White-Collar Crime
White-collar crime is a term that has been applied to a wide variety of non-violent crimes that are often committed in offices and boardrooms rather than on the street. Crimes are committed by means of unlawful paper transactions rather than with weapons, by middle-class people rather than by career criminals (Sutherland, 1983). It includes the crime of fraud in its many variations, as well as violations of government regulations that might not even result in immediate, ascertainable harm. The term refers to crimes committed by individuals, as well as wrongs inflicted by corporate entities (which are also subject to criminal prosecution). White-collar crime is investigated and prosecuted by the federal and state governments.For most individuals, white-collar crime is not viewed as a crime at all, because of its non-violent nature. Violent crime has an immediate and obvious impact on its victims, which raises the attention of the public, whereas white-collar crime frequently goes undetected or is viewed as a bending of the rules (Geis, 1982). White-collar crime; however, can have more of an impact than violent crimes. The victim of a violent crime can recover (most times, but not always),
. . .
Some common words found in the essay are:
Embezzlement Periodic, EMBEZZLEMENT White-collar, Occurs Embezzlements, Cost Embezzlement, Prevention Mistakes, Conclusion Embezzlers, Waring Bode, Embezzlement Embezzlement, FBI Geis, white-collar crime, Geis Gilbert, al 1991, et al, et al 1991, geis 1982, weisburd et al, crime embezzlement, intent steal, specific intent, weisburd et, law enforcement, jamieson 1994, specific intent steal, white-collar crime embezzlement, press geis gilbert,
Approximate Word count = 1949
Approximate Pages = 8 (250 words per page double spaced)
|
 |