Harry, imagine if you were a judge having to listen to this plethora of justifications and silly excuses for what is clearly an illegal intent to defraud!
Seedub49 hit the nail on the head. Of course the vehicle was tampered with in a manner not normally permitted. No vp machine is allowed to be tampered with abnormally for the purpose of illegal gain the way these guys did either, just as it's fraudulent if you discovered by chance that pushing an odd sequence of buttons on any ATM, delivered money to you that it shouldn't have.
Guilty!
----- Reply message -----
From: "vp_wiz" <harry.porter@verizon.net>
To: <vpFREE@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [vpFREE] Re: Illegality, immorality and cheating
Date: Mon, May 13, 2013 6:24 am
Sorry, but the "car thief" analogy fails on a key aspect: lack of invitation ...
The car thief has tampered with/hotwired the vehicle -- clearly accessing the vehicle in a manner that isn't normally permitted.
A better analogy would be if you put your car up for sale and permitted someone a test drive ... who then drove it cross country and failed to return (all in the course of "standard" use of the equipment). In this case, your only recourse is with the manufacturer, who failed to protect you from misappropriation of an asset that you permitted someone else to operate.
- H.
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