Wednesday, December 11, 2013

The Root of All Evil


In 1960 Cloward and Ohlin identified three types of illegitimate juvenile subcultures; criminal, conflict, and retreatist. (Hagen, 2013, p. 164)  This identification condensed two and a half centuries of research, bringing understanding to what was previously not understood.  The first identification of the criminal subculture is evident in Wu-Tang Clan’s 1993 album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers);  In the opening of this song Raekwon talks about two for fives, and how the other drug dealers have garbage down the way, then the song comes in.  Raekwon opens with how he grew up as a youth, and the motivation to want success.  He raps about the subculture in Staten Island when he speaks of, “ making his way on fire escapes”, but with all that theft, extortion, and property offenses, he finally figures out what he is doing wrong, and begins to hang out with a clique of drug dealers.  He learns to make money by selling kilos of cocaine; converting the powder cocaine into crack cocaine, and selling rocks.  Back to the two for five, this was criminal opportunity that allowed him to achieve success.  I grew up in the 1990s not only listening to artist like Wu-Tang Clan, Snoop Doggy Dogg, Dr. Dre, Dogg Pound, Ice Cube, Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, DJ Quik, MC Eiht, Mac 10, N.W.A., Outkast, MC Ren, Nate Dogg, all while I was gangbanging and selling drugs.  In 1994 I had returned from California to the slums of South Phenix City, Alabama, and made up in my mind that it was time to grow up and be a man.   I got serious about making money.  I was influenced by the ‘disorganized slums’ of Los Angeles, California.  Even though gangs were not common, they were present in Columbus/Phenix City at the time.  I did not know that I was a part of a group that was denied both legitimate and illegitimate sources of access to status, so I resorted to violence through fist fighting and ‘peeling caps[1]’, with a chrome .380 Lorcin that I bought from a ‘crackhead’, for a “bad rep” and prestige. (Hagen, 2013, p. 164)   The 1960s was a transitional time period that provided a lot of answers.  1960-1980 gave birth to children known as ‘similac babies[2].  Exactly the same, the only difference between a similac baby and a ‘crack baby’ from the 80s is similac babies were born in transition, receiving all the nutrients or benefits of two and a half centuries of research; crack babies born after1980, received no information because the 1980s spawned a new era that required individuals to ‘put in work[3] or punk someone out.  In N.W.A.s song, Compton’s-n-the House (N.W.A., 1988) and Gangsta, Gangsta (N.W.A., 1988), took the ‘retreatist’ subculture of ‘double failures’ and made heroes out of them.  Unable to succeed either in the legitimate or illegitimate opportunity structures, they sought status through “kicks” and “highs” of drug and alcohol abuse. Most ‘double failures’ have done long terms in prison, whether in a single-man cell or population, most become ‘institutionalized[4], learning law, psychology, art, finances, business, education, etc., but unable to function properly outside of the controlled environment in which he or she was incarcerated due to the inability to create or hold-on to friendships, intimate relationships, resources, and/or opportunities.  These subcultures become the individual’s reference group and primary source of self-esteem.” (Hagen, 2013, p. 164)  In the second verse of C.R.E.A.M., GZA says, “…life is hell; living in the world ain’t no different than living in a cell”, so while in this world they become targets for individuals in the community and corporations to use as stepping stones to create opportunities for profit.  Being targeted by friends, intimate friends, businesses, corporations, and law enforcement; being used as the means for these individuals or entities to achieve their ends.   Whether the ‘double failure’  is truly a sacrifice/scapegoat or not, he or she is the diversion to keep attention away from the white-collar criminals, as well as leniency of punishment because they are the reason that the ‘double failure’ is a failure in the first place.  In my fictional story entitled, Dawning Achievements, I state: “…I attended political events, media events, school functions, and talked politics with gangsters who were influential men and women in the bi-city.  These people knew of me, and some of them did not like me.  I knew who was doing what to me; I was no longer in Ted's shadow, but I was still a shadow of a man.”   In this rumination the character here speaks of why he is successful in a city that has very high standards. 

 

Expelled student brought civil rights action against state university president, alleging procedural due process violations, and against board of regents, asserting state-law contract claim. The United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Doc. No. 1:08-cv-00077-CAP, denied president summary judgment based on qualified immunity, and denied board of regents summary judgment based on Eleventh Amendment immunity. President and board of regents appealed (Barnes v. Zacchari, 2012).  In 2007, in the wake of the massacre at Virginia Tech, Ronald Zaccari, the President of Valdosta State University at the time, “administratively withdrew” (expelled) Thomas Hayden Barnes, a student, on the ground that Barnes presented a “clear and present danger” to the campus.  Even though policy states that Barnes was due notice of charges and a hearing to answer to them, Zacchari made a decision that was not in accordance with school policy, policy of TCSG, and the 11th amendment.    In Kentucky v. Graham, 473 U.S. 159, 166 (1985), it states that more is required in an official-capacity action, however, for a governmental entity is liable under sec. 1983 only when the entity itself is a ‘moving force’ behind the deprivation (Kentucky v. Graham, 1985). Corporate policy usually, a documented set of broad guidelines, formulated after an analysis of all internal and external factors that can affect a firm's objectives, operations, and plans.  Formulated by the firm's board of directors, corporate policy lays down the firm's response to known and knowable situations and circumstances. It also determines the formulation and implementation of strategy, and directs and restricts the plans, decisions, and actions of the firm's officers in achievement of its objectives; also called company policy.” (Finance, 2013) 


Corporate crime refers to crimes by business or officials, committed on behalf of the employing organizations (Hagen, 2013, p. 282).  However, the information sought on organized crime or white-collar crime is hard to get hold of, so therefore we rely on other means of obtaining information.  There are four ways authorities obtain information on organized crime and the figures that make up these organizations.  Group A:  Informers, Investigators/hearings, Transcripts/depositions; Group B:  Media, Reporting, Biographies; Group C:  Government Reports, Law Enforcement research, and Archives; and Group D:  Observation and Interviews (University, 2013).  These four sources are how information is compiled on crime figures or figures that are under investigation for a number of white-collar offenses, where he or she has been elusive from authorities.  There are four types of organized crime:  Political-Social, Mercenary, In-Group Oriented, and Syndicate Crime.  Political-Social consists mostly of political crimes, and crimes committed by militant social movements. Domestic terrorism has existed for more than a century, dating back at least to the 1901 assassination of President William McKinley. Extremists across the political spectrum -- including white supremacists, Puerto Rican separatists, abortion opponents, and environmentalists -- have used a variety of terrorist tactics to pursue their goals.  While homegrown Muslim extremists have proven more lethal in Europe than in the United States, U.S. authorities continue to worry about the prospect of attacks by militant Muslims who are American citizens.  The FBI classifies domestic terrorist threats mostly by political motive, dividing them into three main categories: left wing, right wing, and special interest. Religious sects have also been connected with terrorist incidents. Another type of domestic threat cited by federal law-enforcement officials in the period after September 11 is the alleged presence of Islamic extremists in the United States, operating either as an arm of a foreign organization or a homegrown cell (Fletcher, 2008).  The second type, Mercenary or Predatory organized crimes are committed by groups geared toward direct or personal profit; an example of this type would be a street gang.  The third type, In-Group Oriented are crimes committed, so that the individual can experience a high or thrill or to just be accepted by one of the gang.  The last type, is Syndicate Crime, and is what all the other types are under in a chain of ‘criminal command’.  Syndicate crime commits crime for illicit gain; they use force, intimidation, and threats; members obey a chain of command, with an oath of allegiance and secrecy; the organization provides protection and immunity from political corruption and prosecution (University, 2013).  In our e-Acitivity for week nine of my CRJ 105 class, it asked us to research a recent or local case where a gang member was charged with racketeering.  Placing emphasis on the ‘Syndicate’ type of crime, which is apparent in all subcultures, even street-level gangs or the ‘Mercenary or Predatory’ type.  Most of your racketeering had its height in the 1990s, but it was at this same time that law enforcement and criminologist came to understand that they were not dealing with the myth of a ‘super criminal’, but a reality of syndicated criminals and gangs on every level, created by the very system designed to punish and deter criminal activity.  In N.W.A.’s song entitled, Always into Something, on the last verse MC Ren expresses how the ‘super criminal’ believes, and how each member of syndicated street-level gangs believe (N.W.A, 1991). 
The ‘big dirty secret[1] of judges, police, correctional officers, politicians, lawyers, prosecutors, and other government officials are ‘soft’ on corporate crime because they are the ones who are committing the corporate crimes.   “The corporate opportunity doctrine (“COD”) is a common law doctrine that limits a corporate fiduciary’s ability to pursue new business prospects individually without first offering them to the corporation. Conflicts over allocation of corporate opportunities constitute particularly thorny questions in corporate law, since the parties’ respective interests are not merely misaligned, but are rather in profound contradiction to one another. In addition, COD conflicts are likely in situations where two or more firms share common officers and/or directors, and particularly within the parent-subsidiary context.  Formally, the doctrine is a subspecies of the fiduciary duty of loyalty, and it has been a mainstay in the corporate precedents of virtually every state for well over a century (notwithstanding the existence of several doctrines that similarly restrict the appropriation of corporate property by fiduciaries1). Nevertheless, the precise contours of the doctrine remain somewhat elusive, and, perhaps consequently, its application is widely thought to be unpredictable.” (Hashmall, 2001) Pre-twentieth century many acts that are considered white-collar crimes were not illegal until present day.  White-collar crimes are given less publicity than those crimes committed by street-level criminals, but with more public concern with corporate crime there has been more coverage of these criminals when they are caught (Hagen, 2013, pp. 318-319).  In a 2010 Oliver Stone directed, Wall Street:  The Money Never Sleeps, starring Micheal Douglas as Gordon Gekko, and Shia Lebeouf as Jake Moore, shows the tradition of robbery and rip offs on Wall Street, in this tale of how Gordon Gekko, the teacher was once a Wall Street mogul, but was taken down by his student, Bretton James, played by Josh Brolin who is now the Wall Street mogul.  Now comes along Jake Moore, whom is soon to be married to Gekko’s daughter, a bright star at his company dealing in fossil fuels and alternative forms of energy.  Gekko needs money to regain his position, not his throne, but his position.  Gekko also wants to take down his nemesis, and former student, Bretton James.  He uses Jake Moore’s naivety to take down Bretton James, and acquire 100 million USD that he placed in his daughter’s Swiss bank account in the 1980s.  The money never sleeps.  It doesn’t eat, it doesn’t drink, it has no habits, and it doesn’t fold.  Like the devil, all it does is seek out a willing victim, and victimization spreads like wild fire.  These actions fall well within Merton’s theory and modes of personality adaptation, but it is the criticism of his theory that I cite here.  “The theory appears to dwell on lower-class criminality, thus failing to consider law breaking among the elite.  I. Taylor et al. express this point:  “Anomie theory stands accused of predicting too little bourgeois criminality and too much proletarian criminality” (Hagen, 2013, pp. 159-161).  Because Syndicated crime is present on every level, it now becomes paradigm of the elite criminals keeping their white-collars clean with oxyclean[2], and by making the blue collars get and stay dirty by keeping them in a revolving door of missed opportunities and unnecessary actions that lead them back to prison.  Crimes committed by the corporate fiduciaries are due impart to the same reason that most blue-collar crimes are committed.  Most of your white-collar offenders are caught through some personal habit that leads to an act that is morally wrong and/or against the law, committing this ‘bad act’, is how they are caught.   They have been excluded from their circle of criminal corporate cohorts that deem them a ‘high risk’ to their operations.  Most either fall all the way to rock bottom becoming ‘bums’ or just white-collar deadbeats. 
Due process of Law says that, “… No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws”, this is why Standard Operating Procedures, Administrative Regulations, School Policy, Corporate Policy, Governmental Policy, etc. all exist as subsets of state and federal law; to keep, maintain order, and a balance that was envisioned by President Lincoln, “… that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom— and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.” (Lincoln, 2005)  


[1] Peeling caps – shooting to kill
[2] Similac baby – a child born between in the 1970s, that received all the nutrients an nourishments of two and a half centuries of research. 
[3] Put in work – a term coined by the Los Angeles (westcoast) subculture of gangs in the 1980s that meant to sell drugs, fight, kill, rob, etc., and do recon for the neighborhood and organization.
[4] Institutionalized – when an individual has been incarcerated for a long period of time, and cannot function outside that particular institution.
[5] The big dirty secret – that the criminal justice system is soft on white-collar crime
[6] Oxyclean – a method used by white-collar criminals to protect their operations, keeping the informants, snitches, and liabilites out of their circles.