BRUH! If you’re gonna commit a crime….maybe DON’T do it while you’re ALREADY IN THE JAIL?!?!
When deputies were responding to reports of a stolen car in Maine, they ended up stopping a man nearby. While it was determined that he had no connection to the stolen car, he was arrested for an outstanding warrant for theft from Walmart.
The man told officers he had enough money to pay the $200 bail, but then the bail commissioner arrived, the man tried to pay with two COUNTERFEIT $100 bills. In addition to being returned to jail, he was also given an extra charge of forgery, or illegal copying of a document or banknote (money).
Bail is a hot topic within the criminal justice community because a lot of times, the people accused of crime are already suffering from extreme poverty. After they’ve been charged for a crime they’ve been accused of committing, they are basically punished before they are found guilty of anything since they end up staying in jail as a result of not being able to pay bail (to be fair, in this case the charge was for attempting to pay bail with counterfeit money which is pretty dang criminal). The cost of bail keeps the cycle of crime and poverty going (if you’re stuck in jail and you have a job to be at but can’t afford the bail, you can lose your job)! Still, there needs to be a way to hold defendants in criminal cases accountable to make sure that they show up to their court dates.
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Questions:
Be sure to provide full explanations for each of your answers. For more details, you can read the article this piece was sourced from here:
https://www.heraldstandard.com/news/state/sheriff-man-tried-to-pay-200-bail-with-counterfeit-bills/article_d4892b96-dbc1-558a-9cc5-19b3fef69bda.html
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Contributed by: Marlee Carpenter
Online Popularity = Totes NOT Worth Criminal Penalties!
We hear about people doing strange things all the time to gain more followers on social media or to go ‘viral’. While some of these things are super funny or interesting to watch and harmless, some ways of gaining popularity online can be dangerous to the one doing them and/or innocent bystanders. As social media becomes more and more popular, the line has become blurry regarding what people will do to gain a following.
In Miami, Florida a 28-year-old woman snuck onto a high-school campus by posing as a student. She was walking around campus, talking to students, and handing out fliers with her Instagram handle on them in attempts to gain more followers. She was wearing a backpack, had a skateboard in her hands, and was carrying a painting to blend in. She even lied to security officers when stopped and questioned about why she was on campus, saying she was just looking for the administration office. You just have to love social media!
When security realized she was not a student, they attempted to confront her, but she rushed off campus as the potential threat was called in to administrators. She ignored the officers’ commands to stop, also known as ‘resisting arrest’.
She was arrested on charges of burglary, interfering at an educational institution, and resisting an officer without violence. This situation shows just how far someone will go to be popular on social media. No number of followers is worth facing criminal and civil penalties or potentially hurting yourself or others.
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Questions:
Be sure to provide full explanations for each of your answers. For more details, you can read the article this piece was sourced from here:
https://www.clickorlando.com/news/2021/05/12/florida-woman-posing-as-student-goes-to-high-school-campus-to-promote-her-instagram-police-say/#//
Contributed by: Marlee Carpenter