Oak Lawn woman misspelled ‘Moderna’ on fake COVID-19 vaccine card to get into Hawaii: authorities - Chicago News Weekly

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Oak Lawn woman misspelled ‘Moderna’ on fake COVID-19 vaccine card to get into Hawaii: authorities

A Honolulu resort is pictured in November 2020. Authorities there say a woman from Chicago’s southwest suburbs used a phony COVID-19 vaccination card to bypass a required quarantine period.
Authorities there say a woman from Chicago’s southwest suburbs used a phony COVID-19 vaccination card to bypass a required quarantine period. | AP file

Chloe Mrozak’s allegedly bogus CDC card claimed she received her first “Maderna” vaccine dose in Delaware from a National Guard member named “cpl wolf.”

Authorities say a southwest suburban woman used a phony COVID-19 vaccination card that misspelled “Moderna” to get into Hawaii for a vacation last week without quarantining for 10 days as required.

Now Chloe Mrozak’s trip has been extended at a Honolulu jail as she faces misdemeanor charges of violating the archipelago state’s coronavirus emergency proclamation, which requires visitors to show proof of full vaccination or a negative test in order to roam the islands freely.

Screeners were skeptical of the 24-year-old Oak Lawn resident’s supposed CDC card when she arrived Aug. 23 at Daniel K. Inouye International Airport, according to a report filed by investigators with the Hawaii attorney general’s office.

The card claimed Mrozak received her first “Maderna” vaccine dose in Delaware from a National Guard member named “cpl wolf,” with a second dose administered by a “ssgt montey,” photocopies of the alleged document show.

Authorities say an Oak Lawn woman used this bogus CDC COVID-19 vaccination card to bypass a mandatory 10-day quarantine in Hawaii. Hawaii Department of the Attorney General
Authorities say an Oak Lawn woman used this bogus CDC COVID-19 vaccination card to bypass a mandatory 10-day quarantine in Hawaii.

Mrozak still made it through the screening before investigators determined the hotel and return flight information she had listed on her state-mandated trip record was bogus, authorities said. Public health officials in Delaware later told investigators they had no record of her receiving a shot in their jurisdiction.

Mrozak allegedly ignored calls and emails from investigators over the next few days, so they waited for her at the airport for her return flight Saturday.

When they arrested her at the Southwest Airlines counter, she allegedly “made a spontaneous utter” that she’d gotten her shot at a doctor’s office and paid for it, the report says.

Chloe Mrozak Hawaii Department of Public Safety
Chloe Mrozak

She was charged with two counts of falsifying vaccination documents, a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $5,000 or a year in prison.

Mrozak’s public defender could not immediately be reached for comment. Calls to her listed home phone number in Oak Lawn went unanswered.

A judge set bail at $2,000 at a hearing Monday, records show. She remained in custody at the Oahu Community Correctional Center ahead of another hearing scheduled for Wednesday.

At least four other people have been arrested in Hawaii with bogus vaccination cards so far this year, according to Hawaii News Now.

Travelers to Chicago are urged to show proof of vaccination or a negative test under COVID-19 guidelines that are similar in wording to Hawaii’s, but the city’s travel advisory is purely educational and carries no penalties. It had been an order in Chicago from July 2020 through June, but it wasn’t even enforced over that period.



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