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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper focuses on white collar crime. Various types of crime are defined and its impact on society is discussed. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA734bus.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
those are the crimes that people are familiar with. They see news reports about dangerous criminals each night. Yet, there are crimes related to business that often go unnoticed,
and many types are called white collar crimes. Many times, when these incidents take place, it is not even known that a crime is being committed. For example, some might
embezzle money over time and not be caught until years after the fact. Sometimes crimes are even less obvious. Someone may testify in respect to a business case and make
a false statement to a bank or federal agency. Martha Stewart for example was convicted of a white collar crime related to securities. Health insurance fraud is another example
of a white collar crime. Some people fake an accident in order to reap monetary benefits. Other white collar crimes are very serious. Identity theft for example is a crime
usually committed by a ring of thieves, but sometimes, one individual will steal the identity of another. On a much smaller scale, an individual may steal a credit card or
check number and try to extort money that way. Clearly, white collar crime runs the gamut from organized financial crimes to petty crimes that are not well thought out.
White collar crimes are crimes that involve a level of sophistication. They usually implicate criminals who work as insiders or have access to computer technology or have special skills and
talents. Many years ago, sociologist Edwin H. Sutherland defined white collar crime as follows: "...a crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of
his occupation" (Lewis, 2002, p.2). Here, the idea is that a criminal is usually someone who looks like a criminal. It could not be the good old boy next door.
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