Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Rudy Giuliani’s witness served probation after sex video plea deal

- The Detroit News (TNS)

DETROIT – A Michigan woman who served as a witness for Rudy Giuliani during a legislativ­e hearing in Lansing last week was until recently on probation stemming from a case in which she was accused of sending sex videos to her fiance’s ex-wife.

Mellissa Carone, 33, of Grosse Pointe Woods is a supporter of President Donald Trump who delivered colorful testimony Wednesday claiming mass voter fraud in Detroit without evidence. Her testimony about her time working as an informatio­n technology contractor for Dominion Voting Systems on election night prompted a spoof by “Saturday Night Live” over the weekend.

Police records obtained through a records request show that, in 2019, Southgate investigat­ors charged Carone – then using her married name of Mellissa Wright – with one count of using a computer to commit a crime and one count of obscenity in the first degree.

The two misdemeano­r charges were later dropped in a deal with the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office in which Carone pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of disorderly conduct, said Maria Miller, a spokeswoma­n for the office.

Carone was sentenced to 12 months’ probation in September 2019, Miller said, and the case was closed in September 2020 by the court. Miller could not immediatel­y provide further details on the plea arrangemen­t, she said.

A Southgate Police report said Carone initially claimed in an interview with police that she never sent the sexually explicit emails, but then investigat­ors presented her with informatio­n returned from a search warrant probing the source of the email account and IP address used to send the images.

“Mellissa then confessed to sending the videos because she wanted to send (the exwife) ‘over the top,’” a police investigat­or wrote in a 2019 incident report. “Mellissa stated that she knew it was wrong and after she sent the videos she told (her fiance) to get a new router and get a new wifi company.”

“To quote Rudy Giuliani, instead of investigat­ing a credible witness, why don’t you go investigat­e Hunter Biden smoking crack?” Carone told The Detroit News in an interview.

Carone stressed that the initial charges against her were dropped and said she took the plea deal on the disorderly conduct charge “because I am a mother, and I had a full-time job at the time, and I could not keep going to court.”

Carone said it actually was her husband, Matthew Stackpoole, who sent the explicit emails but that he used her phone to do so. Stackpoole told the Huffpost in a text message that he did send the videos.

“Being that it was sent from my phone, I had to take the charges, or I was gonna lose my job because I could not go back to court every week,” Carone said.

People are trying to discredit her testimony on alleged election fraud by digging up her background, she said.

“I know that people want to make this about me because they love me, and they love my personalit­y. And that’s great,” Carone said.

“But one thing that that anybody that knows me, or people that don’t even know me, cannot and will never be able to ever claim about me is that I’m a liar. I am not a liar. I’ve never been known to be a liar. I am not a liar. And I am the most honest person.”

Her former attorney, David Loeckner, confirmed to The News that he represente­d Carone in her case but declined to comment further.

Stackpoole’s ex-wife, Jessica, said her dispute with the couple dates to 2017 but that she used to be friendly with Carone.

“She is calculatin­g and methodical,” Jessica Stackpoole said about Carone. “The political thing came out of nowhere. I was close personal friends with her for five months ... and I never, ever had a political discussion with her, not once ever.”

Carone appeared last week before the Michigan House Oversight Committee, where Giuliani urged state lawmakers to intervene in the state’s election, which President-elect Joe Biden won 51%-48% or by 154,000 votes.

In a Huffpost interview, Giuliani dismissed the idea that Carone’s criminal history raises questions about her credibilit­y as a witness in Lansing.

“There is no rule that people coming off probation are incredible as a matter of law,” Giuliani said. “I don’t know her circumstan­ces, but her testimony is corroborat­ed by other witnesses, documentar­y evidence and expert testimony.”

At the hearing, Carone claimed that she witnessed thousands of instances of ballots being run through tabulators in Detroit multiple times. But election officials have said she didn’t understand what she was seeing at the TCF Center.

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