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Can you summarize 14 LARS Chapter 1, Part III, Subpart D?
OFFENSES AGAINST PROPERTY > COMPUTER RELATED CRIME
Short Summary
These legal documents, part of the Louisiana Revised Statutes, cover various aspects of computer-related crimes and offenses against property. They define and provide penalties for offenses such as intellectual property destruction, unauthorized access to computer equipment or supplies, denial of computer user access, computer fraud, unauthorized use of a wireless router system, use of internet, virtual, street-level maps in criminal offenses, online impersonation, trespass against state computers, and unlawful deepfakes. The documents apply to individuals who commit these offenses and do not mention any specific exemptions. Penalties for non-compliance or violation of the provisions vary depending on the offense, ranging from fines of up to $500 to $10,000 and imprisonment for up to 6 months to 15 years, depending on the severity of the offense and the intention behind it.
Whom does it apply to?
Individuals who commit computer-related crimes, offenses against intellectual property, computer equipment or supplies, computer users, computer fraud, unauthorized use of a wireless router system, use internet, virtual, street-level maps in criminal offenses, online impersonation, offenses against property, trespass against state computers, unlawful deepfakes
What does it govern?
Computer-related crimes, offenses against intellectual property, computer equipment or supplies, computer users, computer fraud, unauthorized use of a wireless router system, use of internet, virtual, street-level maps in criminal offenses, online impersonation, offenses against property, trespass against state computers, unlawful deepfakes
What are exemptions?
The document does not mention any specific exemptions.
What are the Penalties?
Penalties for non-compliance or violation of the provisions vary depending on the offense. They range from fines of up to $500 to $10,000 and imprisonment for up to 6 months to 15 years, depending on the severity of the offense and the intention behind it.
Jurisdiction
Louisiana