Friday 11 January 2013

How a notification or a post on Facebook can lead you to jail.


How a notification or a post on Facebook can lead you to jail. Read about the criminals who were betrayed by their actions on Facebook 


How a notification or a post on Facebook can lead you to jail. A few days ago an 18 year old was in jail with Facebook confessed that he was driving drunk! The Jacob Cox - Brown from Astoria was drunk and crashed his car parked vehicle.


Instead of leaving a note with the details, preferring to go home and house to share the "achievement" of the 665 fans in the popular social media.


Several hours later, police knocked on the door of Jacob and unsurprisingly, they arrested him. The 18 year old was taken to prison, whence came paying warranty.

How a notification or a post on Facebook can lead you to jail. 

Below is an indicative list of the "whiz" thugs who wanted to share their accomplishments on Facebook and their personal pages and found themselves behind the bars of a prison.


1. Attention to "check in"


The Chris Crego was arrested in 2009 after a fight in a bar during which thrash one of the regulars. Initially evaded arrest, but a few hours after he was caught in the caliper of the law.


The police identified him through his profile on Facebook, since Crego had managed to fight the next day, doing "check in" to the company that employs him, betraying its exact position.


The icing on the cake is that page sent the photo that depicts him as a fugitive.


2. The petrol thief



This is exactly what 22-year old Michael Baker. For unknown reasons, decided to notify a snapshot of the moment of action.


The protagonist of the story, he went to the local police station Jenkins U.S. stole gasoline from parked patrol car, put the glued to immortalize him and raised the achievement of the social network. Then he wrote. "Yes, I went to prison through Facebook". Pride.



3. They set traps to ... themselves



Two men were arrested in April 2012 because "planted" medieval-style deadly traps along a hiking trail near Provo, Utah.


The Benjamin Rutkowski and Kai Christensen, rushed to "move up" their act, where else? In Facebook of course. Then said that traps designed to kill animals and not humans.



4. Why should you ALWAYS Log Out



A woman in Martinsburg returned home and discovered that two valuable rings had made ​​wings. He also noticed that someone had entered his Facebook by computer. The forgetful robber, had failed to disconnect from their profile.


The 19 year old Jonathan Parker was diagnosed with summarily and rings returned to their owner's hands.



5. The blunder of the year



And his name, Rodney Knight Jr. Location, Washington, DC The Rodney decided one day to invade the home of journalist Washington Post, Marc Fisher and stealing a coat, cash and a laptop.


Then took pictures with the loot, he entered his personal Facebook account and upload for to see his friends. A few hours later, delivered into the hands of the law. The head of the police headquarters said. "This is the most stupid criminal I've ever encountered."



6. 33 months in prison for a "share".



Or rather, the Yucatán blues. The Maxi Sopo was feeling really great after repeated robberies he had committed.


Logical, since he had managed to "raise" overall, $ 200,000 from banks. After his success, he said to celebrate with a trip to Cancun located on the shoreline of Yucatán in Mexico.


The mistake is that one notified the fun place in the list of friends on Facebook and also that between them, had unintentionally add a former police officer who spotted and reported the incident to the department.