Global mobs embrace technology

Published: 8 September 1999 y., Wednesday
In the next decade, the world_s crime fighters say they will fight international organized crime on several fronts, battling financial fraud, corruption, the sale of human beings for sex and labor and the trafficking of weapons of mass destruction. The focus of a three-day crime-fighting conference at Garmisch-Partenkirchen (Germany) sponsored by the FBI and the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies was touted in advance- as an assessment of organized crime_s impact on national security. But the meeting of American, European and Eurasian top brass ended Thursday with little open discussion of such forecasts. Organizers admitted the conference fell short of that objective, but said other goals had been achieved, namely the forging of new East-West relationships between law enforcement officials. One senior U.S. law enforcement official involved in planning the event told APBNews.com it was difficult to get officials from the former Soviet republics to open up and discuss their problems and worries over mobsters operating in their fledgling democracies. Author and criminologist Joseph Albini, of Indiana_s Wayne State University, said he estimates that as early as 2000, more than 90 percent of those involved in organized crime will be computer literate on some level. "The conception of Don Corleone [from the "Godfather" movies] smoking a cigar is better seen as Don Corleone behind a laptop," he said. It is the access to mass media information and the technology boom that are changing the face of mobsters from thugs to super-criminals, Albini said. Kulikov echoed that view. "We are at the threshold of a new millennium. We have to be prepared for the emergence of new types of criminal activity," including technological, he said. The retired Russian general clicked off a number of examples, including trafficking illegal genetically-engineered human organs and crop seeds. A senior intelligence officer from Great Britain who specializes in organized-crime analysis said tomorrow_s gangsters almost certainly will be consumed with electronic commerce, particularly online gambling, credit card fraud and virtual banking, where a financial institution exists solely in cyberspace. Another possibility, he said, is the theoretical notion of virtual-reality narcotics, which assumes it is possible to transmit a digital "stimulant" or hallucinogen across the Internet, creating a new form of addiction. "Biotechnology and information technology are the two biggest revolutions of this century, and we should look at each of them and see where the potential for money is from the criminal point of view," the official told APBNews.com, requesting anonymity.
Šaltinis: APBNEWS.COM
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

British boy dies in Thai pool tragedy

14-year-old Nathan Clark drowned after being sucked into the Thai water park in the popular resort of Pattaya pool's pumping system. more »

Runners gored in Spain bull run

The sixth day of Spain's Pamplona bull run got off with a bang. more »

China preps animal rights law

China drafts its first animal protection law to prevent animal abuse. more »

Safe and secure flights in the EU

You arrive at the airport ready for your flight - but upon arrival you find the flight has been overbooked leaving you waiting for another one. more »

Architect of Vietnam War dies

Former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, the leading architect of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, has died in his sleep at his home in Washington, D.C. more »

Seasons in the sun

Tips and advice for a hassle-free holiday in Europe. more »

Living abroad in the EU

Some EU countries are making it hard for other EU nationals to obtain residence permits. more »

AB Bank SNORAS already accepts applications for preferential housing loans

People, who lay claim to the state sponsored housing loans, can already submit applications on receiving a credit under preferential conditions in Bank SNORAS. more »

Russian gamblers forced to fold

From July 1, all gambling activities in Russia have to move to 4 designated zones, far from the bright lights of the big cities, or cease altogether. more »

Sarkozy looks to ban burqa

French President Nicolas Sarkozy supports a group of legislators, who've said they're concerned that increasing numbers of women are wearing burqas in France. more »