The Collar

How Easy Is Prison for White-Collar Cons?

By Luke Mullins

Posted: April 3, 2008

Despite the widespread perception that white-collar offenders all get sent away to cushy Club Fed, the fact is that longer sentences are putting an increasing number of executive-level convicts in closer contact with violent criminals. That could set the stage for an uptick in prison violence involving white-collar offenders.

Ellen Podgor, of White Collar Crime Prof Blog, has an interesting post on the issue:

A perfect example here is [ex-Dynegy Inc. executive] Jamie Olis. Olis initially went to a very secure facility because of the [exorbitant] sentence given to him. When his sentence was reduced he was sent to a less restrictive facility. But even then—it is prison. And as seen this past week, it was the facility near Olis where there was a prison riot and death.

Full post is here.

I'm so excited about this blog! It's such a great topic, I can't wait for more posts.

clare of @ Apr 03, 2008 19:52:56 PM

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The Collar

Luke Mullins is an associate editor at U.S. News, covering banking, real estate, and white-collar crime. He came to the magazine from the American Banker, a financial services daily newspaper, after a stint in the Peace Corps in West Africa and 18 months coaching baseball in the Dominican Republic. Mullins earned a master's degree in journalism from Syracuse University in 2005 and now lives in Washington, D.C., where he grew up. He has written about white-collar criminals for the American magazine, and his work was included in 20 Something Essays by 20 Something Writers: The Best New Voices of 2006, a Random House anthology that appeared on the Boston Globe's bestseller list.

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