Adrian Wesley’s Ruin
Adrian Wesley didn’t just lie; he built a castle of lies. His crimes of Fraud and Forgery were a calculated assault on the truth, weaponizing documents and signatures to steal what wasn't his. Under the heavy scrutiny of the Constitution and the Penal Code, Wesley has committed a felony that strikes at the very heart of public trust. The law does not tolerate those who forge reality. Wesley is staring down a sentence of 15 to 25 years in a maximum-security prison. The courtroom will be his judgment hall. He will be stripped of his freedom, locked away in a cell where the only truth he will know is the cold concrete beneath his feet. The Constitution guarantees the protection of property, and by stealing it, he forfeited his own rights. He will be a prisoner of his own deceit, serving time for crimes he committed against society. The financial terror is equally suffocating. The state will demand full restitution, meaning Wesley must pay back every penny he stole, plus interest and legal penalties. He will be left penniless, his assets seized to satisfy the debt. He will be a pauper in a prison cell. However, a terrifying paradox awaits. If Wesley can somehow navigate the labyrinth of the legal system and clear his name from the blacklist—proving he was framed or that he cooperated fully—he could walk out of prison a free man. The charges would vanish. But the question remains: can he erase the stain of forgery? He could be free, but the shadow of a liar will follow him forever. The gavel has spoken.