As innocent as it may seem, hacking into another person’s email account is considered a serious offense in the eyes of the law. Depending on the circumstances surrounding the hacking, an offender may be charged with a second or third-degree felony, which generally results in severe penalties. Hacking is the online equivalent of tampering with another person’s mail. Anyone may be charged with hacking, regardless of the offender’s relationship to the person whose account was illegally accessed. In fact, most hacking cases involve family members, partners, or spouses accessing an email account without the owner’s consent. In all cases, the victim may press charges against the perpetrator, and if he or she is convicted, there will be a felony offense on his or her record. Felonies are serious offenses that are punished with either jail time, fines, or a combination of both. Generally, hacking is a third-degree felony; however, if the act was committed in order to steal information, defraud, or otherwise harm the victim, the offense may be escalated to second-degree felony.
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Tags: Battery, Burglary, Drug, Federal, Felony, Firearm, Fraud, Immigration, Insurance, Misdemeanor, Misdemeanor Crimes, Mortgage, Murder, Probation, theft, Trafficking, Violence, Weapons
This entry was posted on Tuesday, February 21st, 2012 at 10:16 pm and is filed under Criminal Defense. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

