Yes, agreed.
I don't know how it could be any clearer that Cesar Saldivar does, in fact, have Texas Steel Conversion's property, and that he does not, in fact have that company's consent.
No, they did not. If they had, this would not be happening.
I didn't think I'd need to make an analogy, I thought it was too obvious, but I was wrong. Here you go:
What if, in handing the clerk at the grocery store a 5 dollar bill your ring slips off and into his hand? You ask for it back. He says no. He won't give it back. He never gives it back. He just keeps your ring for the rest of his life. Is he a thief?
Obviously and without a doubt he is a thief! He has committed the crime of theft. Theft is a crime, 69360. I consider it a crime, you consider it a crime, virtually everyone who believes in the concept of crime at all would place theft into the category of crime.
He is stealing it from them right now! It doesn't matter how the property came to be wrongfully in his possession. It really doesn't. A windstorm could have blown it onto his front yard. But it's not his and so he doesn't get to keep it. And he is intentionally keeping it, knowing it is not his, ignoring requests from its owner to return it. That's criminal. Just because the flood waters sweep the neighbor's Ferrari onto your lawn doesn't mean it is yours now.
It most certainly does matter how the money came into his possession because they charged him with the crime of theft. He didn't steal anything and I don't think he will be found criminally liable.
To successfully prosecute him for theft, they will have to prove that he took the money. He didn't take it, they gave it to him erroneously. You can't just say ex post facto he took it. Theft is the act of taking property with out consent. He didn't get possession of it through embezzlement or fraud either which is intentional deception. They gave it to him in error.
If they were smart, the correct action would be a civil suit for the return of their property.
We all know what the guy is doing and know it's wrong morally, but I don't think he'll be found guilty of theft.
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