Abstract
Since the mid-1980s, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act of 1970 (RICO) has been used against traditional organized criminals (i.e., Mafia) operating within various waste-trade industries. Recent civil and criminal RICO cases brought in New York City and State, provide current examples of the overall limited success of using RICO against criminal actors situated within the waste-trade industries. Although the traditional form of organized crime (i.e., Mafia) appears to be on the wane, corporate forms of organized crime have already entered into the waste-trade industries to fill the void created by the extraction of their predecessors. These corporate racketeers closely mimic the old traditional form of crime they have replaced, but may prove to be even more intractable, because, as the literature on corporate crime has clearly shown, corporate entities are extremely resistant to labeling as illegitimate organizations. One result of addressing “environmental-organized crime” as strictly organized crime, rather than as environmental crime, is that little change will be forthcoming in our current environmental regulations, laws, strategies and policies.
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Previously presented at the 50th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology in Washington, DC, and subsequently revised for publication here.
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Carter, T.S. Ascent of the corporate model in environmental-organized crime. Crime, Law and Social Change 31, 1–30 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008348805646
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008348805646