OK so he left his dates to pay for the meal on eight different occasions but a potential sentence of 16+ years in prison?

https://ktvq.com/news/crime-watch/2018/ ... date-scam/
YES. This is exactly what I tell my friends to do.
I am not from USA, but this question is somehow a 'grey-zone'. Yes... or NO?
I spent quite a bit of time in Indonesia, where if you say, "Let's go to X restaurant' you pay for it. It makes perfect sense. This is a broken part of US culture. It's okay if you announce it and let people know up front they have to pay. But if suggest the venue (especially if it is expensive) then invite the other person to meet you there, you are the host and the other person is the guest. They can offer to pay, but the inviter should have the obligation.Yohan wrote: ↑September 23rd, 2018, 1:55 amIf I say to a person I met only online and who is living not far away from my place but I never met personally during internet-chat something like 'what about meeting face to face?' 'let's go to a restaurant for lunch or coffee shop' is this an 'invitation'? I think, it is an invitation.
That's fine, too. But socially uncomfortable. So unless you are unemployed or a poor student or something like that, inviting and paying makes more sense.I think, the best solution is to clear up this question BEFORE meeting personally, also in what price category this restaurant might be - and if we agree, we pay for our own consumption out of our own wallet, it should be also clearly said to the waiter to be aware to prepare 2 bills.
The type of women to avoid. I did pay for stuff when my wife and I were dating. She was a student and I was working overseas making more money as an English teacher than some middle level managers on local salaries were making after the monetary crisis. Prices were cheap. I knew she couldn't buy anything. I gave her money for stuff, too. But I volunteered, and she tried to decline, tried to get us to go to cheaper restaurants, suggested not talking on the phone too much so as not to run up my bill.Some women and not so few of them - despite they claim to be strong independent Western women - expect men to pay for everything while dating - it is not only about expensive dinner/shows, but also about offering some expensive gift when meeting the first time and pay for their taxi bill etc. etc. - and later on to pay for their student loans, ask for payment of travel expenses
I can think of a retort to that that I probably would not actually say, "Only a true prostitute would ask." Gold digger might be a better word.- I met a Western woman (long time ago, while I was still stupid) who was asking me to buy her a private horse - a true gentleman who likes her would not hesitate to do so, she told me....
I believe the man has a responsibility to be the provider in marriage. I dated women who had lower income than I did-- students and women working on developing-world salaries. So I did not mind paying. If a woman is looking for a traditional arrangement-- which could come with other benefits (that she believes in submitting to and respecting her man), she may expect the man to pay. If you are looking for someone to marry and submission and respect comes with the package, paying may be a fair trade-off. Sharing the bills implies egalitarianism, 'equality'. IMO, women are happier, calmer, and easier to get along with in the marriage relationship when they accept that the man is in charge and worthy of respect. The girl looking for that arrangement may be disappointed with splitting the bills. That is rarer in Europe than in some other regions of the world, I suppose.Note: WARNING! If you pay one time for HER, she expects you to pay from that moment on for all and everything what she is asking for....this is the lesson I learnt quickly...while living still in Europe and not in Northern America.