Jones is right. The woman is an idiot, no two ways about that, but the cable company had already assumed responciblity for her personal information when she opened her account. If an officer of the company was tickled and wanted share the image of the check outside the company, then that employee was oblidged to distort the personal information. That's just common sense, not that the woman who sent the check had any, but that's beside the point. After ten years of litigation, the courts might pay her and her lawyer enough to cover their respective cable bills. Unless they're into Pay-Per-View, in that case, there's nothing in the world that can help them.
Unfortunately, the woman can't be prosecuted for fraud. No court would assume anybody would take that check for anything but a joke. Just the same, I'd like to see the cable company collect.