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by candiodari
2737 days ago
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(not legal advice and so on) One of the first rules of the legal system is that you don't get to violate the law. This INCLUDES the situation where someone else violates the law first. In many places this principle is repeated. For instance, you DO NOT get to bump someone's car if they run a red light for instance. (and no, EVEN the situation where you literally had no choice still isn't an excuse. There is only the small "non-exception" that earlier laws can override later laws. For instance, keeping someone safe takes precedence over obeying traffic lights. If you can avoid an accident by running a red light you MUST do so. There is an explicitly defined order in which laws can override one another, even though I would strongly agree that it's not exactly a clear thing) So the thief (or whoever) can sue this person for things like willful damage to property, violation of privacy, ... and that the package was stolen won't be a valid defense. |
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Ah, see, but lack of enforcement from the police goes both ways!
If the police are unwilling to go after petty theft cases, why would they bother with the even smaller crime of "wiretapping" thieves?
Is the opportunist thief likely to have the resources to go after you for this? Almost certainly not.
And even then, it is additionally unlikely that a judge and jury would convict and punish someone. Stories, narratives, and being perceived to be "in the right" go a long way in the criminal justice system, which is enforced by people, not the legal words on a piece of paper.