Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate CrimeLawrence M. Salinger SAGE Publications, 2005 - 1016ÆäÀÌÁö With more than 500 entries (including up-to-date information on such high profile cases as Martha Stewart and Enron), the Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate Crime gathers history, definitions, examples, investigation, prosecution, assessments, challenges, and projections into one definitive reference work on the topic. This two-volume encyclopedia incorporates information about a variety of white-collar crimes, and provides examples of persons, statutes, companies, and convictions. Each entry offers a thorough and thoughtful summary of the topic. Rather than a simple definition, users are given a satisfying and sophisticated synopsis with references for further study. |
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... million millionaires into million- aires worth $ 200 to $ 300 million by the 1880s . In 1870 , following the loss of the Civil War , the South owned only 12 percent of the nation's wealth , down from 30 percent in 1860. Moreover , a ...
... million for Merrill Lynch between December 1999 and No- vember 2000. Merrill records revealed that Blod- gett's personal income had risen from $ 3 million to $ 12 million during the relevant period . Although he refused to admit any ...
... million francs ( about $ 2.25 million ) and an Elf- funded 4.5 - million - franc ( about $ 1.15 million ) di- vorce settlement . Floch - Prigent told investigators that President Francois Mitterand had ordered him to pay off his ex ...