Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
(2012)
Insurance Fraud Register Launched to Aid Crackdown on Fake Claims
Robert Weiss (2014)
Corporate Security at Ford Motor Company: From the Great War to the Cold War
(2014)
I ended up on a fraud list for letting rooms
(2015)
Home page, available from http://www.emmlegal.com
A. Doig, M. Macaulay (2008)
Decades, Directions and the Fraud Review: Addressing the Future of Public Sector Fraud?Public Money & Management, 28
Amy Ludlow (2015)
Privatising Public Prisons: Labour Law and the Public Procurement Process
Cuny Pathways, Criminal A.A (1948)
Criminal justice.The Medico-legal journal, 16 Pt. 4
D. Garland (1996)
THE LIMITS OF THE SOVEREIGN STATE Strategies of Crime Control in Contemporary SocietyBritish Journal of Criminology, 36
A. Wakefield, J. Fleming (2008)
The SAGE Dictionary of Policing
(2011)
Client Alert -Stark Warning Given to Fraudsters
Michael Mcmanus (1995)
From fate to choice : private bobbies, public beats : private security patrol and the diminishing boundaries of neighbourhood policing
Katherine Snell, S. Tombs (2011)
‘How do you get your voice heard when no-one will let you?’ Victimization at workCriminology & Criminal Justice, 11
G. Shefer, A. Liebling (2008)
Prison privatizationCriminology & Criminal Justice, 8
W. Fitzgibbon, J. Lea (2014)
Defending probation: Beyond privatisation and securityEuropean Journal of Probation, 6
P. Waddington (2004)
THE NEW PARAPOLICE: RISK MARKETS AND COMMODIFIED SOCIAL CONTROLBritish Journal of Criminology
Deborah Michael (2000)
Private Security and Public PolicingSecurity Journal, 13
C. Meerts (2014)
Corporate security : Governing through private and public law
Mark Button (2008)
Doing Security: Critical Reflections and an Agenda for Change
M. Levi (2008)
Organized fraud and organizing fraudsCriminology & Criminal Justice, 8
J.-P. Brodeur (2010)
The Policing Web
J. Mehigan, A. Rowe (2007)
Problematizing prison privatization: an overview of the debate
(2008)
Developments in the Australian security industry
(2002)
Some explorations of shaming and incapacitating business fraudsters
A. White (2010)
The Politics of Private Security: Regulation, Reform and Re-Legitimation
(1980)
Contract Security in Ontario, Toronto, Centre of Criminology, University of Toronto
Michael Reisig, R. Kane (2014)
The Oxford handbook of police and policing
R. Mawby (1989)
Regulating Fraud: White-Collar Crime and the Criminal ProcessInternational Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 33
(1988)
Policing for Profit, Sage, London
(2014)
Private prosecutions grow as state bodies retreat in face of dwindling resources
Douglas Sharp, David Wilson (2000)
‘Household Security’: Private Policing and Vigilantism in DoncasterHoward Journal of Criminal Justice, 39
(2014)
Private prosecutions for fraud”, paper presented at the 2014 Counter Fraud and Forensic Accountants Conference
Anita Dockley, I. Loader (2013)
The Penal Landscape : The Howard League Guide to Criminal Justice in England and Wales
(2009)
Unreasonable demands? Threatened civil recovery against those accused of shoplifting oremployee theft
Lesley Noaks (2000)
Private cops on the block: A review of the role of private security in residential communitiesPolicing and Society, 10
E. Genders (2013)
Prisons and privatisation: policy, practice and evaluation
Mark Button, G. Brooks (2016)
From ‘shallow’ to ‘deep’ policing: ‘crash-for-cash’ insurance fraud investigation in England and Wales and the need for greater regulationPolicing and Society, 26
D. Whyte (2013)
Policing for whomCriminal Justice Matters, 94
(2008)
incapacitating business fraudsters”, Punishment and Society
(2001)
Alternatives to the criminal courts: some considerations of civil and administrative options in the process of legal regulation
J. Mehigan (2007)
Security Officers and Policing: Powers, Culture and Control in the Governance of Private SpaceBritish Journal of Criminology, 47
Lesley Noaks (2004)
Private PolicingCrime Prevention and Community Safety, 6
Autumn, Mark Twain, Asher Lans, Revolving Bookstand (2016)
The Private Government
P. Stenning, C. Shearing (1979)
Private Security and Private Justice, 6
Joshua Bamfield (2012)
Shopping and Crime
Sandra Walklate (2006)
Imagining the Victim of Crime
A. James (1998)
Privatizing prisons : rhetoric and realityContemporary Sociology, 27
P. Waddington (2004)
SELLING SECURITY: THE PRIVATE POLICING OF PUBLIC SPACEBritish Journal of Criminology
C. Shearing, P. Stenning (1981)
Modern Private Security: Its Growth and ImplicationsCrime and Justice, 3
L. Johnston (1992)
The rebirth of private policing
A. Wakefield, Mark Button (2014)
Private Policing in Public Spaces
Hazel Croall (2007)
Victims of White-Collar and Corporate Crime
D. Garland (2001)
The Culture of ControlCrime, Inequality and the State
Mark Button (2013)
Security Officers and Policing: Powers, Culture and Control in the Governance of Private Space
(2014)
Metropolitan Police accused of acting on behalf of big business”, available from http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/jan/29/metropolitan-police virgin-media-lord-chief-justice
(2007)
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners
M. Levi (1993)
The investigation, prosecution, and trial of serious fraud
(2011)
Law firm ACS : Law stops chasing ‘ illegal file sharers ’ ”
I. Loader (2000)
Plural Policing and Democratic GovernanceSocial & Legal Studies, 9
Julian Roberts, Loretta Stalans, M. Hough, D. Indermaur, M. Tonry, N. Morris (2002)
Penal Populism and Public Opinion: Lessons from Five Countries
C. Shearing, P. Stenning (1983)
Private Security: Implications for Social ControlSocial Problems, 30
K. Bussmann, Markus Werle (2006)
Addressing Crime in Companies: First Findings from a Global Survey of Economic CrimeBritish Journal of Criminology, 46
(2001)
Policing as a public good: reconstituting the connections between policing and the state
C. Meerts, N. Dorn (2009)
Corporate Security and Private Justice: Danger Signs?European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, 17
Bilge Yeşil (2006)
WATCHING OURSELVESCultural Studies, 20
B. Jon (2005)
Plural Policing: the mixed economy of visible patrols in England and Wales
Shanna Slyke, William Bales (2012)
A contemporary study of the decision to incarcerate white‐collar and street property offendersPunishment & Society, 14
Janice Goldstraw-White (2011)
White-Collar Crime: Accounts of Offending Behaviour
W. Fitzgerald (1984)
Corporate Crime in the Pharmaceutical industryAmerican Journal of Health-system Pharmacy, 41
(2014)
EY to offer businesses help with private prosecutions for fraud
(2007)
Victims of corporate crime”, in Walklate, S. (Ed) Handbook of Victims and Victimology, Willan, Cullompton
(1995)
Responsive Regulation, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Bamfield
Mark Button, D. Blackbourn, M. Tunley (2015)
‘The Not So Thin Blue Line After All?’ Investigative Resources Dedicated to Fighting Fraud/Economic Crime in the United KingdomPolicing-an International Journal of Police Strategies & Management, 9
(2012)
Understanding Fraud Suffered by individuals and Smaller Businesses, Fraud Advisory Panel
Amy Ludlow (2014)
Transforming Rehabilitation: What lessons might be learned from prison privatisation?European Journal of Probation, 6
C. Lewis, G. Brooks, Mark Button, David Shepherd, A. Wakefield (2014)
Evaluating the case for greater use of private prosecutions in England and Wales for fraud offencesInternational Journal of Law Crime and Justice, 42
(2013)
Annual Fraud Indicator
Mark Button (2011)
Fraud investigation and the ‘flawed architecture’ of counter fraud entities in the United KingdomInternational Journal of Law Crime and Justice, 39
James Williams (2014)
The Private Eyes of Corporate Culture: The Forensic Accounting and Corporate Investigation Industry and the Production of Corporate Financial Security
(2012)
Fraudsters found guilty of contempt of court and sentenced
(2007)
Safety Crimes, Willan, Cullompton
Mahesh Nalla, A. Wakefield (2014)
The Security Officer
R. Sarre, T. Prenzler (2009)
The Law of Private Security in Australia
Purpose– The purpose of this paper is to illustrate the ways in which contemporary organisations are imposing their own private sanctions on fraudsters. Design/methodology/approach– The research draws on primary data from interviews with counter fraud practitioners in the UK, secondary sources and case examples. Findings– Such developments have been stimulated, at least in part, by the broader limitations of the criminal justice system and in particular a “fraud bottleneck”. Alongside criminal sanctions, many examples are provided of organisations employing private prosecutions innovative forms of civil sanction and “pseudo state” sanctions, most commonly civil penalties comparable to fines. Research limitations/implications– Such changes could mark the beginning of the “rebirth of private prosecution” and the further expansion of private punishment. Growing private involvement in state sanctions and the development of private sanctions represents a risk to traditional guarantees of justice. There are differences in which comparable frauds are dealt with by corporate bodies and thus considerable inconsistency in sanctions imposed. In contrast with criminal justice measures, there is no rehabilitative element to private sanctions. More research is needed to assess the extent of such measures, and establish what is happening, the wider social implications, and whether greater state regulation is needed. Practical implications– Private sanctions for fraud are likely to continue to grow, as organisations pursue their own measures rather than relying on increasingly over-stretched criminal justice systems. Their emergence, extent and implications are not fully understood by researchers and therefore need much more research, consideration and debate. These private measures need to be more actively recognised by criminal justice policy-makers and analysts alongside the already substantial formal involvement of the private sector in punishment through prisons, electronic tagging and probation, for example. Such measures lack the checks and balances, and greater degree of consistency as laid out in sentencing guidelines, of the criminal justice system. In light of this, consideration needs to be given to greater state regulation of private sanctions for fraud. More also needs to be done to help fraudsters suffering problems such as debt or addiction to rebuild their lives. There is a strong case for measures beyond the criminal justice system to support such fraudsters to be created and publicly promoted. Originality/value– The findings are of relevance to criminal justice policy-makers, academics and counter fraud practitioners in the public and private sectors.
Journal of Criminological Research Policy and Practice – Emerald Publishing
Published: Sep 21, 2015
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.