Nevada Code § 205.370

Swindling; credit by false representations; defenses not available
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1. A person who, by false representations
of his or her own wealth, or mercantile correspondence and connections, obtains
a credit thereby and defrauds any person of money, goods, chattels or any
valuable thing, or if a person causes or procures another to report falsely of
his or her wealth or mercantile character, and by thus imposing upon any person
obtains credit and thereby fraudulently gets into the possession of goods, wares
or merchandise, or other valuable thing, is a swindler, and must be sentenced
to return the property fraudulently obtained, if it can be done, or to pay
restitution and shall be punished:
(a) Where the amount of money or the value of the
chattels, goods, wares or merchandise, or other valuable thing so obtained is
$1,200 or more, for a category D felony as provided in NRS 193.130 .
(b) Otherwise, for a misdemeanor.
2. In any prosecution for a violation of
this section, the State is not required to establish that all of the acts
constituting the crime occurred in this State or within a single city, county
or local jurisdiction of this State, and it is no defense that not all of the
acts constituting the crime occurred in this State or within a single city,
county or local jurisdiction of this State.

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