It can be a criminal offense in any state to threaten violence against someone. It depends on the circumstances and whether or not the person actually had the intention and means to carry out the threat. It is automatically a crime if the person making the threat mentions using a bomb.
Yes, it is illegal to read someone's email without their permission. This is considered a violation of privacy and can be punishable by law.
They track that person down and they arrest them
Yes, email spoofing is illegal and punishable by law under the CAN-SPAM Act in the United States. Email spoofing involves sending emails with a forged sender address to deceive recipients, which can lead to penalties including fines and imprisonment.
If your name is Bill and you use Jim's email account, it depends on what you send. If you pretend to be Jim you could get in trouble - with Jim & whoever received it. If you sign your name on the email so everyone knows it's not from Jim, that's ok. If you aren't threatening someone or saying anything to make them afraid or angry, it's not illegal.
Yes, sending threatening emails is illegal. It is also illegal to send an email from another's person's address, pretending to be them, it's a form of identity theft. Both you and the party receiving the threatening emails should contact the police.
Contact the host of the Email Service & ask them to check it for you. If emails of a threatening nature, Involve the police.
Don't. Not only is it punishable by law, it is a major invasion of privacy. Be a friend.
No, someone cannot email you a physical check.
Yes, someone can email a check to you.
For interstate or international email threats to do serious bodily harm to another person is punishable up to five year in federal jail.
No