There must be charges made that fit the purported crime, a trial, and the defendant must be found guilty in order for any penalty to be imposed. Then it is up to state laws and the judge to impose the penalty. Your question cannot be answered definitively. You should consult with an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review all the details and provide you with more information.
If someone is attempting to "blackmail" you into paying child support for a child who is not yours and who doesn't even live with the blackmailer then you should report it to the authorities.
There must be charges made that fit the purported crime, a trial, and the defendant must be found guilty in order for any penalty to be imposed. Then it is up to state laws and the judge to impose the penalty. Your question cannot be answered definitively. You should consult with an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review all the details and provide you with more information.
If someone is attempting to "blackmail" you into paying child support for a child who is not yours and who doesn't even live with the blackmailer then you should report it to the authorities.
There must be charges made that fit the purported crime, a trial, and the defendant must be found guilty in order for any penalty to be imposed. Then it is up to state laws and the judge to impose the penalty. Your question cannot be answered definitively. You should consult with an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review all the details and provide you with more information.
If someone is attempting to "blackmail" you into paying child support for a child who is not yours and who doesn't even live with the blackmailer then you should report it to the authorities.
There must be charges made that fit the purported crime, a trial, and the defendant must be found guilty in order for any penalty to be imposed. Then it is up to state laws and the judge to impose the penalty. Your question cannot be answered definitively. You should consult with an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review all the details and provide you with more information.
If someone is attempting to "blackmail" you into paying child support for a child who is not yours and who doesn't even live with the blackmailer then you should report it to the authorities.
There must be charges made that fit the purported crime, a trial, and the defendant must be found guilty in order for any penalty to be imposed. Then it is up to state laws and the judge to impose the penalty. Your question cannot be answered definitively. You should consult with an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review all the details and provide you with more information.
If someone is attempting to "blackmail" you into paying child support for a child who is not yours and who doesn't even live with the blackmailer then you should report it to the authorities.
Yes, not all blackmail is illegal or undesirable. For example, "Go to detention or I will call your parents," is technically a form of blackmail, but hardly illegal. If the blackmail is illegal, the blackmailer should be arrested. This assumes that someone aside from the blackmailer and the person who is being blackmailed knows about the blackmail. If not, it is unlikely that the person who is being blackmailed will tell anyone they are being blackmailed and the principal isn't going to say anything. The school principal should not be allowed to keep their job, but if no one knows about it, there is no one to complain about it.
Blackmail is not a form of persuasion. It involves threatening someone with revealing damaging information unless they comply with the blackmailer's demands. Persuasion, on the other hand, typically involves using reasoning, logic, or emotional appeals to convince someone to take a particular action or change their beliefs.
Depending on the context, blackmail is already a verb. For example "to blackmail someone" is an action and therefore a verb.
A blackmailer is a person who blackmails another person - who uses money or other resources to bribe or someone to do something.
The person is a blackmailer.
Its a form of extortion which is a crime, months back someone tried to blackmail David Letterman. Instead of paying Letterman went public and to the police and the guy went to jail for his scheme.
You dont
no, to threaten someone is to tell them you will do something but to blackmail someone is to tell them you will do something to them if they dont do something in return.
The commission of a crime should be reported to local authorities, and blackmail is a crime. The fact that the person may be an illegal immigrant is not relevant, if they have broken the law they should be taken into custody.
No. Blackmail would be if you went to the boyfriend and threatened to tell on him unless he paid you something.
KIDS OPTIONS *Tell an adult if you not a tell cat tell your sister/brother or your Friend to do it *Tell you mom about she maybe can sort it out/ or dad ADULT OPTIONS *Phone for the police that not aloud *Run away *bully What does blackmailing mean? *When i say something like this ''Be my friend or i will bully you"! <><><><><> There is more to blackmail than just that. One example might be that you were caught in an affair, and the blackmailer wants money to not tell your spouse. Blackmail is illegal and should not be tolerated in any event. Of course, it depends on what the blackmailer has "on you", but it is still illegal. In my opinion, running away and bullying in return are not options, because running away means you don't face the problem - it usually will come back to haunt you, and bullying in return is also illegal.
It is illegal.