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3 commentsThursday, March 20, 2008

Facebook Prince Faker Pardoned In Morocco

Shenanigans earned jokester 3 year jail sentence
The young man who created a fake Facebook profile and presented himself as a prince received a present on Aid Mawlid Nabaoui, the holiday marking the birth of the Prophet Mohammed.

Fouad Mourtada's cheeky prank on Facebook, where he pretended to be Moroccan Prince Mourlay Rachid, answered the question of what such chicanery is worth: three years in jail and a $1,300 fine.

The sentence brought plenty of criticism to Casablanca. Fortunately for Mourtada, King Mohammed VI made Mourtada one of 566 royal pardons and freed him from prison, according to CNN.

Mourtada's gag would have been unnoticed in many parts of the world. The mind boggles at the idea of every President Bush parody site publisher being imprisoned for a similar offense, for example.

The Telegraph cited Mourtada's testimony that he intended no harm toward the prince. "I admire him, I like him a lot and I have never caused him any wrong, it was just a joke. I am innocent," he said at his trial.

Reporters Without Borders criticized the February 22 sentencing, and expressed relief at the royal pardon. "Nonetheless, we regret that his release is the result of a royal pardon rather than a fair verdict and sentence. Moroccan bloggers will not be able to forget his imprisonment when they compose their blog entries," the group said.

Let the sentence stand as a warning for posting fake websites

The sentence may have been harsh, but, I'm glad that they are finally starting to punish people who place fake, harmful posts, websites claiming to be someone else. The guy in Italy who got sentenced to two and a half years for posting nude photos and negative information about his ex-girlfriend is also a good idea.

There are too many "sick and twisted" individuals placing disgusting photos, and/or statments on a website to "get even" with an ex lover, boss, friend etc. And, unfortunately, plenty of morons around who will believe anything negative as long as it's not about them.

Make people accountable via jail time and court judgments and you'll see how quickly these photos and websites disappear.

 

fake websites

banning would be the thin end of the wedge. The right to freedom of speech

should come first. All that would happen is this sort of stuff would still be published and worse Anonomusly.

The answer is the courts & in none third world countrys sueing for libel with

very large damages according to persons income,& damage caused

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