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Property Crimes

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Chapter 11 Property Crimes A Brief History of Theft Economic crimes: acts in violation of the criminal law designed to bring financial reward Skilled thieves ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Property Crimes


1
Chapter 11
Property Crimes
2
A Brief History of Theft
  • Economic crimes acts in violation of the
    criminal law designed to bring financial reward
  • Skilled thieves typically worked in larger
    cities and congregated in flashouses
  • Smugglers moved freely in the sparsely populated
    areas and dealt in spirits, gems, gold, and
    spices
  • Poachers lived in the country taking game that
    belonged to a landlord

3
Modern Thieves
  • Occasional Criminals
  • Most crime committed by amateurs whose acts are
    unskilled, and unplanned
  • Occasional crime occurs when there is a
    situational inducement
  • Frequency of occasional crime varies according to
    age, class, race, and gender
  • Occasional criminals have little group support
    for the crimes

4
Modern Thieves
  • Professional Criminals
  • Make a significant portion of their income from
    crime.
  • Professionals do not rationalize their
    criminality
  • Pursue their craft to make the most money with
    the least amount of risk

5
Modern Thieves
  • Sutherlands Professional Criminal
  • Professional thieves engage in limited types of
    crime
  • Exclusive use of wits, front (demeanor), and
    talking ability
  • Must acquire status in the profession
  • Pickpocket (cannon)
  • Thief in rackets related to confidence games
  • Forger
  • Extortionist from those engaging in illegal acts
  • Confidence game artists
  • Thief who steals from hotel rooms
  • Jewel thief who substitutes fake gems for real
    (pennyweighter)
  • Shoplifter (booster)
  • Sneak thief from stores, banks, and offices (heel)

6
Modern Thieves
  • The Professional Fence
  • Earns a living buying and reselling stolen
    merchandise
  • May operate through legitimate business fronts
  • Fences use complex pricing policy

7
Modern Thieves
  • The Nonprofessional Fence
  • Often legitimate business people who integrate
    stolen merchandise part-time
  • Associational fences barter stolen goods for
    services
  • Neighborhood hustlers buy and sell part-time and
    keep some merchandise for themselves
  • Amateur receivers strangers approached in a
    public place with a great deal on valuable
    commodities

8
Larceny/Theft
  • The trespassory taking and carrying away of the
    personal property of another with intent to steal
  • Constructive possession refers the legal fiction
    that applies in situations in which persons
    voluntarily and temporarily give up custody of
    their property (i.e. watch repair)

9
Larceny/Theft
  • Larceny Today
  • Petty larceny involves small amounts of money or
    property
  • Grand larceny involves greater values of property
    punishable by imprisonment
  • Larceny/theft is the most common of all crimes (7
    million acts in 2003)

10
Larceny/Theft
  • Shoplifting taking of goods from a retail store
  • Boosters professional shoplifters (Mary Owen
    Cameron)
  • Snitches amateur shoplifters who steal for
    themselves
  • Criminologists view shoplifters as likely to
    reform

11
Larceny/Theft
  • Controlling Shoplifting
  • Fewer than 10 percent are detected by store
    employees
  • Merchant privilege laws protect retailers from
    lawsuits
  • Target removal strategies involve dummy or
    disabled goods for display
  • Target hardening strategies involve locking
    racks or displays such as EAS systems
    (situational deterrents)

12
Larceny/Theft
  • Bad Checks
  • Knowingly and intentionally drawn on nonexistent
    or under-funded bank account
  • Edwin Lemert classified check forgers as
  • Naïve check forgers are amateurs who have a
    pressing need for money
  • Systematic forgers make a substantial living
    passing bad checks
  • Often it is difficult to separate the true check
    forger from the neglectful shopper

13
Larceny/Theft
  • Credit Card Theft
  • Approximately 1.8 billion per year lost to
    stolen or fake credit cards
  • To combat losses Congress passed a law in1971
    limiting losses to 50
  • Use of bogus Internet sites to obtain credit card
    numbers
  • Digital signatures and digital keys are an
    attempt to reduce credit card theft

14
Larceny/Theft
  • Auto Theft
  • Approximately 1.2 million in 2003
  • Types of Auto Theft
  • Joyriding motivated by a desire for power or
    prestige
  • Short-term transportation similar to joyriding
  • Long-term transportation Intend to keep vehicles
    for personal use
  • Profit motivated by the hope for profit
  • Commission of another crime vehicle taken for
    use in the commission of a crime for anonymity
  • Luxury cars and SUVs most in demand
  • Vehicles are frequently shipped abroad where
    they command higher prices

15
Larceny/Theft
  • Carjacking legally considered a form of robbery
  • Victims and offenders tend to be Black
  • Urban residents most likely to experience
    carjacking
  • Committed in groups and often in the evening
  • Combating Auto Theft
  • Situational crime prevention efforts (HEAT)
  • Lojack systems utilize a tracking device
  • Public campaigns to lock vehicles
  • Closed-circuit TV cameras

16
Larceny/Theft
  • False Pretenses or Fraud
  • Misrepresenting a fact to gain property
  • Victims willingly give up their money or property
  • Does not require a trespass

17
Larceny/Theft
  • Confidence Games
  • Getting a person interested in get-rich-quick
    schemes (Mark)
  • Most common forms are pigeon drops
  • Con artist may pose as bank employees
  • Pyramid schemes involve the selling of phony
    franchises
  • Shady contractor repairs

18
Larceny/Theft
  • Embezzlement
  • Occurs when someone who is trusted with property
    fraudulently converts it for his or her own use
  • Number of people arrested for embezzlement has
    increased over the last two decades
  • More employees are willing to steal from
    employers
  • More employers are willing to report embezzlement
  • Law enforcement officials are more willing to
    prosecute

19
Burglary
  • Legal definition has undergone considerable
    change
  • Common law required breaking and entering and
    at night
  • Recent laws have discarded forced entry and
    eliminated nighttime requirement

20
Burglary
  • The Nature and Extent of Burglary
  • NCVS reports about 3.3 million residential
    burglaries in 2003
  • Residential Burglary Experienced burglars tend
    to avoid rental properties and willing to travel
    to find rich targets
  • Commercial Burglary Business are quick sources
    of merchandise that can be easily sold

21
Burglary
  • Careers in Burglary
  • Good burglars must learn many skills to be
    lucrative
  • Must be able to team-up with trustworthy
    companions
  • Must have inside information
  • Must cultivate fences and buyers
  • Neal Shover suggests a person becomes a good
    burglar by learning techniques of the trade from
    experienced burglars

22
Burglary
  • The Burglary Career Ladder
  • Paul Cromwell, James Olson, and DAunn Wester
    suggest burglars go through stages of
    development
  • Novices (learning the trade)
  • Journeyman (lucrative targets and careful
    planning)
  • Professional (advanced skills)

23
Burglary
  • Repeat Burglary
  • Research suggests many burglars return to strike
    the same victim
  • Less effort to burgle a suitable target
  • Aware of targets layout
  • Entry/escape target has not changed
  • Lack of protective measures (alarms, etc.)
  • Goods were observed in first strike

24
Arson
  • The willful, malicious burning of a home, public
    building, vehicle, or commercial building (71,000
    in 2003)
  • To obtain money during a period of financial
    crisis
  • To get rid of outdated or slow-moving inventory
  • To destroy outmoded machines and technology
  • To pay off legal an illegal debts
  • To relocate or remodel a business
  • To take advantage of government funds
  • To plan bankruptcies
  • To eliminate business competition
  • To employ extortion schemes
  • To conceal another crime

25
Arson
  • Weblink
  • http//www.atf.treas.gov/
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