An astronaut allegedly usurped the identity of his ex-wife from a computer aboard the International Space Station. If it turns out, it would be the very first act of delinquency committed in space.

Originally, this is just a trivial case of divorce between two married women. Except that one of them is an astronaut and could have committed the very first act of spatial delinquency.

Anne McClain is one of the stars of NASA, tipped to be the first woman to set foot on the moon one day. She has spent six months in space aboard the International Space Station (ISS), while being on earth in the middle of divorce proceedings with Summer Worden. At stake: the guard of the boy of the latter. The separation is happening more and more badly, and Summer Worden realizes little by little that his ex-wife seems to know a lot about his finances.

Identity theft

Summer Worden then asks his bank to check which computers were used to connect to his bank account using his password and his ID. But to everyone's surprise, one of these computers is in space and belongs to NASA. Anne McClain acknowledges having logged into her ex accounts from the ISS, but in good faith. She claims to have thought she could still monitor the family finances.

Summer Worden and his lawyers do not stop there: they seize the NASA General Inspectorate, accusing the astronaut of impersonation. the investigators of the American space agency are therefore dealing with what could be the first crime committed in space.