Chapter 2: Defining & Conceptualizing Organized Crime.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Police in America Chapter Thirteen Police Corruption.
Advertisements

Enterprise Crime: White-Collar Crime and Organized Crime
DIRTY ENTANGLEMENTS Illicit Links between Organized Crime, Corruption and Terrorism Louise Shelley, Hirst Chair and Director of Terrorism, Transnational.
What is Crime?.
Edwin Sutherland Persons of the upper socio-economic class engage in much criminal behaviou; this criminal behaviour differs from the criminal behaviour.
Criminal Violence: Patterns, Causes, and Prevention Riedel and Welsh, Ch. 1 “Violence and Criminal Violence”
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education Canada Inc Chapter 10 Organized and Corporate Crime “…had I a hundred tongues, a hundred mouths, a voice of.
Conflict Perspective According to this perspective, groups in society are engaged in a continuous power struggle for control of scarce resources Conflict.
Chapter 7 Deviant Behavior. Positivism Both biological and psychological views of criminal behavior seethe individual at fault in some way, not society.
1 How organised is crime in Southern Africa? Briefing on the state of trans-national organised crime in Southern Africa ISS Conference.
© 2011 Delmar, Cengage Learning Part I The Nature and Setting of Police Administration Chapter 2 The Environment of Administration.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education Canada Inc Chapter 1 Canadian Criminology Its nature and structure “Obviously crime pays, or there'd be no crime.”
“Money Laundering and Financing of Terrorism as Trasnational Crimes” Wednesday 4 th March 2009, Centre for Criminology, Oxford University (12:30 – 13:30.
Chapter 6 International crime. In this chapter, you will study the concept of international crime. You will be introduced to the main categories of international.
Why People Commit Crime By Charles Feer Department of Criminal Justice Bakersfield College.
Larry J. Siegel Valerie Bell University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH Chapter Twelve Enterprise Crime: White-Collar Crime, Cyber.
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Police in America Chapter Thirteen Police Corruption.
CHAPTER 1: CONTRACTS & TORTS, ESTABLISHING CONTEXT Emond Montgomery Publications 1.
Legal Considerations Members in Practice (MIP) Members in Business (MIB)
Legal Considerations Members in Practice (MIP) Members in Business (MIB)
Presenter: Shelley King University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa The slow development of legislature in South Africa to combat human trafficking- Challenges.
CRIMINAL LAW 1. Ahmed T. Ghandour.. CRIMES OF POWERFUL.
1.1 Introduction The question that needs to be addressed is: what is “social” about social problem? Why is it different from individual problems? In the.
EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYEE FREELANCER ENTERPRENEUR. EMPLOYEE FIXED - TERM CONTRACT PERMANENT CONTRACT WORK REMUNERATION / WAGE.
Dr. Maria Chr. Alvanou Criminologist-Terrorism Expert Rome 20/10/2016
Legal and Policy framework The United Nations
Introduction to Law Rules & Laws.
Does race still matter? Are you colorblind?
Edwin Sutherland Persons of the upper socio-economic class engage in much criminal behaviou; this criminal behaviour differs from the criminal behaviour.
The Concept of Fundamental Justice
Levels of Police in Canada
Five Themes of Canadian History
(c) 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Thirteen Police Corruption
Crime and Social Control
Introduction to asset recovery in Poland and Wielkopolska region, along with the presentation of the invited guests and discussion of thematic areas presented.
European case studies relating to the administrative approach
Project Management Framework
Annual Report: Additional Financial Statements
Political Systems.
Political Systems.
Crime and the Law Types of Crime
Team Leader Crime Statistics
Criminal Violence: Patterns, Causes, and Prevention Riedel and Welsh, Ch. 1 “Violence and Criminal Violence”
Criminal Violence Riedel and Welsh, Ch
Levels of Police in Canada
Freedom, Order, or Equality?
Chapter 6 International crime
Magruder’s American Government
Project Management Framework
Chapter 10 White-Collar and Organized Crime
Chapter 13 Globalization and Terrorism: Our Small World
Lifestyles and socialisation
Gangs Main Menu Klein (2001): Street Gangs Text adapted from:
European response to Human trafficking
Which man might the judge be more likely to convict? Why?
Annual Report: Additional Financial Statements
Magruder’s American Government
Eurojust Presentation outline I. What is Eurojust? II. Objectives and competences III. Legal framework IV. Tasks and Powers V. Eurojust in action VI. Role.
Crime and the Law Types of Crime
Levels of Police in Canada
CHAPTER 13 THE STRUCTURE OF INTERNATIONAL FIRM
Magruder’s American Government
Differences and similarities of organized crime and terrorism
Chapter 3: Describing Organized Crime: Identifying & Classifying Dominant Characteristics.
Preface & Introduction
Magruder’s American Government
Conclusions of the International Conference on Migrant Smuggling:
Political Systems.
DEFINING THE CONCEPT OF TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 2: Defining & Conceptualizing Organized Crime

Chapter Outline Definitions of OC Challenges & Controversies in Defining & Conceptualizing OC Competing Conceptualizations of OC Differentiating OC from Other Criminal Conspiracies The Harms Stemming from OC Conclusion

Learning Outcomes After reading this chapter, you should have an understanding of: The various definitions & conceptualizations of OC that have emerged over the years & their historical context The challenges & controversies inherent in trying to define & conceptualize OC, including why many argue that OC is a “social construct” The similarities & differences between OC & other forms of “organizational” crime How definitions & conceptualizations distinguish Canadian OC The nature & scope of harms to Canadian society attributed to OC & how they are amplified compared to “disorganized crimes”

Defining Organized Crime The term “organized crime” has been used to differentiate a specific manner of crimes & criminality (criminal behaviour) The term is used to describe: illegal activities groups that carry out these illegal offences how illegal activities are carried out Image Source: By User:BenBurrnnett (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Defining Organized Crime Definitions from American Sources

Defining Organized Crime Chicago City Council Committee (1915) “While this criminal group is not by any means completely organized it has many of the characteristics of a system. It has its own language it has its own laws; its own history; its traditional customs; its own method & techniques; its highly specialized machinery for attacks upon persons & property; its own highly specialized mode of defense. These professionals have interurban, interstate, & sometimes international connections.”

Defining Organized Crime Oyster Bay Conference on Organized Crime (1965) “…The product of self-perpetuating criminal conspiracy to wring exorbitant profits from our society by any means--fair or foul, legal & illegal. Despite personnel changes, the conspiratorial entity continues. … It survives on fear & corruption. By one or another means, it obtains a high degree of immunity from the law. It is totalitarian in its organization; a way of life, it imposes rigid discipline on its underlings who do the dirty work while the top men of organized crime are generally insulated from the criminal act & the consequent danger of prosecution."

Defining Organized Crime President’s Commission on Organized Crime (1967) “Organized crime is a society that seeks to operate outside the control of the American people & their governments. It involves thousands of criminals, working within structures as complex as those of any large corporation, subject to laws more rigidly enforced than those of legitimate governments. Its actions are not impulsive but rather the result of intricate conspiracies, carried on over many years & aimed at gaining control over whole fields of activity in order to amass huge profits.”

Defining Organized Crime Donald Cressey (1969) “An organized crime is any crime committed by a person occupying an established division of labour, a position designed for the commission of crime, providing that such division of labour also includes at least one position for a corrupter, one position for a corruptee, & one position for an enforcer.”

Defining Organized Crime U.S. Department of Justice (2008) Transnational organized crime can be defined as “…self-perpetuating associations of individuals who operate internationally for the purpose of obtaining power, influence, monetary and/or commercial gains, wholly or in part by illegal means, while protecting their activities through a pattern of corruption and/or violence.” Image Source: Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=385280

Defining Organized Crime Vincent Teresa (1930-1990) former member of Boston’s Patriarca mafia family: "Organized crime ... it is just a bunch of people getting together to take all the money they can from all the suckers they can." Image Source:

Defining Organized Crime Definitions from Canadian Sources

Defining Organized Crime Criminal Intelligence Service Canada “…two or more persons conspiring together on a continuing & secretive basis to participate in illegal activities either directly or indirectly for gain.” Image Source: http://www.cisc.gc.ca/index-eng.htm

Defining Organized Crime Quebec Police Commission (1975) ". . . this new class of the underworld is a group of individuals continuously & secretly conspiring together on a permanent basis with a view to profiting from several types of crimes."

Defining Organized Crime S. 4671(1) Criminal Code of Canada A criminal organization is “a group, however organized, that (a) is composed of three or more persons in or outside Canada; and (b) has as one of its main purposes or main activities the facilitation or commission of one or more serious offences that, if committed, would likely result in the direct or indirect receipt of a material benefit, including a financial benefit, by the group or by any of the persons who constitute the group. It does not include a group of persons that forms randomly for the immediate commission of a single offence.”

Challenges & Controversies in Defining & Conceptualizing OC OC is a complex phenomenon that it is averse to a concise definitions Little agreement exists regarding what constitutes “organized” Definitions, description & police cases, reveal a mix of offenders ranging from sophisticated “specialists” to “opportunists” — all operating in the same field (Beare, 2003a: xxii).

Challenges & Controversies in Defining & Conceptualizing OC There has been an “enlargement of the concept, which seems to be continuously enriched with new types of activities & organizational structures. The danger associated with expanding concepts lies in the possibility of over-stretching them to a point where they risk losing their meaning & coherence” (Carrapiço, 2012: 25).

Challenges & Controversies in Defining & Conceptualizing OC The Social Construction of Organized Crime “More than most other types of crime, organized crime is a social construct that strongly reflects policy choices and beliefs.” - Vander Beken (2012: 83) OC “is a construct, an attempt to make sense of a complex social reality.” - von Lampe (2016: 12) OC is “not as the result of a simple observation of an independent reality but as a labelling process amounting to a political and/or moral act.” - Carrapiço (2012: 26)

Competing Conceptualizations of OC The organization of criminals or the organization of crimes Highly structured criminal organizations or loosely organized criminal networks A limited number of large organizations that monopolizes criminal markets & territories or many smaller groups & individuals competing in disorganized illegal markets A system of governance or a system of criminal activities

Differentiating OC From Other Criminal Conspiracies Organized vs. “disorganized” crime Organization of offenders OC involves multiple offenders “unorganized crimes” committed by individuals acting alone or in pairs or small groups Organization of crimes OC not defined by illegal activities, for many of these crimes can be carried out by individuals working alone. OC is characterized by how illegal activities are carried out (e.g., greater sophistication)

Distinguishing Organized Crime Organized Crime vs. Youth Gangs Should youth gangs should be included under the category of organized crime? Yes: youth gangs embody fundamental tenets of OC: two or more people are involved a structure to the relationship among members continuing enterprise engaging in (profit-oriented) criminal activities increased cooperation between gangs & organized crime groups some gangs have morphed into criminal organizations No: youth gangs have numerous distinguishable traits gangs are confined to young people all members may not be engaged in criminal acts gangs are confined to (inner-city) areas, such as a neighbourhood criminal activities are not always profit-oriented in nature

Distinguishing Organized Crime Organized Crime vs. Corporate Crime Should corporate crime be considered organized crime? Yes: corporate crime embodies fundamental tenets of OC: Multiple individuals involved a structure to the relationship among the offenders continuing enterprise engaging in (profit-oriented) criminal activities commit similar crimes: fraud, theft, corruption, money laundering, tax evasion, smuggling, drug trafficking (by pharmaceutical companies) many victims have been harmed or died from the actions of corporations No: corporate crime is fundamentally different from OC most corporations are not founded to commit criminal offences crimes by corporations are a deviation from otherwise legitimate business many in the corporation are not involved in criminal acts

Distinguishing Organized Crime Organized Crime vs. State Crime Should state crimes be considered organized crime? Yes: state crime embodies fundamental tenets of OC: multiple offenders are involved a structure to the relationship among the offenders continuing enterprise engaging in various criminal activities, some profitable commit similar crimes: fraud, theft, corruption, tax evasion, smuggling, etc. many victims are harmed or have died from state crimes state crime & OC have merged in the form of the “mafia state” (e.g., Russia under Putin, North Korea) No: state crime is fundamentally different from OC states & governments are not founded to commit criminal offences many state crimes not about money but power (i.e., electoral fraud, persecution of opposition parties & dissidents) many in state agencies are not involved in criminal acts

Distinguishing Organized Crime Organized Crime vs. Terrorism Should terrorism be considered organized crime? Yes: terrorism & extremist groups embody fundamental tenets of OC: multiple offenders are involved a structure to the relationship among the offenders continuing enterprise engaging in various (profit-oriented) criminal activities use of violence & intimidation (many victims have died from acts of terrorism) some terrorist groups have evolved into profit-oriented criminal groups some cooperation & coordination between terrorist & OC groups No: terrorism & extremist groups are fundamentally different from OC The two have different objectives: OC exists to make money, terrorist groups exist to effect political & social change Revenue-generating criminal activities of terrorist groups are a means to an end, not an end in itself

Harms to society are increased when crimes & offenders are organized Harms Stemming from OC Corruption of public officials Exploitation of women & children Costs incurred by companies, government, & private citizens due to thefts & fraud Billions of dollars in evaded income taxes Injuries & deaths resulting from the sale of dangerous counterfeit & contraband goods, arms trafficking, innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire of gangland conflicts The toll illegal drugs alone takes on society is immense Billions of dollars spent every year by governments, companies, & individuals to combat OC & to deal with its aftermath Harms to society are increased when crimes & offenders are organized

Conclusion Difficult to define, conceptualize, & distinguish OC due to: the multifaceted & complex nature of this phenomenon, how definitions are socially & political constructed (i.e. influenced by the perspectives, biases, & position of the individual or agency behind the definition). Image Source: RCMP (personal communication)

Conclusion There has been limited attempts to define & conceptualize OC in Canada (compared to the US) This stems in part from the reluctance of public & law enforcement officials to admit there was OC in Canada Government agencies & media in Canada equated OC with ethnic immigrant minority groups (Italian & Chinese in particular) hierarchically structured mafia-style criminal organizations Unlike the U.S., there was a resistance to over-estimating the scope of OC in Canada (i.e., as a nation-wide conspiracy) Recent law enforcement & legislative definitions are so broad they are conceptually meaningless