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Fake Russian-German heiress Anna Sorokin leaves her apartment on October 11, 2022 in New York. - Sorokin, the young Russian-German woman who bilked wealthy New Yorkers while pretending to be an heiress herself, has said she would fight deportation to Germany after her recent release from prison.

Anna Sorokin,the con artist whose story inspired Netflix’sInventing Ana, believes she deserves a “second chance.”

The 31-year-old fraudster — who posed as a wealthy German heiress named Anna Delvey while living in New York City to con socialites, banks, and hotels — spokewith CNN’s Jake Tapperon Wednesday to express regret for her actions between 2013 to 2017.

“I feel like I deserve a second chance, it was my mistake that I made and I served my time and I feel like I should deserve a second opportunity,” Sorokin, also known as Anna Delvey, told Tapper while on house arrest in New York.

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Anna Sorokin sits at the defense table during jury deliberations in her trial at New York State Supreme Court,, in New York. Sorokin, whose exploits posing as a German heiress to scam individuals and financial institutions out of hundreds of thousands of dollars inspired a Netflix series is being released from immigration custody. She was scheduled to be released from ICE custody Friday evening, Oct. 7, 2022, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said Fake Heiress, New York, United States - 25 Apr 2019

For four years, the Russian-born Sorokin used her fake persona to spend invalid credit cards and issue fake bank statements, bounce from hotel to hotel, and stoke an estimated $275,000. She was arrested in October 2017 following a sting operation and wasfound guilty of eight charges, including attempted grand larceny in the first degree, grand larceny in the second degree, grand larceny in the third degree, and theft of services, in April 2019.

“I feel like if I were to leave and say, ‘Oh, whatever, I’m just going to move on and move to Europe,’ I would be accepting the labels that they are trying to slap on me,” Sorokin said. “I feel like I deserve a second chance.”

During her CNN discussion, Sorokin explained that she feels “so sorry for a lot of the choices I’ve made,” and ultimately “learned so much” and “grew as a person” after her trial. Since she’s been released, she’s been barred from joining social media and must use electronic monitoring. She said she’s also determined to “absolutely not” commit her crimes again.

“I definitely did [take advantage of people],” she said. “And I was younger and I learned from my mistakes.”

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Anna Sorokin fake heiress

Inventing Anna, which starsJulia Garneras Sorokin, premiered on Netflix on Feb. 11. The con artist was reportedlypaid $320,000for the rights to adapt her life story, money that she is said to have used to pay restitution, per Insider.

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In an open letter for the outlet, Sorokin spoke up about her thoughts on the series, writing that “nothing about seeing a fictionalized version of myself in this criminal-insane-asylum setting sounds appealing to me.”

“And while I’m curious to see how they interpreted all the research and materials provided,” she wrote, “I can’t help but feel like an afterthought, the somber irony of being confined to a cell at yet another horrid correctional facility lost between the lines, the history repeating itself.”

source: people.com