Legal Question in Banking Law in Wisconsin
Intentionally writing a worthless check is a crime if the check was not postdated or not given for a past consideration (except a payroll check)
1 Answer from Attorneys
Not quite sure what you are asking here, but criminal prosecutions for issuance of a worthless check require proof of intent to defraud. There is a good argument that post dating a check places the recipient on notice that it is not good at the moment it is presented, but will become good by the future date. However, this is not to say that post dated checks could not still play a rule in fraudulent scheming, which is always illegal.
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