...she unwittingly made false statements on loan applications to buy two Florida vacation homes...
Originally Posted by VitaMan
Let's check out "
unwittingly" right quick:
unwittingly (adv)
From the Oxford: without being aware of what you are doing or the situation that you are involved in
From Vocabulary:
When you do something unwittingly, you don't do it on purpose. It's completely accidental or unintentional, like when you unwittingly offended the Queen by not curtseying properly.
And now... the smell test:
While earning a $250K salary, she withdrew ~$40K from her retirement account through a loophole in the CARES act, to purchase a rental property on the coast of Florida and claimed it was to be a second home, as opposed to a money making business and falsely claimed she was a first time home buyer to get another loophole benefit of a lower interest rate - all while owing the IRS almost $50K in back taxes - and then, in a rinse and repeat operation, purchased another rental property.
Could just be me, but uhhmm... I ain't seeing that fit the above definitions of "unwittingly". Seems a better fit for words like: calculated, intentional, entitled, corrupt, fraudulent and so on. Hence the guilty verdict.
Additional explanation from Vocabulary: If you know exactly what you're doing, you're not doing it unwittingly; you're doing it intentionally. This adverb comes from unwitting and its Old English root unwitende, "ignorant." Wit means "knowledge," so if you do something unwittingly, you act without knowledge...
Fails the stink test bigly