Since she used the money from the bank robbery to buy the book with the clues leading to the buried money, would it be a crime for her to purchase the book with stolen money?
A friend of mine was adopted by an old street cat that just walked into their house one day and settled in. Their 20 something son moved back to the area and stayed with them for a while and brought his puppy with him. The dog was less than a year old but was still about 2 or 3 times as large as the cat and one day he decided he wanted to play and tried to get the cat to join him when the cat just wanted to sleep. When the cat was done with the dog he never tried to get the cat to join in with a romp again.
I use to watch “Forged in Fire” on the history channel but when my cable was more than I could afford on my fixed income I switched to fire TV and ended up buying every season on prime video.
I remember watching an episode of Rumpole of the Bailey once where the host explained that British attorneys weren’t allowed to charge their clients. Instead they would have a pocket sown in the back of their robe and the client would put their payment for services in the pocket. Apparently modern attorneys no longer follow that rule but they still have the pocket in their robes out of tradition. Maybe the judge had one of those pockets in his robes.
I was staring thoughtfully out the bus window, thinking about a story I was writing, when the guy across from me jumped up and started screaming for me to stop staring at him. I was so caught up in my story plans that I didn’t even realize he was screaming at me for several seconds.
Since she used the money from the bank robbery to buy the book with the clues leading to the buried money, would it be a crime for her to purchase the book with stolen money?