Can criminal fraud exist without damages?Someone withdrew money from my bank account - what are my rights?Is a high % agent commission contract clause fraud in your jurisdiction?What is the difference between civil fraud and criminal fraud?Can the Feds not put Bank Executives (or their employees) in Prison for Fraud?Why a civil court can order damages for killing a person?How well can one know the rules in gambling before it's legally fraud?If the damages from a lawsuit force the defendant into bankruptcy, are they forgiven?How is getting foreign investors to support your bank fraud? (Barclays)Do we have attempted fraud laws like we have attempted murder?Is Intentional Immaterial Fraud Legal?

You cannot touch me, but I can touch you, who am I?

Hostile work environment after whistle-blowing on coworker and our boss. What do I do?

How to safely derail a train during transit?

Integer addition + constant, is it a group?

Sort a list by elements of another list

Why, precisely, is argon used in neutrino experiments?

Would a high gravity rocky planet be guaranteed to have an atmosphere?

A particular customize with green line and letters for subfloat

Why not increase contact surface when reentering the atmosphere?

Is it appropriate to ask a job candidate if we can record their interview?

What is the intuitive meaning of having a linear relationship between the logs of two variables?

Why are there no referendums in the US?

Term for the "extreme-extension" version of a straw man fallacy?

Roman Numeral Treatment of Suspensions

Anatomically Correct Strange Women In Ponds Distributing Swords

How can I kill an app using Terminal?

How does Loki do this?

How to run a prison with the smallest amount of guards?

How do we know the LHC results are robust?

How did Doctor Strange see the winning outcome in Avengers: Infinity War?

Inappropriate reference requests from Journal reviewers

What does "I’d sit this one out, Cap," imply or mean in the context?

How does the UK government determine the size of a mandate?

Trouble understanding the speech of overseas colleagues



Can criminal fraud exist without damages?


Someone withdrew money from my bank account - what are my rights?Is a high % agent commission contract clause fraud in your jurisdiction?What is the difference between civil fraud and criminal fraud?Can the Feds not put Bank Executives (or their employees) in Prison for Fraud?Why a civil court can order damages for killing a person?How well can one know the rules in gambling before it's legally fraud?If the damages from a lawsuit force the defendant into bankruptcy, are they forgiven?How is getting foreign investors to support your bank fraud? (Barclays)Do we have attempted fraud laws like we have attempted murder?Is Intentional Immaterial Fraud Legal?













8















If I fraud someone, invest their money and pay it back is there any criminal offense? Does fraud require damages? Will most judges realistically treat this a criminal case?










share|improve this question









New contributor




user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 13





    If you rob a bank, spend the money, win the lottery and pay it back, is it still a crime?

    – Ron Beyer
    yesterday






  • 1





    @RonBeyer your case is different, because the robber has not committed fraud, but theft. And yes, it would still be a crime, even if you pay the money back later.

    – Shazamo Morebucks
    yesterday






  • 2





    I feel like the last question should be edited out because it doesn't make sense. A case is either criminal or civil. Civil and criminal statutes are different (though sometimes related) and only a government prosecutor can bring a criminal charge against a person, while anyone can file civil charges. Most importantly, the a set of facts can give rise to both civil and criminal cases, or it could be sufficient for some but not others, or none.

    – IllusiveBrian
    yesterday






  • 3





    Did you mean: "If I tell someone I put his money in some investment A, but I put his money into a different investment B, and then pay him back at the agreed time with the amount he expects if his money was invested in A, is it fraud?"

    – Alexander
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Did you also pay interest on your fraudulently-acquired "loan"?

    – RonJohn
    10 hours ago















8















If I fraud someone, invest their money and pay it back is there any criminal offense? Does fraud require damages? Will most judges realistically treat this a criminal case?










share|improve this question









New contributor




user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 13





    If you rob a bank, spend the money, win the lottery and pay it back, is it still a crime?

    – Ron Beyer
    yesterday






  • 1





    @RonBeyer your case is different, because the robber has not committed fraud, but theft. And yes, it would still be a crime, even if you pay the money back later.

    – Shazamo Morebucks
    yesterday






  • 2





    I feel like the last question should be edited out because it doesn't make sense. A case is either criminal or civil. Civil and criminal statutes are different (though sometimes related) and only a government prosecutor can bring a criminal charge against a person, while anyone can file civil charges. Most importantly, the a set of facts can give rise to both civil and criminal cases, or it could be sufficient for some but not others, or none.

    – IllusiveBrian
    yesterday






  • 3





    Did you mean: "If I tell someone I put his money in some investment A, but I put his money into a different investment B, and then pay him back at the agreed time with the amount he expects if his money was invested in A, is it fraud?"

    – Alexander
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Did you also pay interest on your fraudulently-acquired "loan"?

    – RonJohn
    10 hours ago













8












8








8








If I fraud someone, invest their money and pay it back is there any criminal offense? Does fraud require damages? Will most judges realistically treat this a criminal case?










share|improve this question









New contributor




user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












If I fraud someone, invest their money and pay it back is there any criminal offense? Does fraud require damages? Will most judges realistically treat this a criminal case?







united-states fraud






share|improve this question









New contributor




user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









A. K.

1,4121127




1,4121127






New contributor




user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









user24954user24954

5113




5113




New contributor




user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






user24954 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 13





    If you rob a bank, spend the money, win the lottery and pay it back, is it still a crime?

    – Ron Beyer
    yesterday






  • 1





    @RonBeyer your case is different, because the robber has not committed fraud, but theft. And yes, it would still be a crime, even if you pay the money back later.

    – Shazamo Morebucks
    yesterday






  • 2





    I feel like the last question should be edited out because it doesn't make sense. A case is either criminal or civil. Civil and criminal statutes are different (though sometimes related) and only a government prosecutor can bring a criminal charge against a person, while anyone can file civil charges. Most importantly, the a set of facts can give rise to both civil and criminal cases, or it could be sufficient for some but not others, or none.

    – IllusiveBrian
    yesterday






  • 3





    Did you mean: "If I tell someone I put his money in some investment A, but I put his money into a different investment B, and then pay him back at the agreed time with the amount he expects if his money was invested in A, is it fraud?"

    – Alexander
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Did you also pay interest on your fraudulently-acquired "loan"?

    – RonJohn
    10 hours ago












  • 13





    If you rob a bank, spend the money, win the lottery and pay it back, is it still a crime?

    – Ron Beyer
    yesterday






  • 1





    @RonBeyer your case is different, because the robber has not committed fraud, but theft. And yes, it would still be a crime, even if you pay the money back later.

    – Shazamo Morebucks
    yesterday






  • 2





    I feel like the last question should be edited out because it doesn't make sense. A case is either criminal or civil. Civil and criminal statutes are different (though sometimes related) and only a government prosecutor can bring a criminal charge against a person, while anyone can file civil charges. Most importantly, the a set of facts can give rise to both civil and criminal cases, or it could be sufficient for some but not others, or none.

    – IllusiveBrian
    yesterday






  • 3





    Did you mean: "If I tell someone I put his money in some investment A, but I put his money into a different investment B, and then pay him back at the agreed time with the amount he expects if his money was invested in A, is it fraud?"

    – Alexander
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Did you also pay interest on your fraudulently-acquired "loan"?

    – RonJohn
    10 hours ago







13




13





If you rob a bank, spend the money, win the lottery and pay it back, is it still a crime?

– Ron Beyer
yesterday





If you rob a bank, spend the money, win the lottery and pay it back, is it still a crime?

– Ron Beyer
yesterday




1




1





@RonBeyer your case is different, because the robber has not committed fraud, but theft. And yes, it would still be a crime, even if you pay the money back later.

– Shazamo Morebucks
yesterday





@RonBeyer your case is different, because the robber has not committed fraud, but theft. And yes, it would still be a crime, even if you pay the money back later.

– Shazamo Morebucks
yesterday




2




2





I feel like the last question should be edited out because it doesn't make sense. A case is either criminal or civil. Civil and criminal statutes are different (though sometimes related) and only a government prosecutor can bring a criminal charge against a person, while anyone can file civil charges. Most importantly, the a set of facts can give rise to both civil and criminal cases, or it could be sufficient for some but not others, or none.

– IllusiveBrian
yesterday





I feel like the last question should be edited out because it doesn't make sense. A case is either criminal or civil. Civil and criminal statutes are different (though sometimes related) and only a government prosecutor can bring a criminal charge against a person, while anyone can file civil charges. Most importantly, the a set of facts can give rise to both civil and criminal cases, or it could be sufficient for some but not others, or none.

– IllusiveBrian
yesterday




3




3





Did you mean: "If I tell someone I put his money in some investment A, but I put his money into a different investment B, and then pay him back at the agreed time with the amount he expects if his money was invested in A, is it fraud?"

– Alexander
12 hours ago





Did you mean: "If I tell someone I put his money in some investment A, but I put his money into a different investment B, and then pay him back at the agreed time with the amount he expects if his money was invested in A, is it fraud?"

– Alexander
12 hours ago




1




1





Did you also pay interest on your fraudulently-acquired "loan"?

– RonJohn
10 hours ago





Did you also pay interest on your fraudulently-acquired "loan"?

– RonJohn
10 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















22














If a person is wrongfully deprived of money (or something else of value) for a period, that is damage, even if the money is later repaid. The victim might have used the money in some profitable or advantageous way during the period when it was taken. But the victim need not prove exactly how s/he might have profited, it is enough to show that the victim was wrongfully deprived of something of value.



Of course, there are other elements to fraud. There must have been a lie or deception, on which the victim reasonably relied. There must have been intent that the victim so relay. The deception must have been material and must have directly caused or led to the damage. (Or have gotten the Fraudster a benefit that would not have been provided had the victim known the truth.)



But assuming that all the elements of fraud are proved, restitution, even full restitution with interest, does not excuse the fraud.



However, as a practical matter, if offered full restitution on condition of a release or an agreement not to prosecute, many victims will choose to take it, preferring their money back, perhaps with interest, to a legal case, even a winning one.






share|improve this answer

























  • Would the deception be material if there was no cost?

    – user24954
    yesterday






  • 3





    @user24954 "material" in this context usually means that the deception influenced the decision, or that it might have influenced the decision of a reasonable person. "caused or led to the damage" is also an element of fraud, and if there was no damage there was no fraud (possilby attempted fraud). But a cost later repaid is not "no damage".

    – David Siegel
    yesterday











  • I wonder where the line of wrongfully deprived is drawn. If I tell you "give me $1000, and in 6 months I will return you $5000 from the Nigerian prince I represent", but instead start a food truck business with the $1000, and give you the $5k as promised, I've clearly done something unethical, but nobody was deprived of anything they didn't agree to.

    – mbrig
    9 hours ago











  • @mbrig Thew risk that the food truck would fail to earn enough to pay back $5k is probably higher than the risk that the Prince won't have the cash. The was materiel deception with the intent of gain a benefit that would not otherwise have been gained. In most jurisdictions, that is also fraud. The damage was in getting the investor to take a risk that s/he would not have with accurate info.

    – David Siegel
    8 hours ago


















8














You say "criminal fraud", if you mean exactly that, then no, returning the money, or offering even more money, will not be a defense.



You committed a crime and can be convicted for it even if you gave back more money than the complainant had "lost".



There may be a case for if someone initiated civil proceedings against you on the basis of fraud, since you can simply pay whatever damages that person may seek, and settle the claim.






share|improve this answer


















  • 4





    But note that fraud may entitle the victim to triple damages, or other damages beyond simple restitution, so the damages the victim may seek might not be the same as the original loss.

    – David Siegel
    yesterday










Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "617"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);






user24954 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2flaw.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f38459%2fcan-criminal-fraud-exist-without-damages%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









22














If a person is wrongfully deprived of money (or something else of value) for a period, that is damage, even if the money is later repaid. The victim might have used the money in some profitable or advantageous way during the period when it was taken. But the victim need not prove exactly how s/he might have profited, it is enough to show that the victim was wrongfully deprived of something of value.



Of course, there are other elements to fraud. There must have been a lie or deception, on which the victim reasonably relied. There must have been intent that the victim so relay. The deception must have been material and must have directly caused or led to the damage. (Or have gotten the Fraudster a benefit that would not have been provided had the victim known the truth.)



But assuming that all the elements of fraud are proved, restitution, even full restitution with interest, does not excuse the fraud.



However, as a practical matter, if offered full restitution on condition of a release or an agreement not to prosecute, many victims will choose to take it, preferring their money back, perhaps with interest, to a legal case, even a winning one.






share|improve this answer

























  • Would the deception be material if there was no cost?

    – user24954
    yesterday






  • 3





    @user24954 "material" in this context usually means that the deception influenced the decision, or that it might have influenced the decision of a reasonable person. "caused or led to the damage" is also an element of fraud, and if there was no damage there was no fraud (possilby attempted fraud). But a cost later repaid is not "no damage".

    – David Siegel
    yesterday











  • I wonder where the line of wrongfully deprived is drawn. If I tell you "give me $1000, and in 6 months I will return you $5000 from the Nigerian prince I represent", but instead start a food truck business with the $1000, and give you the $5k as promised, I've clearly done something unethical, but nobody was deprived of anything they didn't agree to.

    – mbrig
    9 hours ago











  • @mbrig Thew risk that the food truck would fail to earn enough to pay back $5k is probably higher than the risk that the Prince won't have the cash. The was materiel deception with the intent of gain a benefit that would not otherwise have been gained. In most jurisdictions, that is also fraud. The damage was in getting the investor to take a risk that s/he would not have with accurate info.

    – David Siegel
    8 hours ago















22














If a person is wrongfully deprived of money (or something else of value) for a period, that is damage, even if the money is later repaid. The victim might have used the money in some profitable or advantageous way during the period when it was taken. But the victim need not prove exactly how s/he might have profited, it is enough to show that the victim was wrongfully deprived of something of value.



Of course, there are other elements to fraud. There must have been a lie or deception, on which the victim reasonably relied. There must have been intent that the victim so relay. The deception must have been material and must have directly caused or led to the damage. (Or have gotten the Fraudster a benefit that would not have been provided had the victim known the truth.)



But assuming that all the elements of fraud are proved, restitution, even full restitution with interest, does not excuse the fraud.



However, as a practical matter, if offered full restitution on condition of a release or an agreement not to prosecute, many victims will choose to take it, preferring their money back, perhaps with interest, to a legal case, even a winning one.






share|improve this answer

























  • Would the deception be material if there was no cost?

    – user24954
    yesterday






  • 3





    @user24954 "material" in this context usually means that the deception influenced the decision, or that it might have influenced the decision of a reasonable person. "caused or led to the damage" is also an element of fraud, and if there was no damage there was no fraud (possilby attempted fraud). But a cost later repaid is not "no damage".

    – David Siegel
    yesterday











  • I wonder where the line of wrongfully deprived is drawn. If I tell you "give me $1000, and in 6 months I will return you $5000 from the Nigerian prince I represent", but instead start a food truck business with the $1000, and give you the $5k as promised, I've clearly done something unethical, but nobody was deprived of anything they didn't agree to.

    – mbrig
    9 hours ago











  • @mbrig Thew risk that the food truck would fail to earn enough to pay back $5k is probably higher than the risk that the Prince won't have the cash. The was materiel deception with the intent of gain a benefit that would not otherwise have been gained. In most jurisdictions, that is also fraud. The damage was in getting the investor to take a risk that s/he would not have with accurate info.

    – David Siegel
    8 hours ago













22












22








22







If a person is wrongfully deprived of money (or something else of value) for a period, that is damage, even if the money is later repaid. The victim might have used the money in some profitable or advantageous way during the period when it was taken. But the victim need not prove exactly how s/he might have profited, it is enough to show that the victim was wrongfully deprived of something of value.



Of course, there are other elements to fraud. There must have been a lie or deception, on which the victim reasonably relied. There must have been intent that the victim so relay. The deception must have been material and must have directly caused or led to the damage. (Or have gotten the Fraudster a benefit that would not have been provided had the victim known the truth.)



But assuming that all the elements of fraud are proved, restitution, even full restitution with interest, does not excuse the fraud.



However, as a practical matter, if offered full restitution on condition of a release or an agreement not to prosecute, many victims will choose to take it, preferring their money back, perhaps with interest, to a legal case, even a winning one.






share|improve this answer















If a person is wrongfully deprived of money (or something else of value) for a period, that is damage, even if the money is later repaid. The victim might have used the money in some profitable or advantageous way during the period when it was taken. But the victim need not prove exactly how s/he might have profited, it is enough to show that the victim was wrongfully deprived of something of value.



Of course, there are other elements to fraud. There must have been a lie or deception, on which the victim reasonably relied. There must have been intent that the victim so relay. The deception must have been material and must have directly caused or led to the damage. (Or have gotten the Fraudster a benefit that would not have been provided had the victim known the truth.)



But assuming that all the elements of fraud are proved, restitution, even full restitution with interest, does not excuse the fraud.



However, as a practical matter, if offered full restitution on condition of a release or an agreement not to prosecute, many victims will choose to take it, preferring their money back, perhaps with interest, to a legal case, even a winning one.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 8 hours ago

























answered yesterday









David SiegelDavid Siegel

14.9k3159




14.9k3159












  • Would the deception be material if there was no cost?

    – user24954
    yesterday






  • 3





    @user24954 "material" in this context usually means that the deception influenced the decision, or that it might have influenced the decision of a reasonable person. "caused or led to the damage" is also an element of fraud, and if there was no damage there was no fraud (possilby attempted fraud). But a cost later repaid is not "no damage".

    – David Siegel
    yesterday











  • I wonder where the line of wrongfully deprived is drawn. If I tell you "give me $1000, and in 6 months I will return you $5000 from the Nigerian prince I represent", but instead start a food truck business with the $1000, and give you the $5k as promised, I've clearly done something unethical, but nobody was deprived of anything they didn't agree to.

    – mbrig
    9 hours ago











  • @mbrig Thew risk that the food truck would fail to earn enough to pay back $5k is probably higher than the risk that the Prince won't have the cash. The was materiel deception with the intent of gain a benefit that would not otherwise have been gained. In most jurisdictions, that is also fraud. The damage was in getting the investor to take a risk that s/he would not have with accurate info.

    – David Siegel
    8 hours ago

















  • Would the deception be material if there was no cost?

    – user24954
    yesterday






  • 3





    @user24954 "material" in this context usually means that the deception influenced the decision, or that it might have influenced the decision of a reasonable person. "caused or led to the damage" is also an element of fraud, and if there was no damage there was no fraud (possilby attempted fraud). But a cost later repaid is not "no damage".

    – David Siegel
    yesterday











  • I wonder where the line of wrongfully deprived is drawn. If I tell you "give me $1000, and in 6 months I will return you $5000 from the Nigerian prince I represent", but instead start a food truck business with the $1000, and give you the $5k as promised, I've clearly done something unethical, but nobody was deprived of anything they didn't agree to.

    – mbrig
    9 hours ago











  • @mbrig Thew risk that the food truck would fail to earn enough to pay back $5k is probably higher than the risk that the Prince won't have the cash. The was materiel deception with the intent of gain a benefit that would not otherwise have been gained. In most jurisdictions, that is also fraud. The damage was in getting the investor to take a risk that s/he would not have with accurate info.

    – David Siegel
    8 hours ago
















Would the deception be material if there was no cost?

– user24954
yesterday





Would the deception be material if there was no cost?

– user24954
yesterday




3




3





@user24954 "material" in this context usually means that the deception influenced the decision, or that it might have influenced the decision of a reasonable person. "caused or led to the damage" is also an element of fraud, and if there was no damage there was no fraud (possilby attempted fraud). But a cost later repaid is not "no damage".

– David Siegel
yesterday





@user24954 "material" in this context usually means that the deception influenced the decision, or that it might have influenced the decision of a reasonable person. "caused or led to the damage" is also an element of fraud, and if there was no damage there was no fraud (possilby attempted fraud). But a cost later repaid is not "no damage".

– David Siegel
yesterday













I wonder where the line of wrongfully deprived is drawn. If I tell you "give me $1000, and in 6 months I will return you $5000 from the Nigerian prince I represent", but instead start a food truck business with the $1000, and give you the $5k as promised, I've clearly done something unethical, but nobody was deprived of anything they didn't agree to.

– mbrig
9 hours ago





I wonder where the line of wrongfully deprived is drawn. If I tell you "give me $1000, and in 6 months I will return you $5000 from the Nigerian prince I represent", but instead start a food truck business with the $1000, and give you the $5k as promised, I've clearly done something unethical, but nobody was deprived of anything they didn't agree to.

– mbrig
9 hours ago













@mbrig Thew risk that the food truck would fail to earn enough to pay back $5k is probably higher than the risk that the Prince won't have the cash. The was materiel deception with the intent of gain a benefit that would not otherwise have been gained. In most jurisdictions, that is also fraud. The damage was in getting the investor to take a risk that s/he would not have with accurate info.

– David Siegel
8 hours ago





@mbrig Thew risk that the food truck would fail to earn enough to pay back $5k is probably higher than the risk that the Prince won't have the cash. The was materiel deception with the intent of gain a benefit that would not otherwise have been gained. In most jurisdictions, that is also fraud. The damage was in getting the investor to take a risk that s/he would not have with accurate info.

– David Siegel
8 hours ago











8














You say "criminal fraud", if you mean exactly that, then no, returning the money, or offering even more money, will not be a defense.



You committed a crime and can be convicted for it even if you gave back more money than the complainant had "lost".



There may be a case for if someone initiated civil proceedings against you on the basis of fraud, since you can simply pay whatever damages that person may seek, and settle the claim.






share|improve this answer


















  • 4





    But note that fraud may entitle the victim to triple damages, or other damages beyond simple restitution, so the damages the victim may seek might not be the same as the original loss.

    – David Siegel
    yesterday















8














You say "criminal fraud", if you mean exactly that, then no, returning the money, or offering even more money, will not be a defense.



You committed a crime and can be convicted for it even if you gave back more money than the complainant had "lost".



There may be a case for if someone initiated civil proceedings against you on the basis of fraud, since you can simply pay whatever damages that person may seek, and settle the claim.






share|improve this answer


















  • 4





    But note that fraud may entitle the victim to triple damages, or other damages beyond simple restitution, so the damages the victim may seek might not be the same as the original loss.

    – David Siegel
    yesterday













8












8








8







You say "criminal fraud", if you mean exactly that, then no, returning the money, or offering even more money, will not be a defense.



You committed a crime and can be convicted for it even if you gave back more money than the complainant had "lost".



There may be a case for if someone initiated civil proceedings against you on the basis of fraud, since you can simply pay whatever damages that person may seek, and settle the claim.






share|improve this answer













You say "criminal fraud", if you mean exactly that, then no, returning the money, or offering even more money, will not be a defense.



You committed a crime and can be convicted for it even if you gave back more money than the complainant had "lost".



There may be a case for if someone initiated civil proceedings against you on the basis of fraud, since you can simply pay whatever damages that person may seek, and settle the claim.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered yesterday









Shazamo MorebucksShazamo Morebucks

3,0621827




3,0621827







  • 4





    But note that fraud may entitle the victim to triple damages, or other damages beyond simple restitution, so the damages the victim may seek might not be the same as the original loss.

    – David Siegel
    yesterday












  • 4





    But note that fraud may entitle the victim to triple damages, or other damages beyond simple restitution, so the damages the victim may seek might not be the same as the original loss.

    – David Siegel
    yesterday







4




4





But note that fraud may entitle the victim to triple damages, or other damages beyond simple restitution, so the damages the victim may seek might not be the same as the original loss.

– David Siegel
yesterday





But note that fraud may entitle the victim to triple damages, or other damages beyond simple restitution, so the damages the victim may seek might not be the same as the original loss.

– David Siegel
yesterday










user24954 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















user24954 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












user24954 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











user24954 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














Thanks for contributing an answer to Law Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2flaw.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f38459%2fcan-criminal-fraud-exist-without-damages%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Triangular numbers and gcdProving sum of a set is $0 pmod n$ if $n$ is odd, or $fracn2 pmod n$ if $n$ is even?Is greatest common divisor of two numbers really their smallest linear combination?GCD, LCM RelationshipProve a set of nonnegative integers with greatest common divisor 1 and closed under addition has all but finite many nonnegative integers.all pairs of a and b in an equation containing gcdTriangular Numbers Modulo $k$ - Hit All Values?Understanding the Existence and Uniqueness of the GCDGCD and LCM with logical symbolsThe greatest common divisor of two positive integers less than 100 is equal to 3. Their least common multiple is twelve times one of the integers.Suppose that for all integers $x$, $x|a$ and $x|b$ if and only if $x|c$. Then $c = gcd(a,b)$Which is the gcd of 2 numbers which are multiplied and the result is 600000?

Србија Садржај Етимологија Географија Историја Политички систем и уставно-правно уређење Становништво Привреда Образовање Култура Спорт Државни празници Галерија Напомене Референце Литература Спољашње везе Мени за навигацију44°48′N 20°28′E / 44.800° СГШ; 20.467° ИГД / 44.800; 20.46744°48′N 20°28′E / 44.800° СГШ; 20.467° ИГД / 44.800; 20.467ууРезултати пописа 2011. према старости и полуу„Положај, рељеф и клима”„Europe: Serbia”„Основни подаци”„Gross domestic product based on purchasing-power-parity (PPP) valuation of country GDP”„Human Development Report 2018 – "Human Development Indices and Indicators 6”„Устав Републике Србије”Правопис српскога језикаGoogle DriveComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesCalcium and Magnesium in Groundwater: Occurrence and Significance for Human Health„UNSD — Methodology”„Процене становништва | Републички завод за статистику Србије”The Age of Nepotism: Travel Journals and Observations from the Balkans During the Depression„The Serbian Revolution and the Serbian State”„Устав Србије”„Serbia a few steps away from concluding WTO accession negotiations”„A credible enlargement perspective for and enhanced EU engagement with the Western Balkans”„Freedom in the World 2017”„Serbia: On the Way to EU Accession”„Human Development Indices and Indicators: 2018 Statistical Update”„2018 Social Progress Index”„Global Peace Index”Sabres of Two Easts: An Untold History of Muslims in Eastern Europe, Their Friends and Foes„Пројекат Растко—Лузица”„Serbia: Introduction”„Serbia”оригинала„The World Factbook: Serbia”„The World Factbook: Kosovo”„Border Police Department”„Uredba o kontroli prelaska administrativne linije prema Autonomnoj pokrajini Kosovo i Metohija”оригиналаIvana Carevic, Velimir Jovanovic, STRATIGRAPHIC-STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF MAČVA BASIN, UDC 911.2:551.7(497.11), pp. 1Archived„About the Carpathians – Carpathian Heritage Society”оригинала„O Srbiji”оригинала„Статистички годишњак Србије, 2009: Географски прегледГеографија за осми разред основне школе„Отворена, електронска база едукационих радова”„Влада Републике Србије: Положај, рељеф и клима”„Копрен (Стара планина)”„Туристичка дестинација-Србија”„Висина водопада”„РХМЗ — Републички Хидрометеоролошки завод Србије Кнеза Вишеслава 66 Београд”„Фауна Србије”„Српске шуме на издисају”„Lepih šest odsto Srbije”„Илустрована историја Срба — Увод”„Винчанска култура - Градска општина Гроцка”„''„Винча — Праисторијска метропола”''”оригиналаЈужни Словени под византијском влашћу (600—1025)Држава маћедонских Словена„Карађорђе истина и мит, Проф. др Радош Љушић, Вечерње новости, фељтон, 18 наставака, 24. август - 10. септембар 2003.”„Политика: Како је утврђена војна неутралност, 13. јануар. 2010, приступљено децембра 2012.”„Србија и РС оживеле Дејтонски споразум”„Са српским пасошем у 104 земље”Војска Србије | О Војсци | Војска Србије — Улога, намена и задациАрхивираноВојска Србије | ОрганизацијаАрхивираноОдлука о изради Стратегије просторног развоја Републике Србије до 2020. годинеЗакон о територијалној организацији Републике СрбијеЗакон о државној управиНајчешће постављана питања.„Смањење броја статистичких региона кроз измене Закона о регионалном развоју”„2011 Human development Report”„Službena upotreba jezika i pisama”„Попис становништва, домаћинстава и станова 2011. године у Републици Србији. Књига 4: Вероисповест, матерњи језик и национална припадност”„Вероисповест, матерњи језик и национална”„Специјална известитељка УН за слободу религије и вероисповести Асма Јахангир, код Заштитника грађана Саше Јанковића”„Закон о државним и другим празницима у Републици Србији”„Веронаука у српским школама”„Serbia – Ancestral Genography Atlas”Бела књига Милошевићеве владавинеоригиналаGross domestic product based on purchasing-power-parity (PPP) per capita GDP БДП 2007—2013Актуелни показатељи — Република Србија„Попис становништва, домаћинстава и станова 2011. године у Републици Србији Књига 7: Економска активност”Zemlje kandidati za članstvo u EU„Putin drops South Stream gas pipeline to EU, courts Turkey”„„Соко — историјат””оригинала„„Рембас — историјат””оригинала„„Лубница — историјат””оригинала„„Штаваљ — Историјат””оригинала„„Боговина — историјат””оригинала„„Јасеновац — историјат””оригинала„„Вршка чука — историјат””оригинала„„Ибарски рудници — историјат””оригинала„Закон о просторном плану Републике Србије од 2010 до 2020”„Кривични законик — Недозвољена изградња нуклеарних постројења, члан 267”„Б92: Srbija uklonila obogaćeni uranijum, 25. октобар 2011”„Коришћење енергије ветра у Србији — природни услови и практична примена”„Енергија ветра”„Србија може да прави струју од сунца, биомасе, воде и ветра”„Моја електрана и друге ветрењаче”„Биомаса, струја без инвестиција”„Auto-karte Srbije”„www.srbija.gov.rs Статистике о Србији”оригинала„Статистика зе месец децембар и 2016. годину”„Turizam u Srbiji”„Univerzitet u Beogradu: Vek i po akademskog znanja”„Vojnomedicinska akademija: 165 godina tradicije i napretka”Никола Гиљен, Соња Јовићевић Јов и Јелена Мандић: Мирослављево јеванђеље; Текст је публикован у ревији „Историја” и настао је као део научно-истраживачког рада Фонда „Принцеза Оливера”„World music асоцијација Србије”оригинала„World music у Србији”оригинала„Pogledajte: Boban Marković svira u redakciji „Blica”!”„Eurovision Song Contest 2007 Final”„Projekat Rastko, Alojz Ujes: Joakim Vujic”„Унеско”„Списак локалитета Светске баштине”„Guča i Egzit zaludeli svet”оригинала„Sabor trubača GUČA”„Interesting facts about Exit”оригинала„FIFA Association Information”„Serbia women win EuroBasket title, gain first Olympics berth”„Odbojkašice ispisale istoriju – Srbija je svetski prvak!”„Сајт Ватерполо савеза Србије, Освојене медаље”„Сајт ФК Црвена звезда, Бари”„Сајт ФК Црвена звезда, Токио”„Blic:Zlatna Milica! Mandićeva donela Srbiji najsjajnije odličje u Londonu!”„Милица Мандић освојила златну медаљу („Политика”, 12. август 2012)”„Златни Давор Штефанек”„DŽUDO ŠAMPIONAT Majdov osvojio svetsko zlato”„Španovićeva trećim skokom svih vremena do zlata!”„Чудо Иване Шпановић — 7,24 м („Политика”, 5. март 2017)”The Age of Nepotism: Travel Journals and Observations from the Balkans During the DepressionCalcium and Magnesium in Groundwater: Occurrence and Significance for Human HealthComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesБела књига Милошевићеве владавинеоригиналаComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesSabres of Two Easts: An Untold History of Muslims in Eastern Europe, Their Friends and FoesГеографија за осми разред основне школеSerbia: the country, people, life, customsМедијиВодичПодациВлада Републике СрбијеНародна скупштина Републике СрбијеНародна канцеларија председника Републике СрбијеНародна банка СрбијеТуристичка организација СрбијеПортал еУправе Републике СрбијеРепубличко јавно правобранилаштвоууууууWorldCat151202876n851959190000 0000 9526 67094054598-24101000570825ge130919

Barbados Ynhâld Skiednis | Geografy | Demografy | Navigaasjemenu