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At the moment, Memmo, who said he was released from jail after a few hours, is looking for a lawyer to handle his case. If found guilty, Memmo faces the prospect of up to 15 years in prison for the two charges, as well as thousands of dollars in fines and the various legal fees he expects to accrue as he goes about mounting his defense.
“Luckily, I have the money to take care of the situation,” he said. “But that’s my hard-earned money that I have to pay to defend myself for something that was delivered to my doorstep.”
It his dumbassery that got him in this mess. All he hd to do was the right thing, but at every chance he had to do that, he chose to lie or ignore calls from the police and delivery company.
It his dumbassery that got him in this mess. All he hd to do was the right thing, but at every chance he had to do that, he chose to lie or ignore calls from the police and delivery company.
No there is no “except in the case of mistaken delivery” in any of the laws. Those words are not there anywhere. Please stop posting misinformation. I have quoted the laws in their entirety, multiple times, along with the links for everyone to see for themself, if you don't believe I'm quoting them correctly.
I know I'm batting my head against a brick wall, but I will post them again.
I can’t do this again. It’s not applicable in this case. Again if local car dealership drops your neighbors new car in your driveway, you don’t get to keep it. Those laws are not about this type situation they are about unsolicited goods deliberately sent to you, not mistaken deliveries.
I can’t do this again. It’s not applicable in this case. Again if local car dealership drops your neighbors new car in your driveway, you don’t get to keep it. Those laws are not about this type situation they are about unsolicited goods deliberately sent to you, not mistaken deliveries.
So what are the laws that cover this? If you dispute the ones posted, you need to provide laws to the contrary.
Seems to me a civil matter. The police aren't a collection agency. It doesn't even seem clear he broke any laws.
The police were at his door multiple times. The local store where the tv was delivered from called after the guy repeatedly refused to give back a tv they were supposed to have delivered to another address. Of course it’s not civil, it’s theft. In the same category of trying to keep $5,000 the bank accidentally deposited in your account. It might be fun to think Finders Keepers is the law but it’s not.
The police were at his door multiple times. The local store where the tv was delivered from called after the guy repeatedly refused to give back a tv they were supposed to have delivered to another address. Of course it’s not civil, it’s theft. In the same category of trying to keep $5,000 the bank accidentally deposited in your account. It might be fun to think Finders Keepers is the law but it’s not.
It might be but until the law that counters the only one posted is provided, at best it might be.
He was charged with larceny and misleading a police officer. Those aren't civil matters.
Being charged with something does not make it factual. He says he does not remember if he signed or not. He might be lying but prove it.
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