14-year-old girl who was a student at the Dallas school, according to reports in the news media.

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