Although  there’s been a lot of discussion about the potential for criminal  prosecutions arising from online impersonation, New Jersey is one of the  first states to see an actual prosecution for identity theft on social  media. The lucky winner is Dana Thornton, a somewhat unbalanced-seeming  41-year-old woman from Bellville, NJ, who is accused of creating a fake  Facebook page to defame her ex-boyfriend.
And  defame she did, if the accusations are true: apparently Thornton used  photos and personal information about her ex-boyfriend, a narcotics  detective from northern New Jersey, to create a Facebook page where she  then posted extremely unflattering statements supposedly made by the man  himself. For example, the profile proclaimed that the individual in  question liked to spend money on prostitutes, had herpes, was “high all  the time,” and summed it all up with this sweeping self-indictment: “I’m  a sick piece of scum with a gun.” As there’s no leniency for catchy  turns of phrase, Thornton faces up to 18 months for fourth-degree  identity theft, “for the purpose of obtaining a benefit for himself or  another or to injure or defraud another.”
While  this might strike the casual observer as just another colorful slice of  New Jersey life, the court case is actually important because of a  decision already rendered by the court -- specifically, the ruling that  the case can proceed under existing identity theft law, even though the  statute doesn’t specifically include electronic media as one of the  venues where identity theft may occur.
State  Superior Court Judge David Ironson brushed off an argument to that  effect from Thornton’s lawyer, who said that the case should be  dismissed because the statute didn’t mention electronic media. In his  ruling Ironson wrote: “The  fact that the means of committing the crime are not set forth in the  statute doesn't lead to the conclusion that the defendant didn't commit  the crime.” The  NJ legislature is currently considering amending the identity theft  statute to explicitly include electronic media. Currently only New York  and California have laws explicitly banning online identity theft.
by Erik Sass,
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