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  2. White-collar crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-collar_crime

    “This sub-group is referred to as red-collar criminals because they straddle both the white-collar crime arena and, eventually, the violent crime arena. In circumstances where there is the threat of detection, red-collar criminals commit brutal acts of violence to silence the people who have detected their fraud and to prevent further ...

  3. Category:Commercial crimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Commercial_crimes

    Commercial crimes, mostly focusing on white-collar crime. Defined as financially motivated, nonviolent crime committed by businesses and government professionals. [1

  4. Occupational crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupational_crime

    Thefts of company property, vandalism, the misuse of information and many other activities come under the rubric of occupational crime. The concept of occupational crime - as one of the principal forms of white-collar crime - has been quite familiar and widely invoked since the publication of Clinard and Quinney's influential Criminal Behavior ...

  5. One in Four Households Victim of White Collar Crime: Report

    www.aol.com/news/2010-12-13-one-in-4-households...

    White collar crime now affects more Americans than all other forms of crime combined, according to the a new report published by the the National White Collar Crime Center (NW3C). Conducted by the ...

  6. Corporate crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_crime

    Corporate crime overlaps with: white-collar crime, because the majority of individuals who may act as or represent the interests of the corporation are white-collar professionals; organized crime, because criminals may set up corporations either for the purposes of crime or as vehicles for laundering the proceeds of crime. The world's gross ...

  7. Ellen Podgor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellen_Podgor

    [6] She has written numerous law journal articles, including one in The Yale Law Journal Online [7] about what she saw as harsh punishments of white collar criminals. She is the co-author with federal judge Paul D. Borman and Professors Peter Henning and Jerold Israel of the casebook White Collar Crime: Law and Practice. [8]

  8. Crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime

    Blue-collar crime is any crime committed by an individual from a lower social class as opposed to white-collar crime which is associated with crime committed by someone of a higher-level social class. These crimes are primarily small scale, for immediate beneficial gain to the individual or group involved in them.

  9. Racketeering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racketeering

    Many types of crime can be covered by the "RICO" Act. [6] A protection racket is a form of extortion whereby racketeers offer to "protect" property from damage in exchange for a fee, while also threatening (possibly in a veiled way), in part or in whole, to execute the kind of damage they claim to be offering protection against.