Difference between revisions of "Fraud"

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(Replaced content with 'Conservapedia is a fraud.')
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Conservapedia is a fraud.
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A '''fraud''' is a false representation of a matter of fact which is intended to deceive another.
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To prove fraud in court, a victim must prove each of the "five fingers of fraud":<ref>In re Mau, 293 B.R. 919, 923 (Bankr. C.D.Ill. 2003)</ref>
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# a person made a material false statement
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# he knew the statement was false
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# he intended to deceive the victim
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# the victim justifiably relied on the false statement
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# the victim was [[damage]]d
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==Other uses==
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In [[Medieval]] thought including [[Dante]]'s [[Divine Comedy]], fraud was a broad term used to describe any [[sin]] that involved the use of human intellect, including: [[seduction]], [[flattery]], [[simony]], [[magic|sorcery]], political [[corruption]] (or barratry), [[hypocrisy]], [[theft]], evil counsel, sundering, [[forgery]] and [[deceit]]. These sins were known as 'minor fraud'; 'major fraud' was another name for [[treachery]], which was considered to be the worst sin of all.
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==References==
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{{reflist}}
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{{DivineComedy}}
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[[Category:Legal Terms]]
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[[Category:Sin]]

Revision as of 18:28, April 17, 2010

A fraud is a false representation of a matter of fact which is intended to deceive another.

To prove fraud in court, a victim must prove each of the "five fingers of fraud":[1]

  1. a person made a material false statement
  2. he knew the statement was false
  3. he intended to deceive the victim
  4. the victim justifiably relied on the false statement
  5. the victim was damaged

Other uses

In Medieval thought including Dante's Divine Comedy, fraud was a broad term used to describe any sin that involved the use of human intellect, including: seduction, flattery, simony, sorcery, political corruption (or barratry), hypocrisy, theft, evil counsel, sundering, forgery and deceit. These sins were known as 'minor fraud'; 'major fraud' was another name for treachery, which was considered to be the worst sin of all.

References

  1. In re Mau, 293 B.R. 919, 923 (Bankr. C.D.Ill. 2003)