The Ponte Vedra Beach woman who faked her own kidnapping in 2009 as part of an extortion scheme against her husband has been accused of violating her probation.

A probation officer filed a report in court Monday saying Quinn Gray, who goes by Quinn Hanna since getting divorced, violated her probation by falling behind on her restitution and court fees and for submitting a statement to "Dateline NBC" about her case, according to a violation report.

Hanna pleaded no contest to an extortion charge in February and received seven years of probation.

She was found in a Orange Park parking lot on Sept. 7, 2009, three days after her husband reported her missing. She told police she had been abducted by thugs who demanded $50,000 on a debt owed by her husband.

Hanna's lawyer, Mark Miller, said his client's statement to "Dateline" was not a violation of her probation because she did not include information about her family, a stipulation of her probation agreement, and did not initiate the contact with the show. NBC aired a two-hour special detailing her case Sept. 23.

Nov. 11, 2010: St. Johns County Judge orders Ponte Vedra's Quinn Gray's lawyers to cease media commentary

The remaining violations mostly pertain to restitution owed to the state as the result of the search after her husband reported her missing.

Hanna still owes more than $44,000. She receives $10,000 a month as part of her divorce settlement, according to the report.

If a judge finds her to be in violation, Hanna could be re-sentenced to two years of community control, which Miller said is basically house arrest, or four to six months in jail.