US woman faces jail time for tagging sister-in-law on Facebook
Maria Gonzalez was barred from contacting her sister-in-law under a protection order
A woman in the United States is facing jail time for tagging her sister-in-law in a Facebook post.
According to media reports, Maria Gonzalez, who was restricted under a protection order from contacting her sister-in-law Maribel Calderon, was arrested after she reportedly created a post on Facebook calling Calderon “stupid”. Gonzalez even tagged her sister-in-law in that post.
She is being prosecuted now for second-degree criminal contempt as US Acting Westchester County Supreme Court Justice Susan Capeci ruled that the Facebook post Gonzalez create could be considered as an electronic communication.
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Rejecting the Gonzalez's court-appointed attorney Kim Frohlinger’s argument that the protection order did not specifically exclude communication via Facebook, the judge maintained that she was under protection order which restricts the person from having communication “by electronic or any other means”.
The ruling could lead to a sentence of one-year jail for Gonzalez, which her attorney said she would not appeal against.
Man jailed for 13 years for Facebook 'hate speech'
"You and your family are sad...You guys have to come stronger than that!! I'm way over you guys but I guess not in ya agenda," Gonzalez wrote last on her Facebook.
The article originally appeared in NDTV
According to media reports, Maria Gonzalez, who was restricted under a protection order from contacting her sister-in-law Maribel Calderon, was arrested after she reportedly created a post on Facebook calling Calderon “stupid”. Gonzalez even tagged her sister-in-law in that post.
She is being prosecuted now for second-degree criminal contempt as US Acting Westchester County Supreme Court Justice Susan Capeci ruled that the Facebook post Gonzalez create could be considered as an electronic communication.
Man arrested in Karachi for blackmailing girl on Facebook
Rejecting the Gonzalez's court-appointed attorney Kim Frohlinger’s argument that the protection order did not specifically exclude communication via Facebook, the judge maintained that she was under protection order which restricts the person from having communication “by electronic or any other means”.
The ruling could lead to a sentence of one-year jail for Gonzalez, which her attorney said she would not appeal against.
Man jailed for 13 years for Facebook 'hate speech'
"You and your family are sad...You guys have to come stronger than that!! I'm way over you guys but I guess not in ya agenda," Gonzalez wrote last on her Facebook.
The article originally appeared in NDTV