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Occupational Crime

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Title: Occupational Crime


1
Occupational Crime
  • By
  • Ankit Desai
  • Jeff Dougherty
  • Patrick Crotty
  • Juan F. Calles

2
Occupational Crime
  • Occupational Crimes are crimes committed by
    people of high social or economic status in the
    course of their occupation.
  • They conspire with other companies in order to
    make money for themselves or to drive a
    particular competitor out of the market.

3
Occupational Crime
  • A white-collar crime is a type of occupational
    crime which deals with the further advancement of
    the organizations.
  • In turn, it actually does benefit themselves in
    that as the company profits more and more, so to
    does the individual.
  • The economic cost of such a crime is much greater
    than the combined cost of larceny, burglary, auto
    theft, forgery, and robbery.

4
Why Does It Exist?
  • Who doesnt like money?
  • Financial pressures and family difficulties are a
    few significant motivations for committing
    white-collar crimes
  • One way to view occupational crime is that it is
    in essence an indirect form of theft.
    Perpetrators often rationalize that because it is
    indirect, it is victimless and therefore
    acceptable.

5
Why Does It Exist?
  • The risk of internal misdeeds occurring in an
    organization is based upon a combination of
    factors
  • motive - usually caused by personal financial
    pressures
  • opportunity - caused by poor accounting controls
  • the personal integrity of the employees

6
Corporate Criminals
  • Corporate crime costs 200 billion a year, more
    than even organized crime

7
Enron Facts
  • Enron was formed in 1985 when two smaller energy
    companies merged
  • Enron then set up over 3000 offshore companies,
    and used them to manipulate market price for
    energy
  • Through accounting tricks, the offshore companies
    also provided an easy way for Enron to hide debt
    and increase profits

8
Enron Facts
  • When California and other states came to Enron
    desperate for energy, the energy giant was able
    to charge them astronomical prices based on their
    other contracts (the ones it had made with its
    offshore partners, which were nothing more than
    puppets)

9
Enron Facts
  • Enron also pushed their debts off onto their
    offshore partners, making the company look even
    better to Wall Street and pushing their stock
    higher.
  • Kenneth Lay (CEO of Enron) told his employees
    that Enron stock was an incredible bargain and
    a rise in the value of Enron stock "has never
    been more certain"

10
Enron Facts
  • At the same time, Lay was selling off his shares
    rapidly he made 21 million in profit selling
    his Enron stock in 2001
  • The SEC caught Enrons accounting tricks, and
    begun an investigation

11
Enron Facts
  • Enron was forced to restate profits and debt
  • Reduced profits by 500 million
  • Increased debt by 2 billion
  • Enron shares dive from 80 a share to less than
    1
  • Enron employees lost 1 billion in pension funds,
    while the top executives pocketed millions.

12
Enron Stock
Price
Year
13
Action Steps
  • Don't become an unwitting co-conspirator in shady
    dealings.
  • Six steps to maintaining your ethical integrity
    when those around you seem to be skimping on
    theirs.

14
Action Steps
  • 1. Watch for signs of ethical trouble.
  • These include
  • Directives that violate the organization's own
    policies.
  • Orders to keep an action secret.
  • Requests to "do it this way just this one time,"
    or to "do it for the good of the organization."
  • Pressure to mislead, lie, cheat or steal or to
    change, falsify, hide or destroy documentation
    or to keep no records of something that
    ordinarily should be documented.

15
Action Steps
  • 2. Listen to the voice of doubt in your head.
  • If you get an uncomfortable feeling with a
    directive or request (or a course of action that
    you are contemplating), heed the hesitation.
  • If, even for an instant, you think you might be
    crossing the ethical line, ask yourself Would I
    be embarrassed if this action came to light?
    Would I feel cheated or harmed if I were on the
    receiving end of this action? Then move to Step 3.

16
Action Steps
  • 3. Ask (your boss, your colleague, yourself)
    directly about the ethical soundness of a pending
    action that strikes you as questionable.
  • "This seems to be an unusual course of action. Is
    this ethical?"
  • Or, "For some reason, I get an uncomfortable
    feeling about this. Isn't it misleading / shady
    /dishonest?" "If this truly is an ethical action,
    why am I uneasy about it?"

17
Action Steps
  • 4. Decide, thoughtfully with great awareness,
    whether the proposed course of action meets the
    ethical standard by which you want to conduct
    yourself and be known for.
  • Reject self-justifying and destructive platitudes
    such as Go along to get along. The ends justify
    the means. Everybody does it. Just this once. It
    really doesn't hurt anyone. And other deceptions.

18
Action Steps
  • 5. Act in accord with your decision.
  • Proceed without reservation. If in doubt, don't.
    If you act against your better judgment, you'll
    regret it. And when you stop regretting it,
    you'll be a lesser person. And you'll know it,
    and hate yourself for acting against yourself.
  • You'll be more stressed (keeping track of lies,
    covering up actions, being constantly on
    guard---all take a great deal of energy).
  • The quality of your relationships will suffer.
    You'll be more guarded, more withdrawn, and less
    trusting. It's darned difficult to be genuine
    with others when you feel disingenuous yourself.

19
Action Steps
  • 6. Live comfortably with the consequences of your
    choice.
  • When faced with an ethical dilemma, there likely
    are difficult consequences to whichever way you
    decide to go.
  • So choose to take the high road. While it is the
    steepest at the beginning, it's the least
    stressful and most fruitful path over the long
    haul.

20
Ethical Issues
  • A poor system of internal accounting contributes
    to an environment where occupational criminals
    develop an attitude that they believe that the
    organization will not mind if if you take
    something because it's an unofficial perk of the
    job.
  • This feeling results because organizations do not
    promote internal control concepts and ethics.

21
Utilitarian Perspective
  • The utilitarian approach aims to produce the
    greatest balance of benefits over harms.
  • When Enron failed its 15,000 employees learned
    they had lost 1 billion in pension funds as well
    as their jobs.

22
Rights Perspective
  • Fundamental civil, political and economic rights
    that merit protection and respect.
  • Employee's right to not be cheated by their
    employer.
  • Stock holder's right to receive honest stock
    quotes.
  • Customer's right to purchase energy at a fair
    price.

23
Common Good Perspective
  • What is ethical is what advances the common good.
  • Employees losing their jobs and pension funds.
  • Stockholders lost millions.
  • Destroyed the publics faith in corporate America.

24
Virtue Perspective
  • What is ethical is what develops moral virtues in
    ourselves and our communities.
  • Honesty
  • Courage
  • Faithfulness
  • Trustworthiness
  • Integrity
  • Compassion

25
Conclusion
  • Youve seen what happens when you try to use the
    back door and get rich in a hurry.
  • Take these action steps into consideration in the
    future if you ever find yourself in a similar
    situation.
  • Question the ethics of your actions before acting.

26
Bibliography
  • White-collar Crime. Encyclopedia Britannica.
    2003.  Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 11 Oct,
    2003  
  • lthttp//0-www.search.eb.com.sculib.scu.edu80/eb/
    article?eu78860gt.
  • White Collar Crime. Boston College. 2003.
    August 7, 2003
  • lthttp//www.bc.edu/offices/audit/fraud/whitecolla
    r/gt
  • "Crime and Punishment." Encyclopedia Britannica.
    2003.  Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 11 Oct,
    2003
  • lthttp//0-www.search.eb.com.sculib.scu.edu80/eb/
    article?eu120709gt.
  • Burke, Stephanie J. The Collapse of Enron A
    Bibliography of Online Legal, Government and
    Legislative Resources. 2002. 30 June, 2003
  • lthttp//www.llrx.com/features/enron.htmgt
  • Behr, Peter. Ex-Enron Accountant To Settle,
    2003. The Washington Post. 10 October, 2003
  • http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A59
    33-2003Oct9.html
  • Enron 101, 2002. The Daily Enron. 13 Oct, 2003
  • lthttp//www.thedailyenron.com/enron101/gt
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