COLUMBUS, Ohio — A former Ohio bakery owner will have to pay more than $1.5 million in restitution and spend six years in prison for her extensive fraud, including stealing the identity of a dead baby and obtaining federal pandemic-relief loans for defunct or nonexistent businesses.

Ava Misseldine of Columbus, Ohio, was sentenced Tuesday in U.S. District Court after pleading guilty to 16 counts of wire and passport fraud in 2022. Misseldine, 50, stole the identity of a baby who died in 1979 and applied for an Ohio ID in 2003, and later a Social Security card, driver’s license, and passport.

A federal investigation into Misseldine began last year when she attempted to renew the fraudulent passport, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Authorities arrested her last June in Utah.

Using the stolen identity of a baby for more than a decade

In 2003, Misseldine applied for Ohio identification using the name Brie Bourgeois. The real Bourgeois died as an infant in 1979 and is buried in a Columbus cemetery, court records show. She later obtained a Social Security card and driver’s license using the stolen identity. 

In 2021, Misseldine obtained driver’s licenses in both names after moving to Utah, prosecutors said.

Misseldine was employed under the false identity of a flight attendant at JetSelect Aviation, an Ohio-based private jet charter company.  In 2007, she used the stolen identity to obtain a student pilot certificate and U.S. passport.

Misseldine submitted paperwork claiming she needed the passport to travel internationally in her occupation.