Corporate Crime: Greed is the Bottom Line.
But the Middle Line Includes Destroying Innocent Human Beings
If you're like most you see corporate crime as being soul-less entities that use up employees and cast them aside. You see them as things that take big government handouts, then splurge on extravagant vacations for its upper echelon.
If you're like most, your notion of corporate crime is woefully wrong. The money fallout is only part of the face of corporate crime.
While a portion of corporate crime involves swindling, fraud and the likes of the Enron and mortgage banking ilk, corporate crime ALSO entails violence, inhumanity of man unto man and carnage of the most base kind.
These type of crimes are more insidious as they don't come to light for years, generally after they've run roughshod over groups of people and even whole townships. One person doesn't get knocked in the head by a robber. In corporate crime, an entire group of employees or even a town are sacrificed in the name of greed.
And that's the common denominator: greed. When you get to the origin of the story of how any one of the countless cases of corporate crime started, you'll find that greed was at the core.
You may think you can't name a case of corporate crime. Let me throw some names out at you. (Some real, some based on a compilation of famous cases.) This is where we start putting names and faces on what corporate criminals are doing. This is what you shouldn't forget.
Erin Brokovich, the 2000 movie starring Julia Roberts as an unemployed single mom who ultimately takes on a California power company accused of polluting the city's water supply.
On her Web site, www.brokovich.com, Brokovich talks about the many people in Hinkley, CA who developed health issues in the '60s, '70s and '80s because Chromium had leaked into the groundwater from Pacific Gas and Electric Company's Compressor Station. Brokovich's tenacious efforts to hold a corporate criminal's feet to the fire resulted in the largest direct action lawsuit of its kind. Ultimately, the utility company paid $333 million in damages to the people it injured.
Norma Rae (1979). The tale starring Sally Field is based loosely on Crystal Lee Sutton and her work at J.P. Stevens in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Sutton was harassed, berated, harassed, you name it as she tried to help union organizers unite the workers in an effort to combat unsafe working conditions. In the movie, Norma Rae/Sally Field was fired by the company for copying down a company letter on a bulletin board. The company called the act insubordination. In 1977, a court ordered her to be reinstated. She was awarded $13,436. And while the movie won an award for Sally Field, it won absolutely nothing for Crystal Lee. Unlike in the movie, the real life corporate tale didn't have a good ending. Crystal Lee Sutton lost jobs, home and husband for her efforts. (She's since rebuilt her life.) Whoever says corporate crime doesn't have a cost to the average person, hasn't been paying attention to the news much over the years.
Silkwood (1983), is based on the life of Karen Silkwood, an employee of the Cimarron River nuclear facility in Crescent, Oklahoma, , played by Meryl Streep in the movie. The movie is regarded as being a fairly accurate account of Silkwood, a metallurgy worker at a plutonium processing plant. She was contaminated with plutonium, purposefully, and tortured then possibly murdered to stop her from speaking to a reporter about seriously dangerous practices at the Kerr-McGee plant.
After multiple abuses, Silkwood was unable to remain quiet any longer. She drove her Honda to Oklahoma. Her plan was to turn over a folder full of alleged health and safety violations at the plant to a friend, Drew Stephens, a New York Times reporter and national union representative. (Part of the mental torture Silkwood endured was the result of her gathering of this information.) On the way to meet the reporter, Silkwood's vehicle went off the road, skidded for a hundred yards, hit a guardrail, then plunged off an embankment. Silkwood was killed in the crash, and the folder was never found.
A Civil Action (1998) starred John Travolta as attorney Jan Schlictmann who comes to represent a group of families whose children have contracted leukemia at an alarming rate. The case traces to a leather production company that happens to be the main employer in the area. The plot revolves around illegal chemical substance dumping.
Eventually, investigators would report that the 28 leukemia cases diagnosed in Woburn, Massachusetts, between 1964 and the mid-1980s were four times more than should be expected for a community of its size. That's the real life case. In the movie version, Travolta's firm sues to make the companies responsible to decontaminate the affected areas, as well as compensate the families who lost children.
The film was based on a true story that took place in Woburn, a lower- to middle-class community. The real tale differs from the movie in that the movie seriously oversimplifies the clash of the titans in this case. Ultimately the Environmental Protection Agency was involved, and people were convicted of criminal misdeeds in the real case.
As with the other cases of exposed corporate crimes, the Woburn case came to light because of ONE PERSON. In this case it was Anne Anderson, regarded by almost everyone as a typical, hysterical mom whose child became ill. But as with Karen Silkwood and Erin Brokovich, she couldn't be scared or silenced by a corporation or its battalion of lawyers.
So, when you think of corporate crime, and you think it is victimless, think again. But there is an upside. In many of these corporate crime cases, you'll find a David, an average man or woman, taking on a corporate giant---and winning.
FYI
If you want to follow up on other cases and the steps to make the law enforcement community give more credence to corporate crimes, a few Web sites offer good information:
Site: www.corporatepredators.org details some of the top corporate crimes of recent times and does a good job of categorizing the major misdeeds of corporations.
Site; www.corporatepolicy.org/issues /crime.htm
Sponsored by The Center for Corporate Policy does a good job explaining corporate crime, as well giving news on how it tries to strengthen the legal system's recognition and prosecution efforts in this field.
Published by Kim Remesch - Featured Contributor in Business & Finance
Kim Remesch is an award-winning journalist in Baltimore. Her work appears in Entrepreneur, Business Start Ups, Police, Home Office Computing and more. She was editor in chief of Maryland Lifestyles (for thos... View profile
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1 Comments
Post a CommentReally great wrting and info, Kim. I wish I had a free day to read everything here.