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Is it legal?

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ksj10dan

Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Fla.

My ex-wife was engaged in some less than stellar behavior that resulted in our divorce, to include: using corporate property to make and distribute pornography, bad checks, stealing passwords from the CEO via a keylogger she secretly placed on the computer, sending restricted corporate documents to her lover who was a competitor, unauthorized use of corporate funds and much more. She admitted all these things to me and has written an email to me detailing all the things that she did. She has met an attorney with a stellar reputation and is marrying him next month. He is not aware of what she has done in the past. My question is this: Is it legal for me to inform him of these things and send him a copy of this email as proof?What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?
 


Proserpina

Senior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Fla.

My ex-wife was engaged in some less than stellar behavior that resulted in our divorce, to include: using corporate property to make and distribute pornography, bad checks, stealing passwords from the CEO via a keylogger she secretly placed on the computer, sending restricted corporate documents to her lover who was a competitor, unauthorized use of corporate funds and much more. She admitted all these things to me and has written an email to me detailing all the things that she did. She has met an attorney with a stellar reputation and is marrying him next month. He is not aware of what she has done in the past. My question is this: Is it legal for me to inform him of these things and send him a copy of this email as proof?What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?


And what exactly is your goal here?

To prove that you are a bitter ex with a huge axe to grind?

Way to go.

:rolleyes:
 

quincy

Senior Member
If your ex-wife was not arrested, charged and/or convicted on any of what you've listed, you would be defaming her by reporting to anyone that she did commit any of these crimes. And, if she was arrested, charged and convicted on any of what you've listed, her attorney/fiancé is probably already aware of it. I imagine he is not stupid.

An email purportedly from her, by the way, is not proof of anything. It can just be evidence that you know how to create an email that appears to be sent by your ex-wife. Emails are not hard to fake.

As a note, with an attorney/fiancé/husband, your ex will be able to spend a lot less on pursuing a legal action against you than you will have to spend defending against it.

I recommend you go on with your own life, let her marry, let the new husband discover on his own whatever he will about his new wife. If his stellar reputation becomes tarnished, so be it.
 
Last edited:

The_Saint

Member
You could always make an appointment with him to represent you in suing your wife**************"oh, shes your soon to be wife, my bad. Not a problem, i'll find myself another attorney" :p

I'm kidding of course.
 

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