🛡️ Juvenile Crimes & Federal Consequences Series *coming soon
Course overview
Lesson Overview

14.11 – Using a Phone or App to Distribute = Felony: Using your phone, apps, or social media to sell, plan, or arrange drug deals counts as distribution. The law treats it as using communication technology to commit a crime, which upgrades it to a felony. Even texting about prices or meeting spots can be used as proof. Police track digital evidence through messages, photos, and GPS data. They can also trace money transfers or app activity. Federal law views the internet and phones as tools of interstate commerce, which means bigger penalties. Deleting messages doesn’t erase your record from service providers. Once traced, every message becomes part of your case. Understanding this helps people realize how quickly online talk can turn into real legal trouble.

About this course

Understand how juvenile crimes can lead to serious, long-term consequences—especially when federal laws are involved. This series educates teens on what actions cross the line and how to avoid life-altering mistakes.

This course includes:
  • Real-world case studies of juvenile and federal crimes
  • Step-by-step breakdowns of legal procedures and sentencing outcomes
  • Expert guidance on rights, legal terms, and defense options for minors
  • Prevention strategies to avoid life-changing legal mistakes
  • Interactive scenarios and reflection prompts to build critical thinking and self-awareness Ask ChatGPT

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