Biden-Kamala official dragged out in cuffs after they found what she…See more

A senior official who served in the Biden administration’s State Department has just pleaded guilty to a jaw-dropping theft — and the numbers are staggering.

Levita Almuete Ferrer, 64, a former senior budget analyst in the Office of the Chief of Protocol, admitted to embezzling $657,347.50 over two years. According to a report by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for D.C., she wrote dozens of checks to herself and deposited them into personal accounts while disguising them in the State Department’s accounting system.

Prosecutors said Ferrer used QuickBooks to change payee records after printing each check, falsely assigning the funds to real vendors to avoid detection. She pleaded guilty to theft of government property and will be sentenced on September 18.

New York Post reported that Ferrer has agreed to repay the stolen funds and faces up to 10 years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines.

But that’s not the only chaos shaking the Biden-era State Department…

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Part 10 (Final):

One evening, she stood alone in her office, the city lights stretching beyond the glass like a quiet reminder of how far she had come. Papers were…

PART 9 : My husband didn’t know I make $130,000 a year, so he laughed when he said he’d filed for divorce and was taking the house and the car. He served me while I was still in a hospital gown, then disappeared and remarried like I was just an old bill he’d finally paid off.

Looking back, the divorce no longer felt like an ending. It felt like a forced awakening—one that had stripped away illusion and replaced it with clarity. Painful,…

PART 8 : My husband didn’t know I make $130,000 a year, so he laughed when he said he’d filed for divorce and was taking the house and the car. He served me while I was still in a hospital gown, then disappeared and remarried like I was just an old bill he’d finally paid off.

With time, her efforts expanded beyond immediate support. She began investing—carefully, strategically—building not just stability, but influence. Wealth, to her, wasn’t about display. It was about options….

PART 7 : My husband didn’t know I make $130,000 a year, so he laughed when he said he’d filed for divorce and was taking the house and the car. He served me while I was still in a hospital gown, then disappeared and remarried like I was just an old bill he’d finally paid off.

Her ex-husband, once so central to her story, became less relevant with time. His presence faded—not dramatically, not through public downfall, but through quiet irrelevance. Without conflict…

PART 6 : My husband didn’t know I make $130,000 a year, so he laughed when he said he’d filed for divorce and was taking the house and the car. He served me while I was still in a hospital gown, then disappeared and remarried like I was just an old bill he’d finally paid off.

The nonprofit didn’t launch overnight. It took planning, structure, and intention—the same qualities that had once helped her reclaim control of her own life. She approached it…

PART 5 : My husband didn’t know I make $130,000 a year, so he laughed when he said he’d filed for divorce and was taking the house and the car. He served me while I was still in a hospital gown, then disappeared and remarried like I was just an old bill he’d finally paid off.

What began as survival slowly transformed into something far more deliberate. The woman realized that everything she had learned—every document she had studied, every decision she had…

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