to do with unions as Americans know them) would regularly bring in fascinating people to come and speak.
One of the speakers who made a real impression on me was a man named Brian Freemantle. An organized crime expert who has worked in more than 30 countries, Freemantle is the author of a book called The Octopus: Europe in the Grip of Organized Crime.
The book is nearly 15 years old now, and so many of the statistics are way out of date. But the basic outlines of the organized crime “octopus” Freemantle describes still hold true. And if Freemantle were to update his book with numbers for the new millennium, they would no doubt be mind-boggling.
As Freemantle writes in the opening pages of The Octopus,
Crime pays. It always has done. Not, of course, for the street people or the amateurs. They are swept up, like the disposable dross they are, as much victims as those upon whom they prey. The people for whom crime pays are the professionals, the men and women who operate it as a business, conducted through structures closely resembling legitimate multi-national corporations and conglomerates, their boardroom-like hierarchies serviced by accountants and financial advisors.
Freemantle then goes on to describe the eight tentacles (i.e. money-making activities) of the octopus: “the illegal arms trade, the illegal drugs trade, money-laundering, computer crime, prostitution and pornography, illegal immigration, terrorism, and fine art.”
One might think the octopus, too, has been hit hard by the global financial crisis (just like everyone else). One would be wrong though… instead, the crash of 2008 may turn out to be the biggest coup in decades for organized crime.
Cash in Hand