Hector1S
I still have a doubt: The son of a gun that burned my dinner deserves to be punished.
Can that refer to the son- who is a person? Shouldn't we use who here instead of that to refer to a person?
Mike20201
GMATNinjaCould you elucidate, why do you employ pronoun that referring to human being ?
The son of a gun
that burned my dinner deserves to be punished.
You could certainly argue that "who" would be better than "that" in this case, though there is no ironclad rule against the example above.
But if that one bothers you, here's a (hopefully) less controversial example to make the same point

:
"A carton of cigarettes that was found near the crime scene contains incriminating DNA evidence."
The "that" clause reaches behind the prepositional phrase to modify "carton." As described above, this is a perfectly acceptable exception to the “touch rule.”
IN2MBB2PE
I am a Bengali and I loved this example -
"Charlie is obsessed with Neerob, a Bengali eatery in the Bronx, because that restaurant’s shrimp dopeaja is consistently amazing"
This compliments your diverse thought process, thanks
GMATNinjaThank you so much,
IN2MBB2PE! It always makes me happy when somebody appreciates the food references.