
#Vhs tape felony free
Now she is free to change her driver's license without fear of arrest over a borderline extinct medium of home video consumption. Failure to return a VHS tape to a rental store should never be a felony. Former Oklahoma resident Caron McBride, 52, says that she.
#Vhs tape felony movie
(The punishment for felony embezzlement in Oklahoma is a maximum of one year in jail, along with a fine of $1,000, plus restitution.) Thankfully, upon learning of the situation last week, the Cleveland County District Attorney decided to dismiss McBride’s case. A Texas woman was charged with a felony for not returning a VHS tape of 'Sabrina the Teenage Witch' that was rented over 20 years ago. Last month, we read about Caron McBride, of Texas, who discovered during a routine trip to adjust the name on her driver’s license that there was an outstanding felony warrant for her from Cleveland County owing to a VHS tape of Sabrina the Teenage Witch that wasn’t returned to Movie Place, in Norman, more than 20 years ago. The charges stated that McBride: Did willfully, unlawfully, and feloniously embezzle a certain (one) video cassette tape, sabrina the teenage witch, of the value of 58.59. According to court documents, McBride was charged in March 2000 for felony embezzlement of rented property.

The store that McBride supposedly rented the tape from closed years ago, but the warrant was still outstanding, which means she could have still faced a serious penalty. When no one returned the VHS cassette, charges were filed. She added “I didn't try to deceive anyone over Samantha (Sabrina) the Teenage Witch. Meanwhile, I'm a wanted felon for a VHS tape. I have never watched that show in my entire life, just not my cup of tea. He had two kids, daughters that were 8, 10 or 11 years old, and I'm thinking he went and got it and didn't take it back or something.

I had lived with a young man, this was over 20 years ago. McBride told Fox 25 she doesn’t remember renting the tape, much less not returning it - but she suspects this is what happened. A Texas woman recently learned she was charged with a felony after not returning a VHS tape for over 20 years, CBS Dallas/Fort Worth reports.Caron McBride, a former Oklahoma resident, faced a felony embezzlement charge for not returning 'Sabrina the Teenage Witch' to a movie rental store in Norman in 1999. According to Fox 25, McBride had been charged all the way back in March of 2000 with “embezzlement of rented property” over a VHS copy of Sabrina the Teenage Witch that she allegedly borrowed from the Movie Place video store in Norman, Oklahoma and never returned.
