Scum abound every where
TACOMA,
Wash. — Facebook’s automatic efforts to connect user through “friends” they may
know recently led two Washington women to find out they were married to the
same man, at the same time.
That
led to the man, corrections officer Alan L. O’Neill, being slapped with bigamy
charges.
According
to charging documents filed Thursday, O’Neill married a woman in 2001, moved
out in 2009, changed his name and remarried without divorcing her. The first
wife first noticed O’Neill had moved on to another woman when Facebook
suggested the friendship connection to wife No. 2 under the “People You May
Know” feature.
“Wife
No. 1 went to wife No. 2′s page and saw a picture of her and her husband with a
wedding cake,” said Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist told The Associated
Press.
Wife
No. 1 then called the defendant’s mother.
“An
hour later the defendant arrived at (Wife No. 1′s) apartment, and she asked him
several times if they were divorced,” court records show. “The defendant said,
‘No, we are still married.’”
Neither
O’Neill nor his first wife had filed for divorce, according to charging
documents. The name change came in December, and later that month he married
his second wife.
O’Neill
allegedly told Wife No. 1 not to tell anybody about his dual marriages, that he
would fix it, the documents state. But wife No. 1 alerted authorities.
“Facebook
is now some place where people discover things about each other that end up
reporting that to law enforcement,” Lindquist said.
O’Neill,
41, was previously known at Alan Fulk. He has worked as a Pierce County
corrections officer for five years, sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said. He was
placed on administrative leave after prosecutors charged him Thursday. He could
face up to a year in jail if convicted.
O’Neill
is free, but due in court later this month, which is standard procedure f
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