Plain-Language Summary

This section of Pennsylvania law addresses financial misconduct and fraudulent activities, including receiving deposits in failing institutions, misapplication of entrusted property, deception in securing documents, and impersonation for unauthorized access. It establishes penalties for these offenses, primarily as misdemeanors, with specific provisions for each type of misconduct.

Frequently Asked Questions

It involves accepting deposits when the institution is about to suspend operations or go into receivership, without the depositor knowing about the institution's precarious financial situation.

Misapplication of entrusted property is a second-degree misdemeanor if the amount exceeds $50; otherwise, it is a third-degree misdemeanor.

It refers to causing someone to execute a document through deceptive means, which is classified as a second-degree misdemeanor.

Falsely impersonating someone to gain access to premises is a second-degree misdemeanor under Pennsylvania law.