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

Especially if this was after-hours and it was just sitting there on the dock??

2006-10-22 15:40:04 · 14 answers · asked by physical_graffiti402 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

14 answers

Yes, just as it is illegal to take something out of a dumpster. You know it is not yours therefore; it is not yours to take.

2006-10-22 15:43:32 · answer #1 · answered by 75160 4 · 0 0

Ok there is whats called the "Letter of the Law" and the "Spirit of the Law"

By the Spirit of the Law...If you truly needed the item and you have no money, then it was not "unlawful" to take it. You are in need.

By the Letter of the Law... It gets fuzzy... You are allowed to take items that are thrown out for trash. In this case it was also probably Unlawful to dump items after hours. So in that case you had a right to take them. You were basicly cleaning up unlawfully dumped items.

It usually not stealing unless the item is in someone elses possession or is considered under someones possession. In this case you have a good cause for "whos possession was the item in". It may be the case that the item was under no ones possession since it was illegally dumped and no one as of yet had claimed it.

I wouldnt worry about it.

2006-10-22 15:54:01 · answer #2 · answered by calcdffirefighter 3 · 0 0

Yes it is theft. But more importantly is it is morally wrong. You are taking things that Goodwill needs to continue it's worthwhile operation. This places the work and income of the handicapped persons that work there in jeopardy.

2006-10-22 15:58:56 · answer #3 · answered by Ranger473 4 · 0 0

Yes,it is illegal. If you read the signs at the drop off site, it says that taking things from there is against the law.

2006-10-22 15:42:24 · answer #4 · answered by moma 5 · 2 0

The purpose of a nonprofit is to help their challenge by ability of the technique of elevating sales in course of this end. Goodwill maintains an internet site, to promote products that they sense does no longer promote at a "solid fee" of their shops. it is smart! the buyer remains getting an outstanding fee on the article, and Goodwill is making as a lot money as they could be able to, to help their challenge. Goodwill does no longer be ready to get $one hundred sixty 5,000 for a portray of their shops -- and doing so might want to possibility robbery or damage to the portray. also, an merchandise as valuable because the portray you element out, needs authentication of its fee, for tax applications. it would want to be no longer conceivable to music the fee of the portray (for the donor's tax use), if the portray replaced into bought to an nameless shopper, in a Goodwill shop. verify out Goodwill's public sale website on the link below! For those of you who imagine that volunteers and team have become the "solid stuff", before it is bought on the sales floor, i'm right here to inform you that maximum of those shops have guidelines for instantaneous termination for robbery, and guidelines for paying for. In our nonprofit thrift shop (the single I take care of), volunteers and team are in a position to make a purchase order, on the conventional fee, minus their lower price, if the article replaced into already on the sales floor and accessible to the buyer first. otherwise, the article is priced, and the volunteer or team might want to pay finished fee for the article.

2016-12-05 03:11:19 · answer #5 · answered by samrov 4 · 0 0

if you are not poor or need, then YES you are stealing. would u walk into a thrift shop and just take? it;s the same thing.

Stealing in the Criminal Code of Queensland, Australia where i live is defined as unlawfully taing the property of another.

If you are poor or needy, then it mite b ok, coz the clothes or watever would eventually get back to u anyway.

2006-10-22 15:43:19 · answer #6 · answered by emo garrett 2 · 0 1

Yes, if a store keeps a rocking chair or a cute sign on their front porch is it okay to take those? Or how about your yard...if your kid leaves his bike out front all night is it okay for someone to come by and take it?

2006-10-22 15:43:44 · answer #7 · answered by Tertia 2 · 0 0

Yes....since this is considered a charity item/location/store....to steal from it call fall under fedaral theft laws.

If not mistaken....its automatically a felony theft.

2006-10-22 15:48:31 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

UM YES! It considered theft no matter what.

2006-10-22 15:47:56 · answer #9 · answered by mysticrelation 2 · 0 0

Not if you chuck a couple of bucks into the bin.

2006-10-22 15:42:26 · answer #10 · answered by Wally Five-O 2 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers