pch101
New member
Let me give you this example. A guy goes to a hit man to put a hit on his wife. The hit man is not who he says he is, he is an undercover cop. Obviously, the contract is no good and it is not really going to happen, but the bad guy does not know that and for all he knows his wife is going to be taken out. If what you are saying is true then the guy should not be held responsible because the cop lied about who he is. The fact is that in his mind he was putting a hit on his wife, and that is what matters. The reality that it was never going to happen does not clear him. The fact that Mark broke a contract and tried to change it for more money on a guy that for all he knew at the time was a great guy is very relevant.
In my opinion it is actually irrelevant (in regard to Mark's guilt) that Tony is an alias, as Mark did not know it at the time when he tried to change the deal, giving him no real reason to do so. The fact that it turned out that Tony is an alias was just dumb (and I mean dumb) luck on Mark's part. It makes him look better and removes him from the spotlight, but it really should not. It does not change mark's intent in the past. However, I do agree with you that they are both toilet bait.
In my opinion it is actually irrelevant (in regard to Mark's guilt) that Tony is an alias, as Mark did not know it at the time when he tried to change the deal, giving him no real reason to do so. The fact that it turned out that Tony is an alias was just dumb (and I mean dumb) luck on Mark's part. It makes him look better and removes him from the spotlight, but it really should not. It does not change mark's intent in the past. However, I do agree with you that they are both toilet bait.