It is possible that you might be ordered to pay restitution as part of your sentence, and if so you will be told who to pay it to. However, uusally you just go to jail for it.
Yes for being a fricken A hole.
Ok, this is funny. Let's change the "circumstances" a bit. If a person was convicted of murder, do you feel that the convicted could sue the homicide detectives who took 6 years to nail him? You lack serious reasoning.
Embezzlement
O. Henry, the American writer, was accused of embezzlement in 1898 while working at the First National Bank of Austin, Texas. He was later convicted and sentenced to five years in prison, but he managed to flee to Honduras where he lived for a few years before returning to the United States.
There are no perfect rhymes for the word embezzlement.
An embezzlement of that amount would undoubtedly be a 'felony' offense.
No. This would be a contract dispute that should be referred to your state labor division.
No. I don't think so. Banks usually do a thorough background checking on all people who work at the bank and people who are interviewed for positions with the bank. So if a person has been convicted of an embezzlement charge, there is no way the bank would choose the person to work for them.
O Henry, whose real name was William Sydney Porter, was arrested in 1896 for embezzlement. He worked at a bank and, due to financial troubles, ended up mishandling the bank's funds. He was convicted of the crime and served time in prison before starting his writing career.
There are no set punishments or penalties for criminal offenses. If the person is convicted, the court must apply an appropriate sentence based on relevant law and the circumstances of the offense.
yes
The fraudulent appropriation of property by a person to whom it has been intrusted; as, the embezzlement by a clerk of his employer's; embezzlement of public funds by the public officer having them in charge.