Examples of organized crime in the following topics:
-
- Global crime can refer to any organized crime that occurs at an international or transnational level.
- Like national and local organized crime, global crime includes highly centralized enterprises run by criminals for the purpose of engaging in illegal activity, most commonly for monetary profit.
- Transnational organized crime (TOC or transnational crime) is organized crime coordinated across national borders, involving groups or networks of individuals working in more than one country to plan and execute illegal business ventures.
- The most commonly seen transnational organized crimes are money laundering; human smuggling; cyber crime; and trafficking of humans, drugs, weapons, endangered species, body parts, or nuclear material.
- Transnational organized crime is widely opposed on the basis of a number of negative effects.
-
- Organized crime refers to transnational, national, or local groupings of highly centralized enterprises run by criminals.
- Gangs may become "disciplined" enough to be considered "organized."
- An organized gang or criminal set can also be referred to as a mob.
- Bureaucratic and corporate organized crime groups are defined by the general rigidity of their internal structures.
- A distinctive gang culture underpins many, but not all, organized groups; this may develop through recruiting strategies, social learning processes in the corrective system experienced by youth, family, or peer involvement in crime, and the coercive actions of criminal authority figures.
-
- This does not deny that there may be practical motives for crime.
- When criminal behavior is learned, the learning includes techniques of committing the crime (which are sometimes very complicated, sometimes simple) and the specific direction of motives, drives, rationalizations, and attitudes.
- One very unique aspect of this theory is that it works to explain more than just juvenile delinquency and crime committed by lower class individuals.
- Since crime is understood to be learned behavior, the theory is also applicable to white-collar, corporate, and organized crime.
-
- Crime statistics attempt to provide statistical measures of the crime in societies.
- Crime statistics attempt to provide statistical measures of the crime in societies.
- Crime statistics are gathered and reported by many countries and are of interest to several international organizations, including Interpol and the United Nations.
- First, they often use statistics from law enforcement organizations.
- These statistics are normally readily available and are generally reliable in terms of identifying what crime is being dealt with by law enforcement organizations, as they are gathered by law enforcement officers in the course of their duties, and are often extracted directly from law enforcement computer systems.
-
- Sex crimes are forms of human sexual behavior that are crimes.
- Some sex crimes are crimes of violence that involve sex.
- Sex crimes are forms of human sexual behavior that are crimes.
- Some sex crimes are crimes of violence that involve sex.
- Sometimes criminal organizations force people to do business with them, as when a gang extorts money from shopkeepers for "protection. " An organized gang or criminal set can also be referred to as a mob.
-
- Criminal law is the body of law that relates to crime and civil law deals with disputes between organizations and individuals.
- Criminal law is the body of law that relates to crime.
- Civil law is the branch of law dealing with disputes between individuals or organizations, in which compensation may be awarded to the victim.
- Generally, crimes can result in incarceration, but torts (see below) cannot.
- All states have somewhat similar laws in regard to "higher crimes" (or felonies), such as murder and rape, although penalties for these crimes may vary from state to state.
-
- Their explanation was that some individuals had a biological propensity for crime.
- The term Lombroso used to describe the appearance of organisms resembling ancestral forms of life is atavism.
- Classical thinkers accepted the legal definition of crime uncritically; crime is what the law says it is.
- Most significant was Garofalo's reformulation of classical notions of crime and his redefinition of crime as a violation of natural law, or a human universal.
- Now, the conversation about crime and biological explanations focuses more on the relationship between genetics and crime than the relationship between phenotypic features and crime.
-
- The Nuremberg Trials were military tribunals that tried Nazi political and military leadership for alleged crimes committed during the war.
- On January 14, 1942, representatives from the nine occupying countries met in London to draft the Inter-Allied Resolution on German War Crimes.
- Thomas Dodd showed a series of pictures to the courtroom after reading through the documents of crimes committed by the defendants.
- These organizations were to be declared "criminal" if found guilty.
- The indictments were for: participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of a crime against peace; planning, initiating and waging wars of aggression and other crimes against peace; war crimes; and crimes against humanity.
-
- A violent crime is a crime in which the offender uses or threatens to use violent force upon the victim.
- A violent crime is a crime in which the offender uses or threatens to use violent force upon the victim.
- Violent crimes include crimes committed with and without weapons.
- With the exception of rape (which accounts for 6% of all reported violent crimes), males are the primary victims of all forms of violent crime.
- The comparison of violent crime statistics between countries is usually problematic due to the way different countries classify crime.
-
- They lost jobs or positions in unions and other political organizations, and suffered other repercussions after "taking the fifth. "
- No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
- The Fifth Amendment states that everyone deserves a Grand Jury in the case of a capital crime.