1. June 24, 2016
By Lauren Bradshaw
June 24, 2016
ResearchPaper Help
White Collar crimes are financial crimes which are non-violent in
nature and crimes that fall under this category are usually committed by
personnel working in business or governmental organizations. Despite
their non-violent nature, do you know that corporate crime in the United
States causes far more damage than all the street crimes combined
together? For those who don’t know and are in need of hard facts, here
are some statistics on white collar crime and its effects to the global
community.
a. Corporate crime results in more collateral damage than all the street
crimes such as robbery, individual credit card scams, and burglary
incidents if classified under one category. Putting numbers to this fact,
the FBI crimes statistics unit estimates the financial losses from street
crimes to approximately $3.8billion yearly while losses from corporate
crime from only the healthcare industry, amount to approximately $100
to $400billion yearly.
The Saving and Loans crisis which affected the Federal Savings and
Loans Insurance corporation and the Resolution Trust Corporation
racked up an unprecedented 400 to 500 billion dollar loss as well as the
failure of a third 1043 of the 3234 savings/loans association in the
United States.
2. b. Corporate crimes lead to violent crimes in many situations and here are
the numbers to back it up. The FBI states approximately 16000 people
die yearly as a result of direct violence done to their person while
approximately 56000 people die due to work related incidents or
occupational diseases such as black lung cancer.
It is important to note that this figure does not take into consideration the
thousands that die from hospital malpractice, and hazardous consumer
products or bureaucratic negligence.
c. The public’s perception of white collar crime places it as a crime more
serious than Car theft but far less serious than murder. A survey
conducted in 2005 by NW3C Group gives a clearer picture on how
corporate crime is perceived in the US. To better understand the survey,
here are the parameters used:
A scale of 0 to 7 was used as the measurement scale, with 0 representing
‘not serious’ while 7 represented ‘very serious’
The survey saw car theft rated as the least serious crime at 4 while
murder was the most serious offense at 6.89.
According to the survey, corporate crime was more serious than Car
theft but somewhat less serious than murder. The respective scores for
the different types of white collar crimes where:
o Deliberately Omitting Safety Reports at 6.18
o Insurance fraud at 5.83
o Hacking into corporate databases at 5.6 and
o Embezzlement at 5.18.
d. White collar crime arrests also spring a few surprises when one
considers the percentage it contributes to the overall population arrested
in the United States.
Statistics from the FBI Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) show you that out
of the 14.1million arrests processed across 10,974 agencies, 458, 946
3. were related to corporate crime. Which means corporate crime amounted
to approximately 3% of total arrests.
Looking deeper into these numbers we have; 118, 455 arrested for
forgery, 321,521 for fraud and 18,970 arrested for embezzlement.
e. The white collar crime demographic in the United States has also been
mapped out by the FBI and statistics show that the south contributes a
larger percentage to white collar crime than any other region in the
United States. These are the facts:
An analysis of 10.4 million arrests through the country contained the
following information; 37,328 arrested on forgery and counterfeiting
were made in the south, the West accounted for 23,410 arrests, the
Midwest 13,984 while the Northeast accounted for 12,624 arrests. Also,
the numbers for fraud and embezzlement follow this pattern.
For fraud; the south leads with 140,271 arrests, followed by the Midwest
34,401, the Northeast with 34,093 arrests and the West with 22,856.
f. Statistics on white collar crime emanating from cities, suburbs and
metropolitan areas create no surprises and buttresses the fact that white
collar crime occurs predominantly in cities where more commercial and
governmental agencies are located.
The numbers show that from the 10.4 million arrests analyzed, 64,874
people were arrested for forgery and counterfeiting in cities, 34,552
from suburban areas while metropolitan areas made up 14,944 arrests in
2005.
Statistics on fraud are also not different. Arrest on fraudulent crime in
cities accounted for 120, 631 of the total number, suburban areas were
close behind with 115,295, metropolitan areas had 70, 881 arrests while
non-metropolitan areas experienced 40,209 arrests.
g. Analyzing white collar crimes and offenders age group points out the
fact that adults are the more active party participating in white collar
crimes when compared to teenagers. This is to be expected due to the
4. opportunities and access available to adults who work as professionals in
corporate organizations.
According to the FBI UCR, data from 1996 showed that 5,433 teenagers
were arrested for forgery while 6,947 were arrested for fraud. This is in
contrast to the 120,232 adults arrested for forgery and 150,245 arrested
for fraud.
Another interesting fact from the FBI’s research on white collar crime
showed that these criminal activities among teenagers sharply declined
in later years. In 2005, only 2,600 people under 18 were arrested for
forgery which was a 52.1% decline when compared to 1996 while the
2005 numbers for fraud was 4,779 which led to a corresponding
decrease of 32.1% compared to 1996 figures.
8. Comparing white collar crimes and offenders gender brings to light
another unsurprising fact. Men are more likely to be involved with white
collar crime than women. A 2013 review of white collar crimes in courts
across the United States concentrated on 483 defendants taking part in
83 representative cases showed that:
o Less than one in ten offenders from the 483 defendants were women.
o All solo executed frauds were carried out by men.
o No case had ever involved an all-female conspiracy to commit white
collar crime.
o All male groups were responsible for 75% of the cases while mixed-
groups involving a female were responsible for a quarter of the cases
reviewed.
i. White collar crime in the real estate sector dominates every other sector
in terms of financial losses. Data from the FBI UCR showed that the
arrest rate for individuals associated with property crime was almost
twice the number of those arrested for fraud forgery and embezzlement
put together.
5. Property crime led to the arrest of 635,500 offenders in 1997 through
1999, while fraud accounted for 131,500 cases, embezzlement 6,500 and
forgery/counterfeiting 40,700.
j. White collar fraud is poorly prosecuted in the United States and leads to
lesser incarceration or jail time than crimes classified under street crime
such as robbery, carjacking, murder, peddling banned substances etc.
According to a 2015 report from the Federal Bureau of Prisons, 93.7%
of inmates were convicted under crimes considered as street crimes
while 0.3% were convicted under crimes considered to be white collar
crimes.
We hope that these facts get you up the speed with white collar crime.
For more material on the subject be sure to check our 20 topics on white
collar crime for research paper writing along with our guide on how to
tackle such academic task.
References:
Russel, M. (2008). Soft on Crime.
http://multinationalmonitor.org/hyper/issues/1995/05/mm0595_09.html
Wikipedia: The Savings and Loan Crisis.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savings_and_loan_crisis
Rebekah, D. (2011). US White Collar Crime Policy too Soft.
http://www.duqsm.com/us-white-collar-crime-policy-too-soft/
Gale Research. (2008). Crime, Prisons and Jails.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/white-collar_crime.aspx
Nicel, A. (2013). When the Gender Gap is a Good Thing: Women and
Corporate Crime.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/leah-eichler/women-and-corporate-
crime_b_3985784.html
FBI National Press Office. (2002). The Measurement of White Collar
Crime Using Uniform Crime Reporting Data.
https://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/white-collar-crime-
study
Understanding White Collar Crime: Definitions, Extents and
7. Thomas E. Dearden , (Department of Criminal
Justice, High Point University, High Point, USA)
Single Sentence Summary:
This paper suggests that adults who are demographically
similar to a stereotypical white-collar criminal are less
likely to consider white-collar crime as a problem than
individuals who were demographically different.
Abstract:
Purpose
This paper aims to update our understanding of the
public’s opinion of white-collar crime and explains
perceptions of white-collar crime using self-interest,
political affiliation and in-group/out-group characteristics.
Design/methodology/approach
A state-wide phone survey of adults in North Carolina was
conducted, and 421 adults responded. They provided their
views of white-collar crime, the need for government
intervention and whether they were more concerned about
white-collar crime in the public or private sector.
Findings
In the survey, 74 per cent of the responders agreed or
strongly agreed that white-collar crime is one of the
leading problems in this decade, and 74 per cent of the
responders suggested that it is not being adequately
addressed by our legislators. Evidence suggests that
individuals who are conservative, have high confidence in
their economic circumstances or are demographically
similar to stereotypical white-collar criminals perceive
9. The fulltext of this document has been downloaded 436
times since 2017
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VOLUME 24, ISSUE 2
AN ASSESSMENT OF ADULTS’ VIEWS ON WHITE-COLLAR CRIM