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Max and Paddy
04 Aug 10 17:00
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Date Joined: 06 Feb 04
| Topic/replies: 10,549 | Blogger: Max and Paddy's blog
If you were in dispute with your business partner, and he sent you an email that said:

"Taking me to court might cause your family some pain."

Would you think that was a "trivial matter"?

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Replies: 7
By:
uncle ho
When: 04 Aug 10 17:02
is he violent or vindictive?
By:
Max and Paddy
When: 04 Aug 10 17:03
It doesn't matter.

As it is, I don't know anything about the two parties involved - but what do you think about that comment?
By:
uncle ho
When: 04 Aug 10 17:06
I think he is being intimidating, but has plausible deniability ie, it may cause your family financial pain. Sounds a lovely person
By:
Ukmalllia
When: 04 Aug 10 17:14
It depends on who it is who sent it, they could claim they mean "pain" from a financial perspective or something else.

Tricky one.
By:
lisbethsalander
When: 04 Aug 10 17:16
Thin veiled threat - court would be interested by it's entry as evidence
By:
Max and Paddy
When: 04 Aug 10 17:25
Surely it doesn't matter why it was sent. Is it a "trivial matter"?
By:
hippie
When: 04 Aug 10 17:30
It's fantastic ammunition for the receiver of the email.

Yes, it's trivial. The sender is panicking. It's obviously not a physical threat. Who would be mug enough to threaten someones family by email?
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