Ex-NAACP Leader Outed for Fake Black Ethnicity Now A Tucson Teacher With Public OnlyFans

dolezal
Rachel Dolezal, a “trans-racial” woman, now teaches in Tucson.

One Tucson school district is home to a former celebrity who does it all: social justice advocacy, art, writing, podcasting, and now, teaching and pornography.

Rachel Dolezal, the “trans-racial” woman who gained international fame for faking her black ethnicity as a NAACP president, is now a Tucson teacher known as Nkechi Diallo who links her OnlyFans page on her public social media pages. Public records show that Diallo has worked as an after-school instructor for $19 an hour for a Catalina Foothills School District Community Schools program.

Although Diallo changed her name in 2017 due to her reported inability to find employment under her former name, she now appears to have no problem marketing herself as “Rachel Dolezal” on her OnlyFans and other social media platforms.

In the Catalina Foothills Community Schools program, Diallo works with elementary school-aged children at the Sunrise Elementary School on an after-school gardening club.

Diallo also participates in Sunrise Drive Elementary School’s Family & Faculty Organization (FFO) managing the garden.

Students could feasibly find and access Diallo’s OnlyFans page: it is listed under her LinkTree on both Instagram and Facebook. Her porn page costs just $9.99 a month, or bundles for $29 for three months, $54 for six months, or $96 for 12 months. Diallo last posted on Jan. 31 about her using a sex toy on herself, presumably. Her most explicitly-written post appeared just a few updates further down her page, posted a few days before Christmas.

“An 18-image explicit collection and a video of self-pleasure to orgasm under the Christmas tree,” Diallo wrote. “Wishing you a very merry season filled with fantasies and pleasure.”

Diallo launched her OnlyFans in 2021. Originally, Dolezal’s account was dedicated to posting her workouts, hairstyling, creating art, makeup tutorials, social justice rants, and the occasional “foot pics.” In a since-deleted Instagram post at the time, Dolezal promised that the account content would remain “tasteful.”

The OnlyFans launch came several years after Diallo took a 2019 plea deal on charges of welfare fraud in Washington state. From 2015 to 2017, Diallo hid her income from some of the business endeavors she continues today: a memoir, speaking engagements, and art sales. Diallo promised to pay the $8,500 back and complete community service to avoid trial.

The same year that Diallo was charged with welfare fraud, 2018, Netflix released a documentary on the fallout Diallo faced for posing as a black woman. Discovery of Diallo faking her ethnicity occurred in 2015: in a viral moment, Diallo walked away from an interview with a local newscaster who asked her about her ethnicity.

Diallo had been talking about alleged racially-motivated hate crimes that she had endured over the years when the reporter, Jeff Humphrey, produced a picture of her father, a white man.

“Are you African American?” asked Humphrey. “Are your parents, are they white?”

Diallo didn’t answer, and then walked away suddenly.

Despite all the controversy she’s faced over the years, Diallo has continued with appearing at important political events.

Last March, Gov. Katie Hobbs was joined by Diallo at her office’s celebration of the CROWN Act, a bill banning hair discrimination.

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