Digital Watermarks for copy protection in recent Billbo
snow
snow at smoke.suba.com
Wed Jul 24 20:56:53 PDT 1996
On Thu, 25 Jul 1996, Timothy C. May wrote:
> I am not a lawyer, but I've virtually certain that "receiving stolen
> property" laws involve terms like "knowingly" and/or "conspiracy." That is,
> "scienter."
>
> While "ignorance of the law is no excuse" is certainly true in many cases,
> the law comprehends the reality that certain actions are not crimes if no
> knowledge of a criminal act was involved. (Sorry if this is not phrased
> more clearly.)
>
> Thus, the guy who buys a bicycle that later turns out to have been stolen,
> will usually lose the bicycle, but is not knowingly receiving stolen
> property and hence is guilty of no crime. And no DA will charge him; the
> courts and jails are already clogged up enough. Of course, if he _knew_ the
> bicycle was stolen (e.g., he "placed an order" to have one stolen, a market
> which actually exists in some places, usually for cars), then "scienter"
> has been met, and perhaps "conspiracy," and so prosecution is more likely.
Unless the point is not to prosecute, but to harass.
Petro, Christopher C.
petro at suba.com <prefered for any non-list stuff>
snow at smoke.suba.com
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