While the number of white-collar crimes is on the rise and increasingly in the headlines, the accounts of affluent offenders doing prison time are few and far between.
Because of spotty enforcement, white-collar criminals are far more likely to get away with their crimes than poor folks. And when they are caught, wealthy corporate executives can take refuge in their

powerful friends and associates while availing themselves of high-priced lawyers, jury-selection experts and mitigation specialists. While most other people can not afford to get the best experts and lawyers to cover for them. The truth is, most corporate crooks get the best representation money can buy, and money, in the criminal justice system, can buy quite a bit. Unlike average criminal defendants, who have few reasonable expectations about where they will do their time, white-collar criminals usually employ consultants to help insure that the defendants serve their sentences under conditions of confinement that, while never pleasant, are nonetheless tolerable. And it works. Because so much of corporate crime is adjudicated in federal rather than state court, corporate criminals often serve their time under relatively cushy conditions of confinement. This seems to be the c

ase for many people in high places and more of it seems to be bought to the public attention. But even with the publicity there are still people committing the crime and getting away with more then they should. You could even say while people are in jail for smaller things for a longer time these white-collar criminals use a "get out of jail free" card and end up having to do less time then they should. This is wrong and at this point larger consequences need to be set so this stops happening and people are brought to justice. Just because they have more money to buy better lawyers doesn't mean that they are any better than other criminals. Sooner or later this white-collar crime needs to stop.
Feige, David. "White-Collar Criminals Rarely Do Hard Prison Time."
The Nation (23 June 2005). Rpt. in
White-Collar Crime. Ed. Kelly Wand. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2009. Opposing Viewpoints.
Gale Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 9 Nov. 2010.
This will never stop. And theres really nothing we can do about it.
ReplyDeleteThis is most likley not going to stop
ReplyDeletePeople should be punished for crime, no matter what.
ReplyDeleteIt makes me super mad to think that people get shorter sentences just because they have a high status.
ReplyDeleteWhite collar criminals should recieve the same sentences for crimes they commit as a blue collar criminal. It's not fair that just because someone makes more money and has a higher status gets off easier.
ReplyDeleteAny person who commits a crime should get the same punishment as someone else, whether they're famous or not.
ReplyDeleteI believe that anyone who commits a crime, famous or not, should have no special treatment.
ReplyDelete