It's happened before. People have been charged. The police and DA didn't say there was *nothing* to charge on, just that they weren't sure what to charge with - big difference. The law expert didn't say that there was no criminal case available, just that the civil route was probably a better one to take (he's right). There *is* a criminal case available if they want to pursue it, of which forgery is one aspect.
For example:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/l ... st17m.html
My understanding of the law is fine. The fact you're continuing to harp on about claiming ownership despite being informed several times that it's irrelevant simply shows that you have no willingness to even research the issue. You've offered no rebuttal of any of the points I've made and instead beat your silly old ownership strawman each time I explain how it's wrong.Nichole Blackwell, 28, was charged with second-degree burglary, malicious mischief and criminal impersonation for allegedly posting an ad that read, "Moving out ... House being demolished. Come and take whatever you want, nothing is off limits," on the online classifieds Web site, according to charging documents from Pierce County Superior Court.
Dd