RandomPoster
Platinum Member
- May 22, 2017
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Imagine you were dying and you didn't want anyone to know. You pay a lawyer to mail letters you have already written at specific dates from various specified locations. You make sure no one will find your body. Then, once a year or so, your lawyer mails a letter to various people, sometimes government institutions. You give him a list of locations to mail from and they are all different. The letters and envelopes all have your fingerprints on them. Your lawyer agrees to wear gloves when he handles them, so they can not track him down. He has to leave them in post office boxes at scattered locations where there are not likely to be cameras.
This way, no one can prove you are dead and they can not collect life insurance. Could it work? If the lawyer never said you were alive, would he be breaking any law if you never specifically told him why you were doing it or what was in the letters?
This way, no one can prove you are dead and they can not collect life insurance. Could it work? If the lawyer never said you were alive, would he be breaking any law if you never specifically told him why you were doing it or what was in the letters?