Politicians aren't going to do much more than give lip service to this issue.
If our attention weren't on blacks (and other minorities/poor) crimes, we might pay more attention to white collar crimes- the HAVES who are responsible for far more injuries and death every year due to bad policies, pollution, faulty products, unsafe drugs and food stuff, harmful and unnecessary medical procedures, etc. etc. etc.
Or those have who 'steal' from the 'people' everyday through Corp Welfare.
We focus on crimes of minorities and poor because that's what the corp predators put on the news every night, san the occassional scandel where one of the own is scapegoated.
I think we'd have a far less 'violent' society if some of the wealth skimmed by the elite were distributed amongst those WHO CAN'T PROVIDE FOR THEIR FAMILIES ON MINIMUM WAGE.
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl? ... /07/033241THE BARONS OF BANKRUPTCY: SURVIVORS WHO LAUGHED ALL THE WAY TO THE BANK
They are the barons of bankruptcy - a privileged group of top business people who made extraordinary personal fortunes even as their companies were heading for disaster. They made their money at the top of the market, selling shares in companies whose values rocketed in 1999 and 2000. Today their companies, many in the telecommunications sector, have crashed, destroying hundreds of billions of dollars of investor wealth and almost 100,000 jobs. Yet the executives and directors of these bankrupt companies have walked away with gross earnings of $3.3 billion, a stunning pay-off for corporate failure.
This is how a report in yesterday's Financial Times begins. It's part of an exhaustive inquiry by the Financial Times into executive compensation at the largest US bankruptcies, covering the 25 largest US public Companies to go bankrupt since January 2001.
Among the barons of bankruptcy are some familiar names. Ken Lay, former chairman and CEO of Enron, grossed $247 million. Jeff Skilling, former Enron president, grossed $89 million. Even these figures are dwarfed by the $512 million grossed by Gary Winnick of Global Crossing.
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CORP PREDATORS
Top 100 Corp Criminals List for the 90's
http://corporatepredators.org/top100.htmlExcerpts:
The point of the list contained in this report, The Top 100 Corporate Criminals of the Decade -- is to focus public attention on a wave of corporate criminality that has swamped prosecutors offices around the country.
This is the dark underside of the marketplace that is given little sustained attention and analysis by politicians and news outlets.
To compile The Top 100 Corporate Criminals of the 1990s, we used the most narrow and conservative of definitions -- corporations that have pled guilty or no contest to crimes and have been criminally fined.
The 100 corporate criminals fell into 14 categories of crime: Environmental (38), antitrust (20), fraud (13), campaign finance (7), food and drug (6), financial crimes (4), false statements (3), illegal exports (3), illegal boycott (1), worker death (1), bribery (1), obstruction of justice (1) public corruption (1), and tax evasion (1).
And that emerging consensus is this: corporate crime and violence inflicts far more damage on society than all street crime combined.
The FBI estimates, for example, that burglary and robbery ? street crimes -- costs the nation $3.8 billion a year.
Compare this to the hundreds of billions of dollars stolen from Americans as a result of corporate and white-collar fraud.
Recite this list of corporate frauds and people will immediately say to you: but you can't compare street crime and corporate crime -- corporate crime is not violent crime.
Unfortunately, corporate crime is often violent crime.
The FBI estimates that, 19,000 Americans are murdered every year. Compare this to the 56,000 Americans who die every year on the job or from occupational diseases such as black lung and asbestosis and the tens of thousands of other Americans who fall victim to the silent violence of pollution, contaminated foods, hazardous consumer products, and hospital malpractice.
Click on the link above to see if any of your favorites made the list.