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Nonviolent Crime and Criminals

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Title: Nonviolent Crime and Criminals


1
Nonviolent Crime and Criminals
  • Chapter 6

2
Substance Related Crimes and Criminals
3
Introduction
  • Crimes committed to gain access to narcotics
  • Crimes committed to resolve drug related disputes
  • Behavioral reaction to mind altering influence of
    drugs
  • Loss of control
  • Increased sense of grandiosity
  • Uncontrollable conduct stimulated

4
Drug Related Crimes and Criminals
  • Definition of substance abuse
  • Risk Factors affecting connection between drug
    use and crime
  • Pharmacological effects
  • Violence associated with drug use
  • Drugs effect brain function and perception
  • Economic effects
  • Violent and nonviolent crimes committed to obtain
    illegal substances
  • Crimes committed to maintain dependence and avoid
    withdrawal
  • Systematic connection
  • One involved in selling drugs seeks justice for
    unpaid debts

5
Drug Related Crimes and Criminals
  • Drug crime relationship explanations and
    treatment
  • Non causal, epiphenomenal
  • Drugs dont cause crime and crime doesnt cause
    drug use
  • Treat through psychoanalytic/behavioral therapy
  • Unidirectional
  • Crime caused drug use and drug use causes crime
  • Treat through twelve step programs
  • Bi-directional
  • Drugs and crime are causes and effects of one
    another
  • Treat by establishing therapeutic communities

6
Drug Related Crimes and Criminals
  • Walters integrated model
  • Incentive and opportunity
  • Established through fear fear of rejection by
    drug using peer group
  • Fear manifests when exposure to drug culture is
    great
  • Associations with others
  • Drawn to life of crime/drug use through
    dispositional/situational factors
  • Personality characteristics of individual
  • Individual expectations of drug use
  • Quality of associations in drug culture

7
Drug Related Crimes and Criminals
  • Walters integrated model cont.
  • Initiation and maintenance of criminal lifestyle
  • Predisposing variables already at risk for drug
    involvement
  • Family history of drug use
  • Pre-existing tendency to act impulsively/aggressiv
    ely
  • Precipitating variables introduction to drug
    use lifestyle
  • Peer or intimate introduction
  • Experience with economic rewards
  • Maintenance variable encouragement of sustained
    involvement
  • Ready source of income and/or recreational
    activity

8
Alcohol Related Crimes and Criminals
  • Personality traits correlated to criminal
    behavior while intoxicated
  • Sensation seekers
  • Risk takers
  • Impulsivity
  • Low self esteem
  • Low self efficacy
  • aggression
  • Alcohol intoxication and behavioral changes
  • Increased aggression
  • Higher risk taking especially in men
  • Willingness to drive while intoxicated
  • Engagement in property damage
  • Gambling
  • High risk sexual behavior

9
Drug Dealing
  • Highest arrest rates
  • Harshest penalties
  • Neighborhood characteristics
  • Central location of community
  • Physical deterioration
  • Social disorganization
  • Predicting drug use
  • Low income of community residents
  • Low status of residents occupations

10
Drug Dealing
  • Drug dealer profile
  • Sell as alternative to low paying job or
    unemployment
  • Overwhelmingly African-American/minorities
  • Drug arrest practices
  • Arrests in socially disorganized areas more
    accessible
  • Arrest practices in mid and upper class
    neighborhoods more difficult
  • Police patrol disorganized neighborhoods more
    frequently and intensely

11
Drug and Crime Involved Women
  • Female drug offenders tend to come from families
    where drug dependence and criminal behavior are
    common
  • Positive non criminal and non drug using
    relationships help females in rehabilitation to
    discontinue drug use
  • Females who enter drug treatment become dependent
    on social and family support

12
Legal Aspects of Substance Related Crime
  • Debate over whether alcohol/drug addictions are
    disabling illnesses or deliberate acts of
    misconduct
  • Diminished mental capacity not appropriate
    defense when intoxication is voluntary
  • Involuntary intoxication one can rely on
    diminished capacity defense
  • Substance induced disorders can be claimed as
    diminished capacity in face of criminal charges

13
Treatment Opportunities
  • Some states offer treatment programs for addicts
  • Small percentage of drug users receive needed
    treatment/rehabilitation

14
Organized Crime
15
Money Laundering
  • Evolving universal definition of money laundering
  • Current wide ranging definitions
  • Concealing the existence of income, then
    disguising it to make it appear legitimate
  • Process of taking proceeds of criminal activity
    and making them appear legal
  • Goal of making funds derived from illicit
    activity appear legitimate
  • Major participants
  • Illegal drug traffickers
  • Illegal arms dealers

16
Money Laundering
  • Essential activities to money laundering
  • Placement
  • Changing illicitly derived money into a non
    illicit form and then placing that money into a
    legitimate financial system
  • Layering
  • Movement of these funds to conceal illicit funds
  • Integration
  • Reintroduction of the money into a legitimate
    financial economy

17
Gambling/Loan Sharking/Numbers Running
  • Monetary proceeds received second only to illegal
    drug sale and distribution
  • Bookmaking
  • Taking bets on sporting events bookies get
    interest on losses
  • Loan Sharking
  • Bookies lend money to gambler with high interest
    rates
  • Numbers Running
  • Similar to daily number of state lotteries
  • Cheaper and better pay offs
  • Caters to and facilitated by poor urbanites

18
Racketeering
  • Definition
  • Includes but not limited to murder, kidnapping,
    gambling, arson, embezzlement, bribery
  • Dont have to commit to be charged
    (co-conspirator)
  • Labor racketeering
  • Illegal infiltration into labor unions for
    personal
  • Victims are members of labor unions
  • Skimming
  • Money taken off the top of cash transactions
  • Unreported, tax free income
  • Bankruptcy fraud
  • Partner with legitimate business establishments
    to commit fraud
  • Organized crime syndicates obtain
    money/merchandise without the banks knowledge
    and legitimate business files bankruptcy

19
White Collar Crime
20
Defining White Collar Crime
  • Edwin Sutherland
  • Crime committed by respectable person of high
    social status in the course of their occupation
  • Too general
  • Donald Gibbons
  • Violation of business rules to benefit legitimate
    enterprises
  • Does not account for fraud and embezzlement
  • Clinnard Quinney
  • Occupational crime
  • Non violent infractions of legal codes within an
    otherwise legitimate enterprise
  • US Congressional Subcommittee on Crime
  • Illegal act committed by nonphysical means and
    concealment to obtain money/property or
    personal/business advantage

21
Embezzlement
  • Definition
  • Theft of goods that one had been entrusted with
    by another
  • Criminal profiles
  • Often highly educated
  • Known to the person from whom they are stealing
  • Tend to be the model employee
  • Manipulative and scheming
  • Triggers
  • Economic hardship
  • Manufactured economic needs
  • To compensate for health care or treatment needs

22
SEC Violations Insider Trading
  • Misperception of insider trading definition
  • Insiders with trading restrictions
  • Directors/owners/officers that have decision
    making authority affecting the entire
    organization
  • Illegal insider trading
  • Information not made public used for personal
    profit
  • No clear definition of what comprises insider
    information

23
SEC Violations Securities Fraud
  • Securities and commodities fraud
  • The sale, transfer, or purchase of securities or
    money interests in business activities of others
  • Boiler-room operations
  • Used to promote sales of fraudulent securities or
    to acquire charitable donations from unknowing
    donators

24
Fraud
25
Internet Fraud
  • Five general types
  • Auction and retail schemes
  • Business opportunity schemes
  • Identity theft and fraud
  • Investment schemes
  • Credit card schemes
  • Acts to prevent spammers
  • Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
  • Communications Privacy Act
  • Legal consequences
  • Imprisonment
  • Serious fines

26
Telemarketing Fraud
  • False promises made offering goods or services,
    requesting investments or asking for charitable
    donations
  • Differentiating fraud from legitimate enterprises
  • Goals of illegitimate enterprises
  • Make the scheme seem to be a charitable cause
    worthy of payment
  • Obtaining immediate payment before victim can
    inspect value
  • Devising a perception of validity
  • Reloading
  • Fraudulent operations re approaches those victims
    it has been successful in scheming in the past
  • Geographical location
  • Less likely that tracking will occur if the
    victim and the illegitimate business are in
    separate states.

27
Telemarketing Fraud
  • Varying telemarketing schemes
  • Charity schemes
  • Credit card schemes
  • Lottery schemes
  • Magazine/prize promotion
  • Credit repair and loan schemes
  • Investment/business opportunity schemes

28
Identity Theft and Identity Fraud
  • Loose definition
  • Purpose
  • Personal information obtained and used by
    offenders
  • Methods
  • Shoulder surfing
  • Dumpster diving
  • 1998 law Identity Theft and Assumption
    Deterrence Act

29
Other types of Fraud
  • Health care fraud
  • Submission of false claims
  • Payment or receipt of bribes
  • Self referrals

30
Offenders and Victims
  • Victim characteristics
  • Anyone especially if careless
  • Elderly more vulnerable to financial fraud
  • Victims of internet fraud
  • Careless in disclosing personal data while online
  • Agree to pay advance fees
  • Victims of identity theft and fraud
  • Extremely trusting
  • Disclose personal information to others (known
    and unknown)
  • Victims of telemarketing fraud
  • Victims of fraudulent behavior in past
  • Names purchased from lead brokers
  • Offenders
  • Motivated by money
  • Low recidivism rate

31
Internet Crime
32
Electronically Generated Child Pornography
  • Definition of crime
  • Knowingly mailing/transporting any child
    pornography
  • Child pornography prevention act (1996)
  • What computer generated child pornography can
    lead to
  • Pedophiles use images to whet deviant appetites
    and lure children into sexually explicit
    activities
  • Desensitizes viewers into a pathology of sexual
    abuse/exploitation of children

33
Cyberstalking
  • Use of the internet to harass victims
  • Practices
  • Search chat rooms for vulnerable individuals
  • Spy on a persons online activities anonymously

34
Stalking
35
Background Information
  • Common elements
  • Unwanted behavioral intrusion
  • Implicit or explicit threat
  • Reasonable fear is experienced
  • Varying clinical definitions
  • Obsessional following
  • Treatment is relatively new
  • Collection of stalking scarce until recently

36
Love obsessional stalker
  • Celebrity stalking
  • Offender profiles
  • Mental illness
  • Lack of successful intimate relationships
  • Socially maladjusted
  • Initiate correspondence with the victim and when
    they do not receive a response frustration and
    anger

37
Erotomanic stalker
  • Delusional thought patterns convince the offender
    he/she is truly loved by the victim
  • Perpetrators are usually female and rarely act in
    physically violent manner
  • Victims are typically men of high socio-economic
    status or celebrity status

38
Stalker profile/motivations
  • Antisocial personality disorder
  • More violent stalkers
  • Borderline personality disorder
  • Unrealistic sense of importance of relationships
    intensity
  • Stalks after being rejected after short term
    relationship
  • Histrionic personality disorder
  • Emotionally dramatic stalkers
  • Considers relationships more intimate than they
    are
  • Narcissistic personality disorder
  • Rely on stalking fantasies to fulfill their own
    psychological emptiness

39
Predispositional Theories
  • Disturbances in early attachment relationships
  • Recent loss in adulthood acting as a triggering
    factor
  • Terminated marriage
  • Loss of a job
  • Messy divorce
  • Death of a parent

40
Sexual Harassment
41
Developments in the Law
  • Not addressed until 1986
  • Two prong test to determine a hostile work
    environment
  • Reasonableness standard
  • Perception standard
  • Treating sexual harassment as outcome of a legal
    test that takes into consideration totality of
    circumstances in the workplace

42
Sexual Harassment Types, Models and Modalities
  • Types
  • Quid pro quo
  • Supervisor demanding sexual favors in exchange
    for tangible job benefits
  • Hostile work environment
  • Employee is a victim of unwelcome sexual conduct
  • Broad based models
  • Sex role spillover theory
  • Tendency of men to invoke sex based stereotypes
  • Sexual harassment is the result of an encouraging
    individual and situational factors

43
Modalities
  • Verbal Harassment
  • Physical harassment
  • Visual hrassment

44
Mental health concerns
  • Victims suffer from anger, depression, anxiety
    and substance use/abuse
  • Poor coping mechanisms lead to more serious
    psychopathologies
  • Females experience higher levels of psychological
    distress than male victims

45
Property Crimes
46
Theft
  • Larceny theft
  • Unlawful taking, carrying leading or riding away
    of property from the possession of another
  • Results in more arrests for females and juveniles
  • Burglary
  • Unlawful entry of a structure to commit a felony
    or theft
  • Motivation
  • Drug use
  • Offenders lifestyles
  • Know others who engage in deviance
  • Exposure to criminal activities
  • Absence of capable guardians

47
Theft
  • Unemployment has a positive impact on commission
    of property crimes
  • Unemployment Property Crimes

48
Arson
  • Willful and malicious burning of property
  • Essential components to designate an act as arson
  • Burning of property or actual destruction of a
    target
  • Presence of intent
  • Condition of malice

49
Arson
  • Types of arson
  • Serial arsonist
  • Three or more fire setting incidents with cooling
    off periods between
  • Unpredictable and most serious
  • Spree arsonist
  • Three or more fires at separate locations with no
    cooling off period
  • Mass arsonist
  • Three or more fires at same location within a
    limited amount of time

50
Motivations John Douglas
  • Vandalism
  • Excitement
  • Revenge
  • Crime concealment
  • profit

51
Profiles Holmes and Holmes
  • White males
  • Between ages of 16 and 28
  • Poor academic adjustment
  • Criminal histories linked to delinquency
  • Repressed rage toward society
  • Feelings of inadequacy, inferiority and
    reclusive-ness
  • Alcohol/drug use

52
Prostitution
53
Why women engage in prostitution
  • No consistent profile
  • To acquire money for drug habit
  • Financial provisions for minorities or those in
    lower classes
  • Product of enduring childhood/life long patterns
    of abuse by men
  • Product of enduring childhood sexual abuse
  • Product of literal or psychological abandonment
  • Product of run away behavior

54
Impact on Womens Lives
  • Emotional damage resulting from stigmatizing
    factors such as
  • Negative social attitudes
  • Loss of control over work situation
  • Harassment from clients and the police
  • Increased opportunities for violence against
    women
  • Organizations representing women in the sex
    industry
  • National Task Force on Prostitution - Women have
    right to determine how they use their bodies
  • US Prostitutes Collective sex work is a class
    isue
  • WHISPER prostitutes are victims of a
    patriarchal structure

55
Impact on Womens Lives
  • Financial independence
  • Sexual power
  • Self-reliance
  • Limitations of research
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