#1: Don't seek "legal" advice on a hooker board (or any other "board").
#2: Plano may be a little thin on lawyers handling internet problems, but more importantly small communities are not good places to reveal "secrets" even to a lawyer.
Use your internet resourcefulness to find an attorney nearby or within decent driving distance to meet, but outside your community, who indicates in their back ground they have internet (IT) experience/slander, etc., and even some criminal practice background. State Bar of Texas is the place to begin.
Oh .. until you have a heart-to-heart with a real lawyer ... I'd stay off the site or any others similar.
Originally Posted by LexusLover
The irony is strong here, since you're giving legal advice on a hooker board -- which you tell the OP not to rely on.
Well, you're right, at least where your bad advice is concerned. The OP's problem isn't an "Internet problem" and has nothing to do with slander. If the blackmailer called him on the phone, would you say the OP has a "phone problem"? The Internet was merely one means of conveyance of communications between the blackmailer and the victim. Also, the OP's problem doesn't sound in slander. Slander is oral communication of false information that could injure the target. Presumably, the blackmailer would convey the written conversations between the blackmailer and the OP to the OP's wife. That would have nothing whatsoever to do with oral communications or false information.
In reality, the OP's issue, under Texas law, is the blackmailer's attempted theft, because that is how the Texas Penal Code characterizes extortion/blackmail.
You advise the OP to contact the State Bar of Texas to try to find a lawyer who specializes in "Internet problems," slander, and who has some criminal background. Again, awful advice. I'd advise the OP to find a criminal lawyer recommended to him by a family member or trusted friend. It wouldn't matter if the lawyer was based in Plano. Attorneys have a duty of client confidentiality and could be disbarred for violating that duty.
I would venture to guess you're an IT geek which means, ipso facto, you consider yourself an amateur lawyer. You're not. You're an IT geek. If you forbear giving [bad] legal advice, I won't try to fix your eWhatever.