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Test your basic knowledge |
White Collar Crime
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
law
,
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Refers mainly to small - inexpensive - and expendable components and tools such as nails - bolts - scrap metals - pliers - and drill bits.
Robber barons
Types of Employee Crime
Property of uncertain ownership
Insider trading
2. Ponzi Schemes has (no a product) - While a Pyramid Scheme (has a product
Financial Crime
Love Canal
Corporate stealing from employees
Difference between a Ponzi Schemes and a Pyramid Scheme
3. Corporations operating in third-world countries include highly hazardous and dangerous working conditions at industrial facilities; exportation of unsafe products
Ponzi scheme largest in history to date
Transnational corporations
Academic Crime
Defense Contract Fraud
4. A situation in which the interests of a person whom serves in their professional role conflict with that person's own private interests as an individual
Conflict of Interest
Overutilization
Paper entrepreneurs
Types of Employee Crime
5. Billing for unnecessary tests and services - is the most common form of medical fraud and it is extremely difficult to prove and prosecute
Types of Retail Crime
Overutilization
Why commit Sabotage
Company Property
6. A type of Employee Crime: the destruction or fraudulent appropriation of another's money which has been entrusted to one's care
Embezzlement
Finance crime
Health Care Fraud
Types of Retail Crime
7. 1/3 of the us adult population has been victimized by some form of consumer fraud - Estimated costs over $100 billion annually - Major causes of this large degree of victimization - Advances in technology (faceless perceptions and victims) - Globaliz
Holtfreter - Van Slyke and Blomberg - 2006
Medical Crime
Manville case
Monopoly
8. Refers to illegal activity that occurs in the world of finance and financial institutions [Can be committed to benefit financial institutions - such as banks - or for the benefit of individuals - such as investment bankers.]
Academic Crime
Holtfreter - Van Slyke and Blomberg - 2006
Finance crime
Insider trading
9. Cheating employees out of overtime pay (Wal-Mart) - Denying workers their pensions (Police Agency) - and Extortion (falsely accusing employees of theft to comp their pay
Corporate stealing from employees
How Corporate violence differs from conventional interpersonal violence
Corporate fraud
Strategic bankruptcy
10. Directing patients to the clinic's pharmacy to fill unneeded prescriptions
Steering
Occupational Deviance
ImClone Case? Individual involved?
Financial Crime
11. Send you to a different place when they could have diagnosed it themselves
Ping-ponging
Conflict of Interest
How Corporate violence differs from conventional interpersonal violence
Price gouging and manipulation
12. Is the act of manipulating people into performing actions or divulging confidential information - rather than by breaking in or using technical cracking techniques
Social Engineering
Property of uncertain ownership
Financial Crime
Overutilization
13. Refers to monogrammed clothing - wallets - jewelry - personally modified tools
Ford Pinto
Love Canal
The Dalkon Shield
Personal Property
14. Its when a corporation commits criminal offences that are non-violence but have vast political and economic consequences. Sutherland
Fraud
Chiseling
Pilfering
Corporate fraud
15. Gaining unauthorized access to computer system - file or network by using their specialized knowledge of computers
Company Property
Role of the corporation in modern society
Ponzi scheme largest in history to date
Hacking
16. Pilfering - Chiseling - Fraud - Embezzlement
Price gouging and manipulation
Difference between a Ponzi Schemes and a Pyramid Scheme
Types of Employee Crime
Occupational Deviance
17. Refers to buying or selling a security - in breach of a fiduciary duty or other relationships of trust and confidence - while in possession of nonpublic information about the security
Role of the corporation in modern society
Occupational Deviance
Insider trading
Pilfering
18. Internal computer crimes (sabotaging programs) - Telecommunications crimes (hacking) - Computer manipulation crimes (embezzlements and fraud) - Computers in support of criminal enterprises - Hardware / software thefts (corporate level mainly)
Ponzi scheme largest in history to date
Technocrime Five types
Ford Pinto
Types of Employee Crime
19. In the Anglo-American tradition - the earliest corporations were churches - towns - guilds and universities - 'town saloon'. Over time - these corporations were recognized as trusts with legal control over certain property. These trading corporations
Health Care Fraud
Parallel pricing
Historical development of the corporation and corporate crime
Difference between a Ponzi Schemes and a Pyramid Scheme
20. 1980s dubbed as the 'biggest bank robbery' ever - S&Ls offered unrealistically high interest rates to attract large sums of money - money invested was then lent to developers engaged in highly speculative (risky) projects; which bound to go broke unl
Holtfreter - Van Slyke and Blomberg - 2006
Corporate Tax Evasion
S&L Crisis
Chiseling
21. Major corporations cost US taxpayers huge amounts by evading their fair share of the tax burden
Historical development of the corporation and corporate crime
Paper entrepreneurs
Different types of hackers
Corporate Tax Evasion
22. Corporations used to annihilate their competitors by undercutting their price and by pressuring dealers - sales agents - unions - and other parties not to work with their competitors
Historical development of the corporation and corporate crime
Predatory pricing
Conflict of Interest
Corporate Tax Evasion
23. The Madoff ponzi scheme was surely the largest in history to date [Started in the 1990s and defrauded thousands of investors of recorded $65 Billion]
Ponzi scheme largest in history to date
Predatory pricing
Fraud
Why commit Sabotage
24. Refers to lawyers engaging in criminal conduct in the course of discharging their professional duties
Legal Crime
Why commit Sabotage
Corporate stealing from employees
Ponzi scheme largest in history to date
25. Let the buyer beware - has traditionally regulated the relationship between buyers and sellers
Insider trading
Ford Pinto
Caveat Emptor
Parallel pricing
26. Price gouging or systematic overcharging - have also been directed at various industries and corporations when they take advantage of especially vulnerable classes of consumers or circumstances such as shortages. Many states prohibit price gouging by
Ford Pinto
Economic exploitation of employees
How Corporate violence differs from conventional interpersonal violence
Price gouging and manipulation
27. Corporations are increasingly controlled by paper entrepreneurs - or investors who are principally concerned with short-term profit. These investors are far less likely to be strongly committed to product development of to the local communities in wh
Why commit Sabotage
How Corporate violence differs from conventional interpersonal violence
Paper entrepreneurs
Role of the corporation in modern society
28. Stock price dropped dramatically after drug was not approved by the FDA.
ImClone Case? Individual involved?
Holtfreter - Van Slyke and Blomberg - 2006
Religious Crime
Family ganging
29. Food - transport - medical
Pilfering
Various forms of corporate violence that are directed at the public
Social Engineering
Occupational Deviance
30. Corporate Officials - Directors and Mangers - Outsiders who are 'tipped' [CEO tips family members - 'it going to be a bad month'] - Bankers - accountants and lawyers who provide services with confidential information about securities being traded - [
Company Property
Corporate stealing from employees
Holtfreter - Van Slyke and Blomberg - 2006
Who commits insider trading
31. A producer of asbestos products which was later found linked to an ultimately fatal lung disease resulting from exposure to asbestos. Manville had internal medical reports of asbestosis among its workers; however - based on cost-benefit analysis - it
Parallel pricing
Enron's Main People
Manville case
S&L Crisis
32. Refers to illegal activity that occurs in the world of finance and financial institutions
Financial Crime
Economic exploitation of employees
Overutilization
Corporate stealing from employees
33. Karl Marx recognized dark side to most corporations. Marx regarded corporations as a capitalist system that exploits and dehumanizes workers and deprives them of a fair return on their labor. The pursuit of profit is the principle rational for the co
Financial Crime
Steering
Who commits insider trading
Role of the corporation in modern society
34. Goods and supplies that are delivered and paid for but cannot be accounted for by sales or stockroom surveys [because the items disappeared]
Social Engineering
Inventory Shrinkage
Defense Contract Fraud
Corporate Tax Evasion
35. A Corporation that ruthlessly undercut virtually all competitors in order to obtain control 95% of the market.
Standard Oil Corporation - presided over by John D. Rockefeller
Historical development of the corporation and corporate crime
Monopoly
Holtfreter - Van Slyke and Blomberg - 2006
36. An intrauterine birth control device in the 1960's in which it was discovered that bacteria was traveling up the wick of the device into the womb.
Occupational Deviance
Inventory Shrinkage
Conflict of Interest
The Dalkon Shield
37. They are the top people in the corporate world - government - and military whom have 'interlocks' - or a complex network of ties - that enable them to advance their interrelated interests and move quite easily between high-level private- and public-s
Financial Crime
Hacking
Power elite ...
Who commits insider trading
38. White hats are good. Black hats are bad
Manville case
Different types of hackers
Inventory Shrinkage
Steering
39. 'offenses committed by either corporate officials or the corporation itself - which benefit their corporation'
Historical development of the corporation and corporate crime
Corporate transgressions
Steering
Corporate crime
40. For lying about a stock sale conspiracy - and obstruction of justice.
What Martha Stewart was jailed for
Raj Rajaratnam
Financial Crime
Transnational corporations
41. Decreasing the number of high-wage union jobs - reducing wages of US workers - hiring illegal immigrants and the use of offshore plants for cheap workers
Economic exploitation of employees
Parallel pricing
S&L Crisis
Power elite ...
42. Was perhaps the single most famous example of a corporation that ruthlessly undercut virtually all competitors]
Chiseling
Standard Oil Corporation - presided over by John D. Rockefeller
Pyramid Schemes
Health Care Fraud
43. Bankruptcy method used to avoid meeting certain burdensome finical obligations - including obligations to creditors
Property of uncertain ownership
Strategic bankruptcy
Corporate Tax Evasion
Types of Retail Crime
44. Refers to a type of Employee Crime: known as theft through misrepresentation
Pyramid Schemes
Company Property
Fraud
Historical development of the corporation and corporate crime
45. Crime that is defined as illegal or harmful conduct committed specifically in the context of their religious entity such as a religious leader may generate a bottomless donation basket for gullible believers to offer money which is used for corrupt p
How Corporate violence differs from conventional interpersonal violence
Love Canal
Fraud
Religious Crime
46. The corporate empires of the robber barons (for example: Rockefeller - Carnegie - Vanderbilt - Gould - and Frick) of the second half of the 19th century were involved in every manner of bribery - fraud - stock manipulation - predation against competi
Property of uncertain ownership
Transnational corporations
Robber barons
Corporate Tax Evasion
47. Refers to a type of Employee Crime: known as cheating or swindling
Personal Property
What Martha Stewart was jailed for
Chiseling
Types of Retail Crime
48. Fixed prices or parallel pricing is when the leaders in the industry set inflated prices and supposed competitors adjust their own prices accordingly. Explicit price fixing was prohibited by the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 as a form of 'restraint t
Predatory pricing
Academic Crime
Parallel pricing
ImClone Case? Individual involved?
49. To conceal their own errors [make it look like it was the manager's fault] - To gain time off - For more pay [brake a system so they can charge to fix it] - To express their contempt and anger with their work and employer
Embezzlement
Corporate transgressions
Property of uncertain ownership
Why commit Sabotage
50. Pyramid Scheme (has product) - A variant of a Ponzi Scheme - Involves recruiting other people into the business in other to sustain profit rather them a truly profitable enterprise [MonVie Acai Berry juice
How Corporate violence differs from conventional interpersonal violence
Finance crime
Insider trading
Pyramid Schemes