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Trial for Nkechi Diallo, also known as Rachel Dolezal, set for March 4

Dolezal is charged with welfare fraud related to income she received from a book and other sources while also receiving some $8,800 in welfare benefits, prosecutors have said.

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - A March 4 trial date has been set in a welfare fraud case involving a former NAACP leader in Washington state whose life unraveled in 2015 after she was exposed as a white woman pretending to be black.

Nkechi Diallo, formerly known as Rachel Dolezal, has pleaded innocent to the three charges filed in Spokane County Superior Court.

The charges of welfare fraud are related to income she received from a book and other sources while also receiving some $8,800 in welfare benefits, prosecutors have said.

Judge Michelle Szambelan on Friday noted that the case had dragged since Diallo was arrested last May, and set the new trial date.

Diallo resigned as head of Spokane's NAACP chapter after it was revealed she was born to white parents in rural Montana.

She was also the subject of a Netflix documentary titled "The Rachel Divide" that premiered on April 27, 2018. 

RELATED: Real Talk: Bridging the Divide

RELATED: Docs: Rachel Dolezal deposited more than $83K in two years while receiving welfare

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