Krystle marie reyes biography examples
Krystal Reyes Biography, Latest Movies
Krystal Mejes also known as Krystal Reyes is a Filipino actress and model. Jump to movie list.
Personal Information
Real Name –> Jolina Marie Bautista Reyes
Nickname –> Krystal
Birthdate –> September 8, 1996 (age 26)
Birthplace –> Santa Maria, Bulacan, Philippines
Height –> 5′0″
Love Life
No information
Showbiz Career
Krystal Reyes started her acting career at the age of 10 when she played the role as the young Kristal in the GMA television series Bakekang. Since then, she became one of the stable actresses of the same Network. In 2019, she moved to rival ABS-CBN network.
Notable Television Programs
2023 – Mara Clara
2021 – Huwag Kang Mangamba
2018 – Tadhana: DH for Sale
2015 – Karelasyon
2014 – Carmela
2013 – Anna Karenina
2012 – Hiram Na Puso
2011-2012 – Munting Heredera
2010 – Bantatay
2009 – Rosalinda
2008 – Lalola
2007 – Mga Mata Ni Anghelita
2007 – Princess Charming
2006 – Carlo J. Caparas’ Bakekang
Movie List
2019 – Apple of My Eye
2012 – Si Agimat, si Enteng Kabisote at si Ako
2011 – Tween Academy: Class of 2012
2006 – Shake, Rattle and Roll 8: 13th Floor
Awards
No major acting award yet.
Scandals and Controversies
No record of controversy.
RELATED: Biography of Kathryn Bernardo, Liza Soberano, Julia Montes
See also: Updated List of Famous Filipino Actresses
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The inside story of Oregon's $2.1 million tax fraud case
When she opened her mail on a mid-February day, Krystle Marie Reyes hit a breathtaking -- and illegal -- jackpot.
Within a week, the Visa debit card tucked inside would be loaded with a $2.1 million refund based on her bogus state tax return, and Reyes would be on her way to a bizarre spending spree and infamy among Oregon's assortment of stranger-than-fiction criminals.
The case exposed
glaring problems inside the Oregon Department of Revenue
-- problems that still haven't been fully explained, including untrained supervisors, hurried workers who are allowed to pick and choose which returns they'll handle and management that values production over accuracy.
Once she was arrested, it took just seven weeks for the Attorney General's office to prosecute Reyes and declare there was no evidence of collusion within the Revenue Department. No one was fired at the agency. Reyes pleaded guilty to theft and
is serving a 5 1/2-year sentence
at Coffee Creek prison in Wilsonville.
But that's hardly the end of the story of how a 25-year-old Salem woman who made less than $15,000 a year as a caregiver almost got away with the biggest tax fraud in Oregon history.
State investigators suspected Reyes did not act alone. Court records show that a number of people were with her as she spent down the debit card, including 29-year-old Dashawn Marquis Hudson, who has an extensive criminal history. No one other than Reyes was charged.
Records also show that a 9 mm handgun was among the $150,000 in purchases she and her friends made before she was caught, and that Hudson was with her when she bought it. Hudson has two prior convictions for unlawful possession of a firearm and one arrest for attempted murder. The gun has not been recovered.
And the documents sugges This was originally published by the Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting. Editor's note: The following account is based on dozens of police reports, court documents and testimony spanning nearly 20 years. The details and events described throughout this article, including recollections of specific situations, are derived from these records. Avelino Tamala's green Ford Bronco cut through the crisp desert night, headlights revealing glimpses of scattered creosote bushes along the shoulders of State Route 238. He knew the sparsely traveled highway southwest of Phoenix from his days as a patrol deputy with the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office, before he became a detective. Tamala still carried a gun, but no longer wore the badge — he abandoned that two years earlier for a romance with one of his confidential informants, Anna Reyes, the woman in the passenger seat that night. His knowledge of law enforcement and her connections to Mexican drug cartels now afforded the couple a lucrative career selling drugs smuggled into the United States. The green Bronco provided an ideal transport for bundles of marijuana. But that night the cargo in the trunk was much lighter, and to them, seemingly less valuable: Reyes' 3-year-old daughter lay lifeless behind them, wrapped in a white bed sheet, a shovel next to her tiny body for what would follow. The Bronco slowed as they passed milepost 26. Tamala maneuvered the vehicle about a mile along an unpaved passage intersecting the highway, surrounded by little more than flat, undeveloped desert. Opening the back hatch, Tamala removed the shovel and clutched its red handle. He drove the blade into the earth. Reyes watched Tamala dig, holding a flashlight as she illuminated the unmarked grave. She broke the silence to utter two final words before they placed her daughter into the earth: "Dig deeper." Crystal Reyes, the 3-year-old SALEM -- The woman who received a fraudulent $2.1 million tax refund from the state of Oregon and nearly got away with it was sentenced to 5 1/2 years in prison Tuesday. Krystle Marie Reyes stood behind a secure glass screen, her hands crossed and cuffed in front of her as she quietly answered "guilty" to filing a false $3.5 million income tax return and taking her $2.1 million refund on a debit card spending spree. Nearly two months after Reyes' arrest, the Oregon Department of Revenue has yet to provide the public with details of just how the 25-year-old woman was able to pull off the biggest tax fraud in state history. A Revenue Department spokesman promised Tuesday that the findings of an internal agency audit would be released today (Wednesday). More The Oregonian’s continuing coverage of Krystle Reyes, who is accused of receiving $2.1 million from the state of Oregon in a fraudulent tax return. Meanwhile, a 24-page search warrant affidavit released to The Oregonian on Tuesday raises the question of whether Reyes would have ever been caught -- if not for two reported lost debit cards. On Jan. 31, according to the affidavit, Reyes filed a tax return via the Internet using Turbo Tax software. A state computer flagged the refund because it was more than $50,000. The return was set aside for review by processing staff and managers for potential fraud. But "some time later," the affidavit says, a Revenue employee "overrode" the flagged payment and the refund issued. By policy, three agency employees are required to verify the override. But, according to the affidavit, no one responsible for reviewing the return opened the file to look at it or looked at the W-2 form Reyes filed. Records show she& Crystal's Cage: a Tragic Story of Child Abuse, Drug Dealing and Murder
Dig deeper
With $2.1 million tax refund, Salem woman goes shopping; now she's going to prison