New Hampshire Underground

New Hampshire Underground => General Discussion => Outside "The Shire" => Topic started by: akmisrmaadi on May 11, 2009, 06:50 PM NHFT

Title: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: akmisrmaadi on May 11, 2009, 06:50 PM NHFT
some moron detective from florida sent me a threatening letter. apparently they didn't like my comments to the mayor in a email.

saying i "may have" violated some florida statute... about threatening public officials... i did not threaten anyone... i might have said what i hope'd would happen to him...

of course i do not live in florida, so the florida statutes have no bearing on me correct?





Title: No mo.
Post by: Tunga on May 11, 2009, 07:45 PM NHFT
As far as we know there is no law that prohibits morons from sending email. It therefor looks like your in the clear. ;D
Title: Re: No mo.
Post by: akmisrmaadi on May 11, 2009, 07:57 PM NHFT
Quote from: Tunga on May 11, 2009, 07:45 PM NHFT
As far as we know there is no law that prohibits morons from sending email. It therefor looks like your in the clear. ;D

heh thats funny :)

yea i'm not worried about its pretty funny they would send me this letter in the mail and misquote the statutes. typical government bottle of the barrel drone.

Title: Re: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: neggy on May 12, 2009, 09:18 PM NHFT
Well if it went by U.S. Mail then it is a federal crime if the recipient feels threatened, if it went electronically and crossed a state line in the transmission bingo also a federal offense.


There was one case where someone sent another party a threat via email, and even though they were in the same town, the prosecutors were able to prove the packet was relayed via an out of state server, and the feds stepped in and charged the sender. IIRC it was a postal employee in Kentucky, and the transmission was via AOL and it bounced through Ohio.



Title: Re: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: Keyser Soce on May 12, 2009, 10:38 PM NHFT
Replace the mayor's name with the detective's name and resend.
Title: Re: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: akmisrmaadi on May 12, 2009, 11:48 PM NHFT
Quote from: neggy on May 12, 2009, 09:18 PM NHFT
Well if it went by U.S. Mail then it is a federal crime if the recipient feels threatened, if it went electronically and crossed a state line in the transmission bingo also a federal offense.

There was one case where someone sent another party a threat via email, and even though they were in the same town, the prosecutors were able to prove the packet was relayed via an out of state server, and the feds stepped in and charged the sender. IIRC it was a postal employee in Kentucky, and the transmission was via AOL and it bounced through Ohio.

it wasn't a threat ;)
Title: Re: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: Ogre on May 13, 2009, 08:26 AM NHFT
No, no, I believe they were saying if YOU, personally, feel threatened by the letter, then the detective is the one who broke a federal law. And I'm pretty sure that he can now be held indefinitely in jail without charges because that's a terroristic action.
Title: Re: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: neggy on May 13, 2009, 05:38 PM NHFT
Quote from: akmisrmaadi on May 12, 2009, 11:48 PM NHFT


it wasn't a threat ;)

You may not have intended it as a threat, but if the reader interprets it as a threat, or feels it is threatining in any way shape or form , then it is a threat.

Kind of like assault, it isn't what you do, it is what they perceive.
Title: Re: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: akmisrmaadi on May 13, 2009, 06:38 PM NHFT
i interpreted your post as a threat. i am now calling the FBI.

you have to be a troll.
Title: Re: letter in mail from police from another state
Post by: KBCraig on May 13, 2009, 08:32 PM NHFT
Quote from: neggy on May 13, 2009, 05:38 PM NHFT
Kind of like assault, it isn't what you do, it is what they perceive.

Definition = fail.