SAC.Young ‘mom’ admits she faked entire pregnancy, tried to pass off silicone doll as newborn
A so-called young “mom” in Scotland has admitted to bizarrely faking her entire pregnancy — and even trying to pass off a silicone doll as her newborn.
Kira Cousins, 22, issued a groveling apology on Tuesday after her massive hoax was uncovered and started spreading rapidly across social media.
“I’m so sorry,” she wrote in a now-deleted Instagram story obtained by the Daily Record.
“I wasn’t pregnant. There was no baby. I made it up and kept it going way too far. I faked scans, messages, a whole birth story, and acted like a doll was a real baby.”

Cousins had managed to fool her loved ones — including who she claimed was the baby’s father — into believing she was pregnant and had given birth to a little girl, who she named Bonnie-Leigh Joyce, on Oct. 10.
Cousins sported a growing prosthetic bump to fuel the ruse and held a lavish gender reveal party in the weeks before the “birth.”
Photos on social media captured Cousins smiling and posing as she cradled the bump throughout the so-called pregnancy.
As part of the elaborate hoax, Cousins also posted images of scans and even claimed tests had detected a heart defect in the baby.
Cousins then claimed she gave birth alone and promptly started showing off the newborn, which ultimately turned out to be a Reborn Doll.

The wild sham came crashing down, though, when her mom found the doll in her bedroom last week.
Just prior to coming clean, Cousins went as far as telling the supposed father that their newborn had died.
The story quickly spilled out on social media as friends and loved ones branded her a “serial liar.”
Some loved ones have since claimed they started becoming suspicious when no one had heard the baby cry and that Cousins wouldn’t let anyone touch the newborn.

In her bizarre apology, Cousins defended those she’d fooled into believing the doll was actually real.
“In everyone else’s defense, the doll could move. You could change the facial features, arms and legs,” she said.
“You could feed the doll making it ‘pee or poo’. So when no one is close to the doll, it does look real. No one was looking at my ‘baby’ expecting it to be a doll.”

Reborn Dolls, which can retail for as much as $2,000, are hyper-realistic baby replicas that are often used as a form of therapy for those struggling with infertility, infant loss or dementia.
The dolls have become part of a cosplay-type trend in recent years in which people pass the dolls off as real children – going as far as breastfeeding them and taking pictures with them out in public.