South Carolina — Statute

16-17-640 – 16-17-640 | South Carolina Law

Learn about South Carolina's 16-17-640 law, including definitions, penalties, and legal implications.

Legal Content
South Carolina State Law

16-17-640 – 16-17-640

South Carolina Code of Laws § 16-17-640

Summary
SECTION 16-17-640. Blackmail. Any person who verbally or by printing or writing or by electronic communications: (1) accuses another of a crime or offense; (2) exposes or publishes any of another's personal or business acts, infirmities, or failings; or (3) compels any person to do any act, or to refrain from doing any lawful act, against his will; with intent to extort money or any other thing of value from any person, or attempts or threatens to do any of such acts, with the intent to extort m
Frequently Asked Questions

Free Case Report

If you were charged or stopped by police, this report helps you understand what may happen next, in plain English. General info only. Not legal advice.

Common Questions

No. This is general information to help you understand what may happen next.

It depends on your facts and local rules. Uploading documents can improve accuracy.

For most criminal charges, the safest next step is to talk to a local attorney.

Citations, arrest reports, court notices, and any test results or paperwork you received.

Why Attorneys Choose FlawFinder

Side-by-side with Westlaw and LexisNexis

FeatureWestlawLexisNexis
Monthly price$19 - $99$133 - $646$153 - $399
ContractNone1-3 year min1-6 year min
Hidden fees$0, alwaysUp to $469/search$25/mo + per-doc
Police SOPs✓ 310+ departments
Zero-hallucination AI✓ CitationGuard
CancelOne clickTermination feesNo option to cancel
Explain Like I'm 5

In simple terms: Learn about South Carolina's 16-17-640 law, including definitions, penalties, and legal implications.. This means people must follow this rule, and breaking it can lead to criminal penalties.

FlawFinder provides legal information, not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney for specific legal guidance.