Disappeared The true story of the Polish woman who claimed to be Madeleine McCann: "Julia is a girl with many problems"

This week the results of the DNA tests carried out by Julia Faustyna Wendell, the Polish girl who claims to be Madeleine McCann, the little girl who disappeared in Portugal in 2004, have been revealed.

“The results show no connection to English or German roots,” explains a statement released by his representative and spokesperson, a Beverly Hills-based medium and actress.

Thus closes the penultimate chapter on Julia’s life. It is not known if it is penultimate or antepenultimate, because `the trajectory that she has followed until now augurs more news, always involved in controversy.

The digital edition of the ‘Daily mail’ collects new testimonies from the family of the 21-year-old, where they assure that “it is the third time that she has pretended to be a missing girl”, which has caused the anger of her family.

Julia has even appeared on prime-time television shows in the United States to recount her life. A story that has fallen like a house of cards as it has been known that he has no genetic links to Madeleine’s parents.

Dorota Wandelt-Cholewinski, Julia’s mother, and Piotr Cholewinski (who is not her first husband, he is a stepfather), are especially upset with Fia Johnansson, the representative who was quoted at the beginning of this information, because it was she who has led to Faustyna from a media round.

“Julia is a girl with many problems. Her mother has only been able to see how the snowball has gotten bigger and bigger. Dorota just wants her daughter to receive the help she needs,” a family friend told the ‘Daily ‘.

“It was clear from the beginning that Julia was not Madeleine, and Dorota is very furious that someone who calls herself a doctor is exploiting her illness,” the same sources add.

“Julia has to return home and receive treatment. This is the only thing that will make her family happy,” they stress. Her home is in Wroclaw, a gothic city in western Poland (located less than 100 kilometers from Warsaw, the capital).

When Julia’s father went to Germany after divorcing Dorota, she and the little girl went to live with Piotr, who works in finance. Her mother, who has been successful with her business, owns a chain of clothing stores.

“Julia was seven years old when she moved to Wroclaw, but changing schools didn’t help her establish herself on a stable basis. Her head was a mess, she said she wanted to be a singer. But this never happened and she ended up depressed,” says one from her peers at school.

This person affirms that when he was a teenager it was the first time that he said that Dorota was not his mother and claimed to be a girl who had disappeared in Poland.

“It was very sad to see how her mother only wanted the best for her, she loved her, but then she met a boy who was into drugs and of course he didn’t help her at all,” she adds.

“I haven’t seen her for more than a year. My friends told me that she had returned to Wroclaw and that she then claimed to be Madeleine McCann. Something ridiculous, we all knew that this girl had to be younger than Julia,” she concludes.

Investigations by the ‘Daily Mail’ have revealed that Faustyna contacted a Polish charity to say she was a missing German schoolgirl and, on another occasion, a missing American girl.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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