Criminal Enterprise
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
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Originally published | January 16, 2008 |
Authors | S. D. Perry |
Preceded by | Steel Egg |
Followed by | No Exit |
Illustrators | Steve Perry |
Genres | Science Fiction |
Horror Fiction | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 3103957 |
About Criminal Enterprise
Thomas Chase wakes up from cryosleep to his first day at a new job — as a pilot for a contraband drug company dropping a shipment on Fantasia, a rock-planet terraformed to hide an elaborate drug manufacturing operation. . . .
Young Thug: US rapper's racketeering trials opens in Georgia
... Georgia prosecutors used the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (Rico) Act - famously used in mafia prosecutions - to charge the rapper and 27 associates who were allegedly involved in the Criminal Enterprise at various levels...
Afghan migrants kidnapped and tortured on Iran-Turkey border
... These disturbing videos are evidence of a growing Criminal Enterprise, in which gangs in Iran kidnap mainly Afghan migrants trying to make their way to Europe...
MOVEit hack: Ofcom data downloaded in cyber-attack
... Victims are always encouraged not to pay though as it fuels the growth of this Criminal Enterprise and there is no guarantee that the hackers will not use the data for secondary attacks...
South Africa load-shedding: The roots of Eskom's power problem
... Instead, it was one relatively small act in a vast, ongoing, and highly successful Criminal Enterprise that involves murders, poisoning, fires, cable theft, ruthless cartels and powerful politicians...
Atiq Ahmed: The life of India's gangster-politician killed on live TV
... " Judging by the lengthy list of criminal cases in which he stood accused, Ahmed was equally proficient in running a Criminal Enterprise as he was conducting constituency service, " wrote Milan Vaishnav in his book When Crime Pays: Money and Muscle in Indian Politics...
Pension fraudsters jailed after £13m scam
... More than £13m of pension savings were transferred, and the pair forwarded most of the money to the mastermind of the Criminal Enterprise, David Austin, from Guildford in Surrey...
The crime gangs cashing in by burying illegal waste
... " An illegitimate firm or Criminal Enterprise could quote half of that and pocket pretty much most of the money, " he said...
Larry Hoover: Kanye and Drake set aside feud for prisoner concert
... In 1997 he was given six life sentences after being found guilty of federal drug conspiracy, extortion and continuing to engage in a Criminal Enterprise...
The crime gangs cashing in by burying illegal waste
Organised Crime gangs are illegally burying thousands of tonnes of waste across Scotland , a BBC investigation has found.
Some of the rubbish is being brought up from the north of England by the gangs, and is believed to include hazardous clinical waste from hospitals.
Current Affairs series Disclosure has been told that threats and intimidation are being used against landowners who refuse to allow waste to be buried on their land.
One claimed to have been threatened that their animals would be killed if they did not agree To Let waste be buried on their land, while many others spoken to by The Bbc were too scared to Go On the record.
An insider from a criminal network told Disclosure that dumping waste had become as profitable as the drug trade.
Sepa, Scotland 's environmental regulator, says its resources are being stretched by the gangs' activities.
Kath McDowall, one of the senior investigators looking into the organised groups, said: " When people typically think of waste crime they think of small-scale fly-tipping and they don't quite realise it's happening on this scale. "
She Said the Scottish Environment Protection Agency was up against gangs who had been involved in running drugs and weapons for decades.
Ms McDowall said they had " taken lessons they've learned from doing other types of criminality and are now applying it to waste".
However, She Said the resources that Sepa had to deal with The Problem were " pretty finite. "
The legitimate disposal of rubbish is an expensive business because of the cost of complying with tight regulations and landfill taxes.
Criminal gangs who bypass these costs have a massive advantage over legitimate traders.
Drew Murdoch is Managing Director of J& M Murdoch and Son, a family-run waste business which has been operating legitimately for 50 Years .
" There is now more of a criminal element in the waste industry than there has ever been before, " He Said .
" And that is largely due to the amount of money they can make out of illegally dealing with waste. "
His company might make £50,000 from a £1m contract due to the costs of landfill taxes, insurance and disposing of materials correctly.
" An illegitimate firm or Criminal Enterprise could quote half of that and pocket pretty much most of The Money , " He Said .
Mr Murdoch said there was a risk that some smaller legal businesses could fold or turn to criminality to compete.
An insider from one criminal network involved in burying waste told Disclosure that waste was " the new drugs".
" It's an easy way to make money. It's completely hidden in plain Sight - and The Money from these waste gangs goes straight back into their organised Criminal Activities .
" It finances their drugs operations, their movement of weapons, people, whatever. "
The Insider claimed that one criminal gang from the north of England had multiple sites across Scotland which received waste driven up from England in lorries.
At one of these sites, the landowner would be paid £350 per lorry, containing a mixture of domestic and hazardous clinical waste. The Site receives five lorries A Day , Five Days a week, adding up to More Than £8,000 a week for the landowner alone.
The Insider said they knew that at least one of these sites had been operational for years.
The Bbc has been told The Criminal gangs are using a network of brokers to identify parcels of land in Scotland where they can bury industrial quantities of waste.
The brokers may identify landowners or farmers who they can either intimidate or pay to accept the waste.
One gang targeted two farms in South Wales where They Buried tonnes of household rubbish as well as hazardous clinical waste from hospitals. Natural Resources Wales, the environmental regulator, discovered the waste included syringes, used dressings, and blood vials.
The same tactic is being used in Scotland , leading to one criminal network being actively investigated by Sepa.
Another method is to fill old lorry trailers with waste and abandon them in laybys and quiet streets around the country.
In The Last 15 months, 12 trailers have been found across central Scotland - All of them filled with household and construction waste.
Elsewhere, a derelict farm near Port Glasgow , in Inverclyde, has been filled with an estimated 10,000 tyres.
One barn that is overflowing with tyres lies within a few metres of a Housing Estate . Tyres are classified as hazardous waste because of the polluting emissions they give off and their potential to catch fire.
And when Sepa investigated an illegal waste site in Lanarkshire, it found that methane emissions from buried rubbish brought up from England were 60 times the legal limit. Methane is a major driver of Climate Change .
Sepa does not have a specific clean-up fund, so it must redirect money from other environmental work when illegal dumps need to be cleared.
Its environmental investigators say Organised Crime has gained a strong foothold in the waste trade.
Richard Sinnott, an atmospheric scientist at Sepa, told The Bbc it was an " increasing trend" and that he could not overstate how damaging it was to Scotland 's environment.
Sepa is currently investigating 234 cases of waste crime. Of those, 31 are of the highest concern due to links with serious and Organised Crime or the potential for severe environmental damage.
The Authority estimates that 15% of Organised Crime groups in Scotland now have interests in environmental businesses. These range from skip hire companies to waste hauliers and construction and demolition firms.
The Environmental Services Association Last Year estimated that criminality in the trade was costing the UK taxpayer More Than £1bn a year.
Scotland 's Justice Secretary Keith Brown chairs the Serious and Organised Crime Taskforce, which five months ago made waste crime its top priority.
He Said he was aware of " a great deal of activity" in terms of waste coming across The Border between England and Scotland .
He added: " The Way that the Environmental Protection agency, our rural local authorities, and The Police authorities, are working, is starting to make an impact on this serious problem. "
Source of news: bbc.com