NCJ Number
153746
Journal
Futurist Volume: 28 Issue: 5 Dated: (September-October 1994) Pages: 33-37
Date Published
1994
Length
5 pages
Annotation
Organized crime is becoming increasingly sophisticated in its understanding and use of new technologies and will become increasingly involved in computer-related crimes, crimes against financial institutions, and other types of crimes.
Abstract
In recent years, organized crime has become a major international financial force; in the future, it will manipulate financial institutions and use their electronic, financial, and legal expertise to establish new ways of doing business in the predicted cashless society. Theft in the next century will far exceed anything currently known in terms of sophistication and specialization. In addition, criminal organizations will both own shares of multinational corporations and manage them as well. Criminal organizations will be tied into larger networks that will use technology and communications to operate more efficiently and with greater impunity. Sports gambling, prostitution rings, trafficking in newborn infants, unlawful trafficking in fetuses, waste disposal, trafficking in arms and nuclear materials, and infiltration of governments are also probable developments.