My question involves criminal law for the state of: Virginia
Here's the deal:
I am a 38 year old guy, old enough to be a teenager's parent.
I have been temporarily out of work for the past month due to a fire at my workplace we are projected to be able to return to work the week after Thanksgiving.
As a result, I have been looking for day gigs on craigslist such as moving help, drywall etc to gain a little extra money to hold me over so I don't have to draw from savings. I was looking today and I came across a kind of a post that I wasn't expecting. It was offering $200 for a light skinned caucasion old eough to be a 16 year old's parent who is willing to play a fake parent for a meeting, and was vague other than that.
I emailed the poster, and he replied with the following details:
1. He is a high school junior, 16 going on 17, and has a car and a part time job.
2. This coming Tuesday is a student holiday and a parent teacher conference day at his school. He described the process at his school. No appointment neccesary, meetings are held in the teachers classroom, and any parent who wants to meet with any of their kids teachers simply shows up at that teachers classroom and a 15 minute conference is held on a first come first serve basis.
3. The kid has not been doing his math homework, although his test scores are high so he expects to still have a decent grade on his report card. His math teacher this past week asked him if his parents will be attending conference day, and the kid lied and said yes. His teacher then informed him that the upcoming conference day is the only reason she hasn't called home about him. So the kid knows that if his parents don't show up, his math teacher will call home and he will likely lose car priveleges.
That's where I come in.
On tuesday around 10am, he wants to meet me in the school parking lot. He pays me $100 up front. Then we go into the school together and go to the classroom. I introduce myself using whatever alias he wants me to use, claiming to be the dad.
And I meet with his teacher, hear her complaints, and tell the kid I am disapointed in him and assure the math teacher that consequences will be enforced at home.
Then we exit the building, he gives me the other $100, and we part company. The teacher is satisfied, the kids parents don't find out, I made the easiest $200 I ever made, and the beat goes on.
1. Could I get into any legal trouble for this?
2. If so, is there any way I could realistically be caught? Afterall, how does the teacher know I'm not his dad?
Here's the deal:
I am a 38 year old guy, old enough to be a teenager's parent.
I have been temporarily out of work for the past month due to a fire at my workplace we are projected to be able to return to work the week after Thanksgiving.
As a result, I have been looking for day gigs on craigslist such as moving help, drywall etc to gain a little extra money to hold me over so I don't have to draw from savings. I was looking today and I came across a kind of a post that I wasn't expecting. It was offering $200 for a light skinned caucasion old eough to be a 16 year old's parent who is willing to play a fake parent for a meeting, and was vague other than that.
I emailed the poster, and he replied with the following details:
1. He is a high school junior, 16 going on 17, and has a car and a part time job.
2. This coming Tuesday is a student holiday and a parent teacher conference day at his school. He described the process at his school. No appointment neccesary, meetings are held in the teachers classroom, and any parent who wants to meet with any of their kids teachers simply shows up at that teachers classroom and a 15 minute conference is held on a first come first serve basis.
3. The kid has not been doing his math homework, although his test scores are high so he expects to still have a decent grade on his report card. His math teacher this past week asked him if his parents will be attending conference day, and the kid lied and said yes. His teacher then informed him that the upcoming conference day is the only reason she hasn't called home about him. So the kid knows that if his parents don't show up, his math teacher will call home and he will likely lose car priveleges.
That's where I come in.
On tuesday around 10am, he wants to meet me in the school parking lot. He pays me $100 up front. Then we go into the school together and go to the classroom. I introduce myself using whatever alias he wants me to use, claiming to be the dad.
And I meet with his teacher, hear her complaints, and tell the kid I am disapointed in him and assure the math teacher that consequences will be enforced at home.
Then we exit the building, he gives me the other $100, and we part company. The teacher is satisfied, the kids parents don't find out, I made the easiest $200 I ever made, and the beat goes on.
1. Could I get into any legal trouble for this?
2. If so, is there any way I could realistically be caught? Afterall, how does the teacher know I'm not his dad?
Posing As a Minor's Parent for a School Meeting
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