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2006-07-23 05:53:10
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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How about jail for you, for the person holding the fake ID, the owner of the establishment that gives drinks to minors, and if there is any accident or injury related to serving alcohol to a minor the whole bunch of you including you could be living in a big jail cell together..I would put you at the top of the worse person in trouble...
2006-07-21 07:42:33
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answer #2
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answered by FloNightingGale 4
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Depending upon the state you're in, you can be held liable for for providing them with alcohol. The way I see it, you're held as liable as if you had sold them the alcohol. It's pretty stiff finewise in a lot of states now. The same thing goes with giving minors alcohol at home. Providing it for a party they're at, etc.
Bottom line - states have made it very not worth an adult's while to provide alcohol to underage drinkers for very good reasons.
Give yourself a break. Don't take any chances. At this point, you have a whole lot more to lose than the kid does. Tell the kid to wait until they're legit to drink.
2006-07-21 07:42:18
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answer #3
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answered by sonofstar 5
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no!!!! i cannot stress that enough. the only way you can get in trouble is if A. the cop physically see you hand your id to the minor or B. you give the minor your information to go get their own id with their picture.
all you have to say is that you lost your license.
actually the people that get in trouble is the minor, the person that let them into the bar and the bar itself.
2006-07-23 18:46:02
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answer #4
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answered by bargirl_2323 4
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interior the U. S. each and every state has what are reported as dram keep rules. The regulation makes the bar proprietor strictly reliable. to that end, if someone were to attempt to make a wrongful lack of existence declare antagonistic to the bar proprietor, the fake identity might want to be grounds to safeguard this style of declare. the adaptation is that the regulation states the bar proprietor is legally responsible for serving a minor. however the minor, in a civil case, is responsible for his or her own moves.
2016-11-25 00:27:20
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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If you go about it the right way, no. I had my friends id, bartender took it. My friend would have been in deep **** had he not reported his wallet and id as lost. Because of that he wasnt even notified that it was found. He had long before recieved his new id and there were monthes between his reporting it lost and my first use
im in minnesota if it helps
2006-07-21 17:15:07
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answer #6
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answered by STURGIS 2
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I believe it's called Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor.
2006-07-21 08:52:01
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answer #7
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answered by midnightdealer 5
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How about jail time if the minor ends up intoxicated, in an accident and hurts someone else. Don't risk it, and I am sure there are other repercussions.
2006-07-21 07:44:06
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answer #8
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answered by squaw 1
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Yep! So don't risk going to jail over it! Make the kid wait til they're of legal age....or tell em to go use somebody elses ID! Tell em you're not goin down 4 them!!
2006-07-21 08:03:07
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answer #9
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answered by MiLuv 4
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It's called contributing to a minor.If you go before the judge he could be pretty hard on you for that one.You could do time for it and pay a fine.
2006-07-21 08:00:08
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answer #10
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answered by captainimij 3
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Yeah, I'm pretty sure you can get a ticket or something for it. Maybe even you liscence suspended. Don't do it.
2006-07-21 07:43:29
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answer #11
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answered by deb42278 2
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