List of Famous people who are 38
Jacoby Ellsbury
Jacoby McCabe Ellsbury is an American professional baseball center fielder who is currently a free agent. He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Boston Red Sox from 2007 through 2013 and then played for the New York Yankees from 2014 to 2017. An enrolled member of the Colorado River Indian Tribes, Ellsbury is the first American Indian of Navajo descent to play Major League Baseball.
Stephy Tang
Stephy Tang Lai-yan is a Hong Kong singer and actress. She was formerly the leader of the Cantopop group Cookies. She won the Hong Kong Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress in 2017 for her performance in The Empty Hands, and was nominated twice for the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress.
Vladimir Stojković
Vladimir Stojković is a Serbian professional footballer who plays for FK Partizan and the Serbia national team as a goalkeeper.
Arouna Koné
Arouna Koné is an Ivorian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Sivasspor, and is a former Ivory Coast national team international.
Luke McCormick
Luke Martin McCormick plays as a goalkeeper for Plymouth Argyle.
Gyselle Soares
Gyselle Soares Estevão is a French-Brazilian actress, columnist and television personality.
Stephanie Mack
Stephanie Madoff Mack is an American sociologist.
Britta Steffen
Britta Steffen is a German competitive swimmer who specializes in freestyle sprint events.
Shah Faesal
Shah Faesal is a former Indian politician and bureaucrat from Jammu and Kashmir. In 2010, he became the first Kashmiri to place first in the Indian Civil Services Examination. He resigned from the Indian bureaucracy in protest on 9 January 2019, citing "unabated killings" in Kashmir among other things.
Michael Behenna
Michael Chase Behenna is a former United States Army First Lieutenant who was convicted of the 2008 murder of Ali Mansur Mohamed during the occupation of Iraq. Behenna is colloquially associated with a group of U.S. military personnel convicted of war crimes known as the Leavenworth 10. He was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment, which was later reduced to 15 years, and served his sentence in the United States Disciplinary Barracks on Fort Leavenworth, a United States Army post in Kansas. He was granted parole on March 14, 2014, after serving less than five years of his sentence. Since his release from prison he has worked as a farmhand. On May 6, 2019, Behenna received a pardon from President Donald Trump.