An April 15 court filing shows Vanessa Gallegos entered a 12-month Pretrial Intervention Agreement, pausing prosecution on two felony fraud-related charges and avoiding a trial.
If she completes the program, prosecutors will drop the counts of fraudulent use of a credit card over $100 and fraudulent use of personal identification information.
The deal requires no new law violations, no contact with the victims, no firearms, $50 monthly supervision payments, $200 in prosecution costs, plus continued virtual therapy and pastoral counseling.
Gallegos was arrested in June 2025 after Boca Raton police tied a roughly two-year harassment campaign against her ex-boyfriend and his now-wife to spoofed calls, fake registries, adoption inquiries and an anonymously mailed HIV test.
Investigators said the florist orders that triggered the criminal case were placed with the ex-boyfriend's credit card from spoofed numbers traced to locations linked to Gallegos; she had already been under a 10-year stalking injunction since March 2024.
She faked an HIV test and credit card fraud. Can therapy truly reform such elaborate deception?
Is a plea deal without jail time true justice for a two-year digital stalking campaign?
How is a recent Supreme Court ruling on religious freedom now influencing local criminal sentences?