ANN ARBOR, MI - A 21-year-old Ann Arbor woman who pleaded guilty to falsely reporting a hate crime was recently sentenced to a deferred jail term and ordered to serve one year of probation, court records show.

Halley Bass was sentenced April 5 to 93 days in jail, but 15th District Court Judge Karen Valvo suspended the term, meaning that if Bass follows the conditions of her probation, she won't serve any time, records show.

Some of those conditions include: no drugs or alcohol, take all prescribed medication and have a mental health evaluation within 14 days of sentencing, according to the records.

Bass also was fined $660.

Ann Arbor-based attorney Doug Mullkoff, who represents Bass, declined to comment Tuesday.

Bass pleaded guilty March 6 to one count of false report of a misdemeanor in Ann Arbor's 15th District Court.

She said she was having mental health issues when she claimed a man scratched her on the face with a safety pin in downtown Ann Arbor Nov. 15.

"I was suffering from depression at the time," Bass told Judge Elizabeth Pollard Hines when she pleaded guilty. "I made a superficial scratch on my face. It was visible and I was embarrassed about what I'd done. So I made up a story and told a friend that a stranger had done it while I was walking. I was encouraged to report it to the police. I made the mistake of doing that."

At the time, Bass said she believed her attack was part of the surge in reported hate crimes following the election of Donald Trump a week earlier. She told police she was targeted for wearing a solidarity pin connected to Great Britain's "Brexit" vote.

Bass admitted to scratching her own face with the pin after becoming upset during a woman's literature class at the University of Michigan, according to the Ann Arbor Police Department report.