Monday, April 2, 2018

Author: Rachel Lynne Sakhi, DeVry University: JADM 110: Criminology: I believe to some extent white-collar crime is distinguished from organized crime, because white-collar crime is inspired by corporate or executive types of maneuvers to defraud and deprive while illegally disadvantaging another to receive goods, services, and anything that may appear to get utilized as something of value.

Collapse SubdiscussionRachel Sakhi

Rachel Sakhi

                                                                                    Professor Hello, 
I believe to some extent white-collar crime is distinguished from organized crime, because white-collar crime is inspired by corporate or executive types of maneuvers to defraud and deprive while illegally disadvantaging another to receive goods, services, and anything that may appear to get utilized as something of value. Usually white-collar means something within a workplace operated on the corporate level, but capable of getting navigated by a chief executive or elected official of any high-profile workplace environment (Pp. 316), whereas the offender utilizes credibility of a major source, utilizes concealed channels of operation to execute the crimes successfully without anyone physically 'watching' them in the commission of the crime or so they think and mostly involves major or minor episodes of isolated fraud process (Pp. 316). 
Organized criminal activity involves just that...large clustered mobs of fans, supporters, witnesses, protectors, scapegoats, alibis, and money-making desensitized criminals who by any means necessary is not supporting the supreme logical or valid advocacy issues, but instead seeking to gain by theft, murder, kidnapping, fraud, laundering, raping, molesting, holding hostages, hijacking, and utilizing the Jehovah's Witness or Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints' partnership techniques to strengthen the smooth production of death rather than the reduction of death with preservation of law--abiding behavior as an overall contribution to participation in any society (Pp. 325). 

Citation
Schmalleger, F.J. (2018). Criminology today: An Integrative Introduction. 7th Edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ

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