NASA astronaut's estranged wife charged with lying about space crime allegation

Summer Worden and NASA astronaut Anne McClain. (LinkedIn, Aubrey Gemignani/NASA)

The estranged wife of a NASA astronaut who claimed her spouse improperly accessed her bank account from space has been indicted on charges of lying to federal authorities.

Summer Worden, 44, whose claim would have possibly been the first accusation of a crime committed in space, made false statements to NASA's Office of the Inspector General and the Federal Trade Commission, according a statement from U.S. Attorney Ryan Patrick. A federal jury in Houston returned the two-count indictment in late February, but it was unsealed Monday.

Worden married Anne McClain, a decorated astronaut who was once set to be part of NASA's first all-female spacewalk, in 2014 and filed for divorce in 2018.

In 2019, Worden filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission claiming McClain had stolen her identity while on a six-month mission aboard the International Space Station, although she saw no signs anyone had moved or used funds in the account, The New York Times reported. Worden's parents brought a separate complaint to NASA's Office of the Inspector General that described a "highly calculated and manipulative campaign" designed to win custody of the couple's child.

First alleged crime in space: NASA astronaut accused of accessing her estranged wife's bank account

"There’s unequivocally no truth to these claims. We’ve been going through a painful, personal separation that’s now unfortunately in the media," McClain said in a statement released on Twitter at the time. "I appreciate the outpouring of support and will reserve comment until after the investigation. I have total confidence in the IG process."

Through her lawyer, Rusty Hardin, McClain told The Times she had accessed the account but said she did so to ensure that the family's finances were in order and that there was enough money in the account to care for their child, who was born a year before they met. She said she was never told to stop using the account and continued to use the same password she had throughout the relationship.

The indictment says Worden maintained multiple accounts at USAA Federal Savings Bank and she shared access to those accounts "with a commissioned officer in the U.S. Army on detail to NASA’s Johnson Space Center."

She lied about when she opened the account that had allegedly been improperly accessed and when she reset her login credentials in a complaint filed with the FTC in March 19, 2019, according to the indictment. Worden also allegedly made another false statement in an interview with NASA's Office of the Inspector General in July.

Worden told The Times she mistakenly gave investigators the wrong date of her bank account’s opening but gave the correct information later.

She added that she had intended to change her password when she created the new account and did not believe it was appropriate for McClain to access her finances during a parenting dispute and divorce.

If convicted, Worden could face up to five years in prison on each count and a maximum fine of $250,000. She is expected to make an initial court appearance April 13.

Follow N'dea Yancey-Bragg on Twitter: @NdeaYanceyBragg

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NASA astronaut's estranged wife charged with lying about space crime