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Persuasive Essay On White Collar Crime

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Have you been charged with a white-collar crime? Do not take it lightly. That’s the most important advice you’ll get from the experienced defense attorneys at Scott Brown & Associates, in a year that will see increased enforcement of anti-fraud and anti-corruption cases.

White-collar crime is any nonviolent, financially motivated crime. Such crimes include bank fraud, tax fraud, embezzlement (theft), extortion, money laundering, pyramid (Ponzi) schemes, racketeering, insider trading, identity theft, credit card fraud, bribery, forgery, tax evasion, cyber crimes, counterfeiting, and conspiracy. Such crimes, committed by prominent executives and politicians, routinely make headlines. But you don’t have to be powerful or celebrated to become embroiled in white-collar crimes. Any respectable, successful member of the community may come to believe that there’s …show more content…

The FBI strengthened its capabilities by establishing three new squads of about 30 agents in Washington, D.C., New York, and Los Angeles. In the first major initiative to be announced by Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch, in September 2015 the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) responded to criticism of its lack of prosecutions of Wall Street criminals. It issued a memo to federal prosecutors nationwide, written by Deputy Attorney General Sally Q. Yates and known as the “Yates Memo,” that outlined new policies that prioritize the prosecution of individual employees.

The Yates Memo also put pressure on corporations to turn over evidence against their executives, reported the New York Times. “Because the memo lays out guidelines, not laws, its effect will be determined largely by how Justice Department officials interpret it. And several of the points in the memo merely codify policy that is already in place.”

Some observers believe the Yates Memo may result in unintended consequences. According

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