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Organized Crime and Human Trafficking: This 12–page analytical essay examines the modern day relationship between organized crime and prostitution. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russian women have been enticed to come to this country with promises of the American Dream. Unfortunately, all too soon that dream becomes their worst nightmare. Bibliography lists 7 sources. SNCrime.doc
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12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_SNCrimes.doc
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SNCrime.doc Organized Crime and Human Trafficking Written by Susan A. Nelson - April, 2001
For More Information On This Paper Please Introduction Gone are the days when the words, "organized crime" meant simply the
Mafia, "The Black Hand," "La Cosa Nostra," or other such colorful euphemisms. Today, it seems more and more that essentially every race, and culture has a representative in an
organized crime "family" (See Lyman and Potter, 2000). Organized crime today means just that - organized. These criminals are established. They understand how the system
works and they are unified, and organized when using their abilities to thwart it. Todays organized crime -- its not just for Italians anymore - everyone can play, if
youve got what it takes. What Constitutes Organized Crime Today organized crime is simply "the illegal activity of people and organizations whose acknowledged purpose is profit through illegitimate business enterprise"
(Organized Crime, 2001). It encompasses a wide range of criminal behavior, including but not limited to, the broad categories of (1) marketing techniques (threat, extortion, smuggling), and
(2) products (drugs, prostitution, gambling, loan-sharking, pornography) that have been outlawed " (Organized Crime, 2001). Today the structure or criminal hierarchy commonly resembles any legitimate corporation, and
may even have a typical looking staff of corporate executives, staff of assistants, accountants, and the like. However, that is where the similarity ends, because ultimately the business "was
set up by force, intimidation or threat" " (Organized Crime, 2001). The members of a criminal organization are in essence gangsters -- professional thugs -- who are trying
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