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If a company (usually a dot com) sercretly paid a person to end up in a televised car chase with police wearing , let's say, a windbreaker or whatever with their company logo/trademark, like how boxers have temporary Golden Palace.com tattoos on the bare skin of their backs, how much trouble would the company get into?...assuming the person being chased or the whole event isn't obviously found as or blatantly advertising said company?
On the other hand, how much trouble will the lot get into if they were doing it on purpose? What charges can be brought, the severity, and to whom? Who goes to the slammer?

I think this has already been done by flashers at sporting events? at least I think so. What would happen if you posed the question to this situation?

2007-05-12 23:53:47 · 1 answers · asked by cpc26ca 1 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

1 answers

promoting illegal activity is a criminal offense, constitutes conspiracy (a felony) among a few other serious charges.

2007-05-13 00:03:43 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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