English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am asking this question on my friend's behalf who is too afraid to ask on yahoo answers. Basically, he fell in love with this 'callgirl' he met. So what he did was go online and try to create an account for her on Nextel so he can see who she calls etc which is a very bad case of stalkish behavior which he regrets now because he doesnt love her anymore.
The redeeming fact is that when you try to create an account, they ask for account number which he did not have so thankfully he could not see any of her info ANYWAY!!
1) He just wants to know if he can close the account completely or just let it be as no one is going to use it anyway? He says the hooker doesnt have a computer.
2) Should he call Nextel and inform them to close the account - again which is only half-created with mainly his email? Or will he get in trouble if he calls them?
Anyone please answer this - what is the best thing to do in this situation. He wants to stay legal.
Thanks.

2006-10-14 06:17:19 · 6 answers · asked by Shah 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

She doesnt know anything about the account or any of this. If he calls Nextel to close the online account, will they call HER?

If he closes the email account, everything will be ok?

2006-10-14 06:29:10 · update #1

6 answers

Your friend needs to focus on his homework.

2006-10-14 06:25:45 · answer #1 · answered by Bullwinkle Moose 6 · 0 0

2

2016-08-09 03:51:22 · answer #2 · answered by Pierre 3 · 0 0

I know someone that did this also.
Tell your friend to go back online to the account, change the email address to any screenname & new email address & have it sent to webtv.net. Example-nextelnosy1@webtv.net

Next change the password before he changes the address. It'd take an act of God to find who orginated it without spending money & getting a lawyer involved which they'd need (owner of the nextel phone # & account). This I know from an extra marital affair/couple married/ & did have to have a lawyer to get the records & prosecute, then court costs,etc. Cost would start at $1500 upfront to start, then more $$$ for atty to get it rolling.
Do not call nextel...do as above & move on.

2006-10-14 06:29:52 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If he wants to 'stay legal' he should take action immediately. If something were to go wrong, and get out of hand..and they catch up with him; he'll be in worse trouble than he ever thought possible.
He's better off to bite the bullet and be up front. You say he created the account FOR her. Is it safe to assume all the information given by him relates to him and him only? If she doesn't have password authority or whatever, I really don't se how it could be a problem for him. He could always inform Nextel that the email account is his, and doesn't wish to have it involved in anything OR he can simply close that email account and open a new one.

2006-10-14 06:25:02 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

He's probably legal now, but the best thing to do is call Nextel and cancel the account. Just have him tell them that he had a change of mind and really does not want the account. It IS legal to change your mind, and Nextel does not want to carry any accounts that will never be used.

2006-10-14 06:30:27 · answer #5 · answered by gabriel3791 3 · 0 0

Hmmm... how do you think of the police get notified to come back to an emergency whilst 911 is dialed? Do you extremely think of that policemen nevertheless use radio as their considerable style of verbal substitute? i do no longer mean to offend you, yet that become a stupid question. They get specific coaching to deal with the numerous better distractions they must manage on the same time as driving.

2016-10-19 09:35:47 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers