Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate CrimeLawrence M. Salinger SAGE Publications, 2004. 8. 3. - 1016페이지 Click ′Additional Materials′ for downloadable samples The Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate Crime is edited to incorporate 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. Articles consider all aspects of white-collar and corporate crime, including: * Law: describes specific elements of corporate law and the various illegal acts to which they apply The Encyclopedia was developed primarily for college, public, and high school libraries. Post-graduate academics, law firms, and corporations will also find this a valuable addition to their libraries. Key Themes * Business Fraud & Crimes Key Features * Two volumes and over 500 entries |
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... and to private businesses with 15 or more employees 1981 Three General Electric executives are imprisoned over a payment of $1.25 million to a Puerto Rican official to obtain contracts to a federally owned electrical plant. xx Timeline.
Lawrence M. Salinger. official to obtain contracts to a federally owned electrical plant. 1984 Ten thousand workers ... contract by inflating the price of parts and hours worked. 1988 The Major Fraud Act is signed into law by President ...
... contracts for proposed ventures. The many exchanges between the Arab agents and the congressmen were secretly recorded and videotaped by the FBI. These recordings captured meetings, agreements to accept payments, and the actual ...
... contracts was intense, and when one player dropped out or proved unsatisfactory, there were always others waiting in the wings. Slavery was outlawed by nearly every Western country by the 19th century and many expected that Africa would ...
... contracts to foreign corporations in return for substantial kickbacks. According to analysts, “most Nigerians believe[d] that their government ministers, civil and military, systematically take a rake-off on government contracts.” Some ...