What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? California/Indiana/Georgia
Internet impersonation question.
The husband of a woman ("cyber-girlfriend") I had been chatting with on Facebook forcibly assumed control of the woman's account (using spyware). He then used this false identity to obtain incriminating information from me--information I would never have communicated if this person had not directly questioned and prodded me about (i.e. "What would you give up to be with me?", etc.). Furthermore, he used this false identity to obtain my wife's email address, asking her for her email address under false pretense that "she" had some old high school photos of me that she wanted to share.
Once he got the email address, he then revealed himself to my wife, and that he had pretended to be my cyber-girlfriend in highly sexually-charged chats with me. Included were several document attachments of previously obtained chats between me and the woman, as well as the transcript of the chat with him impersonating her.
I feel that I have been deceived and/or defrauded into divulging information that has been incredibly damaging to my marriage. This man orchestrated this action over the course of 7 or 8 days, and was deliberate in his intention to damage my marriage. My wife has been extremely traumatized by this (she's not spoken to me for 2 days now, as of this moment). I am facing a potential divorce now, because of this.
What should I do, and what is my recourse?What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?
Internet impersonation question.
The husband of a woman ("cyber-girlfriend") I had been chatting with on Facebook forcibly assumed control of the woman's account (using spyware). He then used this false identity to obtain incriminating information from me--information I would never have communicated if this person had not directly questioned and prodded me about (i.e. "What would you give up to be with me?", etc.). Furthermore, he used this false identity to obtain my wife's email address, asking her for her email address under false pretense that "she" had some old high school photos of me that she wanted to share.
Once he got the email address, he then revealed himself to my wife, and that he had pretended to be my cyber-girlfriend in highly sexually-charged chats with me. Included were several document attachments of previously obtained chats between me and the woman, as well as the transcript of the chat with him impersonating her.
I feel that I have been deceived and/or defrauded into divulging information that has been incredibly damaging to my marriage. This man orchestrated this action over the course of 7 or 8 days, and was deliberate in his intention to damage my marriage. My wife has been extremely traumatized by this (she's not spoken to me for 2 days now, as of this moment). I am facing a potential divorce now, because of this.
What should I do, and what is my recourse?What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?