White collar crimes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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White collar crimes

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White collar crimes Elite crimes Crimes of the powerful Occupational crimes Offences committed by individuals for themselves in the course of their ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: White collar crimes


1
White collar crimes
  • Elite crimes
  • Crimes of the powerful

2
Occupational crimes
  • Offences committed by individuals for themselves
    in the course of their occupations and the
    offences of employees against their employers
    (Clinard and Quinney 1973).
  • A typical example of which is embezzlement,
    involving offenders, either individually or in
    groups, engaging in illegal or rule-breaking
    activities for personal gain at the expense of
    consumers, clients or employers.

3
Organizational crimes
  • Illegal organizational behaviour which is a form
    of collective rule breaking in order to achieve
    the organizational goals.
  • A typical example is the neglect of safety
    regulations, which does not involve personal
    gain, but may be seen as being for the good of
    the organization by enhancing profitability or
    efficiency.

4
  • Characteristics of white collar crimes

5
Low visibility
  • An essential feature of white-collar offences is
    that they take place under the cover of normal
    occupational routines (Shapiro, 1990), and
    involve the exploitation of occupational
    expertise or organizational system. They can
    therefore be readily disguised as business
    offenders are legitimately present at the scene
    (Clarke, 1990). All of this means that victims
    are often unaware that any offence has been
    committed at all. In addition, offences are
    generally private rather than public, leaving
    little visible evidence of their commission. This
    relative invisibility means that offences are
    peculiarly resistant to detection, and even when
    detected, are often not reported to public
    authorities.

6
Complexity
  •  While many white-collar crimes can essentially
    be reduced to lying, cheating and stealing
    (Shapiro, 1990), many are extremely complex. The
    expertise which is being abused, which forms the
    basis of the offenders occupational position,
    may be scientific, technological, financial or
    legal. Many are also highly organized, involve
    many employees, and may have been going on for
    several years. Organizational offences may
    involve a complex web of falsification, cover
    ups, action and inaction. Many of the regulations
    and laws which are being flouted are themselves
    exceedingly complex, making it difficult to
    determine exactly what offences have been
    committed and who is responsible for them.

7
Diffusion of responsibility
  • In many organizations functions are separated and
    responsibilities delegated. Consequently, it is
    often difficult to determine who is immediately
    responsible for any offence

8
The diffusion of victimisation
  • Victimization is also diffused. Whereas in many
    conventional offences individual identifiable
    offenders harm individual identifiable victims,
    in many white-collar offences there is no single
    identifiable victim. The victim may be an
    abstract entity such as the government or the
    company, or there may be many victims who suffer
    only a minimal loss

9
Detection and prosecution
  • White-collar crimes are particularly difficult to
    detect by victims, supervisors or law enforcers.
    Enforcers must possess the same scientific and
    technical knowledge as perpetrators and it may
    take many weeks, months or even years of careful
    investigation to unravel the more complex
    offences

10
Lenient sanctions
  • Even when prosecuted, it is often argued that
    white-collar offenders are not dealt with
    severely. Few offenders are sent to prison and
    the vast majority are fined amounts which are
    often described as derisory

11
Ambiguous law
  • The nature of offences creates many legal
    problems. Their complexity means that it is often
    difficult to capture the essence of offences in
    legislation and to specify precisely the
    situations in which an offence has been
    committed, leaving many loopholes to be
    exploited.
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