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    You are at:Home»Local News»Sentencing in therapist case involving Fort Riley soldier

    Sentencing in therapist case involving Fort Riley soldier

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    By KMAN Staff on December 13, 2011 Local News

    A former Manhattan social worker has been sentenced to three years probation for harassing a Ft. Riley soldier.

    Rachelle Santiago, 44,  also agreed to surrender her license to practice social work to the Kansas Behavioral Sciences Regulatory Board and not to reapply for a license in Kansas or any other state. Santiago pleaded guilty to one count of fleeing from a police officer, one count of criminal restraint, one count of making a criminal threat and one count of unlawfully entering military property.

    In her plea, she admitted that in January 2011 she treated a Ft. Riley soldier for mental health problems. During a meeting with him she became physically aggressive. She embraced him and rubbed her body against him. She also left phone messages and sent text messages threatening him. After the soldier reported her conduct, military authorities banned her from the post. On Jan. 11, 2011, she breeched the gate at a high rate of speed. She drove at speeds up to 110 miles per hour before Fort Riley Police took her into custody.

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