1english For Modern Policing
1english For Modern Policing
1english For Modern Policing
ENGLISH
for
MODERN POLICING
STUDENT’S BOOK
TEXTBOOK UNITS
UNIT 1 UNIT 8
Descriptions Policing the Multicultural Society
Ileana Catina, Centrul de Studii Mark Roberts, British Council, România
Postuniversitare, Bucureşti Amalia Niţu, Academia de Poliţie,
“ A.I.Cuza”, Bucureşti
UNIT 2 UNIT 9
Crime and Punishment Trafficking in Human beings
Ileana Chersan, Academia de Poliţie, Ioana Bordeianu, Şcoala de Agenţi de
“A.I.Cuza”, Bucureşti Poliţie de Frontieră,” Avram Iancu”,
Oradea
UNIT 3 UNIT 10
Criminal Investigations Dealing with Vehicle Crime
Cătălina Harabagiu-Dimitrescu, Ioana Bordeianu, Şcoala de Agenţi de
Centrul de Studii Postuniversitar, Poliţie de Frontieră,” Avram Iancu”,
Bucureşti Oradea
UNIT 4 UNIT 11
Crime, investigation and social Countering Terrorism
relevance Mark Roberts, British Council, România
Mark Roberts, British Council, România
UNIT 5 UNIT 12
Crime in Society: Domestic Computer Crime, Fraud and
Violence and Violence against Economic Crime
Women Mark Roberts, British Council, România
Cătălina Harabagiu-Dimitrescu,
Centrul de Studii Postuniversitare,
Bucureşti
UNIT 6 UNIT 13
Crime in Society: Child Abuse Combatting Organised Crime
Mark Roberts, British Council, România Mark Roberts, British Council, România
Gabriela Şerbănoiu, Academia de Poliţie
“A.I. Cuza”, Bucureşti
UNIT 7 UNIT 14
Women: For Better and For Criminology
Worse
Camelia Budişteanu, Academia de Poliţie, Andreea Călugăriţa, Academia de Poliţie
“A.I.Cuza”, Bucureşti “A.I. Cuza”, Bucureşti
Mark Roberts, British Council, Romania
UNIT 1 DESCRIPTIONS
INTRODUCTION
Police officers will, on many occasions in their service, either be required to describe a person or
obtain a description.
Think about the topic. Discuss the following questions.
1. What is a description?
2. Why do we use descriptions in police work?
3. What should you pay particular attention to when compiling a description of a person?
4. When compiling a description of property what details should you pay particular
attention to?
5. Are there any special skills required for police officers in producing a reliable and
accurate description of things which they have seen?
Activity 1
Think about the members of your class. Try to describe one of them so accurately that all
the others in the class would identify that person from your description. The following
checklist may be of help to you- but obviously you do not mention his/her name yet!
Activity 3
Translate the following text into English:
Martorul incidentului a declarat ofiţerului anchetator că l-a văzut pe cel care a tras două focuri de
armă asupra victimei. El a descris suspectul după cum urmează:
“ Suspectul era un bărbat alb, de talie mijlocie, în vârstă de aproximativ 30 de ani. Avea părul
negru tuns scurt şi mustaţă. Purta un tricou de culoare deschisă şi pantaloni negri. După atac s-a
urcat într-o maşină albă, model japonez, cred, şi a părăsit locul faptei în viteză. Asta-i tot ce îmi
amintesc.”
Activity 4
Reading
OPERATION GRANGER
Detectives investigating a series of serious indecent assaults in Havant and Hayling Island know
that at least two were carried out by the same man.
And the methods used in the other incidents- between December 1999 and July 2000- suggest
that he could also have been responsible for at least three others.
A major inquiry team has been set up to investigate the assaults, and DNA evidence has shown
there is a positive link between two of the attacks – on a 51-year- old woman between Havant
and Emsworth and on a 13- year- old girl in a Hayling Island church yard.
Detectives are especially keen to find the perpetrator before he strikes again because his attacks
are becoming progressively more violent and showing signs of more planning.
In the most recent attack – on Friday, July 7, 2000, at 7.50pm – a 15- year- old girl was cycling
home north along the disused Hayling Billy railway line, now a public footpath. As she reached
West Lane she heard someone on the path behind her. Thinking it was a jogger or walker she
made way for them to pass, but instead she was grabbed from behind by a man.
The attacker threatened to kill her if she struggled and tried to drag her into the bushes at the side
of the footpath. But the girl managed to fight her way free and screamed for help, frightening the
man off.
The terrified girl was then able to cycle to a petrol station and phoned the police. She has been
able to describe the man who attacked her as follows:
• White
• Clean shaven
• 5ft 7ins tall
• Short grey to fair hair
• Physically weak
• Wearing a black woollen hat
• Long sleeved dark coloured top and jogging bottoms
• Gloves
She has also helped detectives piece together a CD-fit image of the attacker.
This attack bears all the hallmarks of at least four other incidents since December 1999 – and
another reported prowler incident could also have been the work of this man. Based on the
victims’ statements, the composite description of the man responsible for their ordeals is that he
is:
• Aged 35 to 55 years
• 5ft 5 in to 5ft 8in tall
• Slim to slight build
• Described by all the victims as physically weak
• Reasonably deep voice
• Smelled very strongly of cigarettes
• In four out of the five attacks he wore gloves.
In the May attack, -the only one in daylight – he wore a dark blue sweatshirt or, possibly a blue
jacket with side pockets, and pale blue or possibly white trousers or jeans.
Police officers want to hear from anyone who recognise the description.
Exercise 1
Decide which statements are true and which are false. Write T if you think the statement is
true and F if you think it is false.
Follow - up discussion
Work in groups or with a partner and discuss the following issues:
Activity 5
a) Vocabulary – specialist terminology related to suspects’ description. Find the right
equivalent in Romanian.
To describe a person
To give a description
To compile a description
To produce a reliable and accurate description
To draw a sketch
To build a description/picture
Personal description/word picture/spoken picture /sketch portrait
Face image
Computer description (CD) fit/identity kit/photo-fit system
Computer –generated image (E-Fit)
Mugshots/ mugbook
Features (the face or countenance)
Description of suspect/offender
To fit/ match the description
To locate suspects
Suspects wanted for
Suspects considered to be armed and dangerous
Suspect described as follows
Last seen wearing
Exercise 2
Choose the right word from the list above to complete the text :
INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM
To all Station Commanders
The Serious Crimes Squad is requesting the assistance of your office in ____1______ four
suspects ____2_____ for the shooting of a Turkish businessman at the Palace Hotel in Bucharest.
The members of our Squad are in the process of ____3_____ the pictures of the alleged shooters
based on descriptions ____4_____ by witnesses. Using ____5___ from police criminal records
we’ve found no one _____6_____ the offenders’____7_____.
Photocopy pictures of the suspects will be made available to you as soon as possible.
Should your officers locate any of the suspects, report location immeadiately. Do not attempt to
apprehend . Suspects are to be considered ___8____ and ___9___.
Thank you for your assistance in this matter and if you have any further questions please do not
hesitate to contact our investigating officers.
Exercise 3
Use a verb from the left and a noun phrase from the right, make phrases describing police
activities. You can use the verbs with more than one phrase. Make up sentences of your
own.
Investigate evidence
Conduct identification parade
Collect crime scene examination
Take (to) investigation
Attend police files
Give suspects
Arrange witnesses
Search (for) crimes
Check prints
Interview emergency call
Describe information
Exercise 4
Put in the correct prepositions:
A saleswoman who sold the car used __5_ the Ealing bombing _6_ a suspected member _7__ the
Real IRA cell behind the attack said the man had chosen the vehicle _8__ the biggest boot.
Speaking yesterday as police issued an e-fit _9__ the man believed to have bought the car, the
woman said the man had paid _10__ cash and it had taken only 20 minutes _11__ him first
seeing the car untill he drove away _12__ it.
The five-door grey Saab turbo was bought __13__ the car lot _14__ Ilford, Esseex, _15__ July
19, two weeks before the explosion __16__ Ealing, west London, last week which injured 11
people.
The e-fit shows a white man _17__ his mid-30s, 5ft 10in _18__ 5ft 11in tall and _19__ slim
build. He has straight blond hair and a pitted face which suggests he suffered _20___ acne
__21__ some time. The man has a slightly dimpled chin and speaks _22__ a soft Irish accent.
After buying the car he asked directions _23__ the A46, known _24__ Londoners as the north
circular road, suggesting he was not local.
Injuries - vocabulary
To receive/sustain injuries
Minor/ serious/ injuries
Slightly injured
Severely injured
Killed
Deaths – fatalities
Casualities
Wounding – to wound
Stab – to stab
Concussion – to concuss
Bruise – bruising
Shotgun wound
Exercise 5
Translate the following sentences into Romanian:
Two police officers received serious injuries while attemting to quell a disturbance outside a
town centre discotheque.
1) The post mortem examination revealed that death had been caused by a single shotgun
wound to the head.
2) The victim of the assault complained that he had two broken ribs and bruising to his head
and back.
3) The murderer stabbed his victim in the heart with a kitchen knife.
4) No casualities were reported in last week’s accident but the driver was treated for severe
concussion
Activity 7
LISTENING MISSING FATHER AND SON
Before listening
Discuss the following questions with a partner:
1. Why do people go missing?
2. What do you do if you are concerned about a missing person?
3. Are there any specific requirements in reporting a missing person to the
police?
4. Is there a national service or helpline one can apply to when there is a long-
term absence or where there is cause for concern?
5. What problems are associated with finding persons who go missing?
6. Give your own opinions (speculate) as to what may happen to a missing
person.
In such cases, it is common to speculate about where a person may be now or what may have
happened to her.
So we can speculate about the present using
May/might +infinitive
May/might be +….ing ( may be holding; might be keeping her prisoner; might be
working)
Or about the past using
May/might have + past participle
May/might have been + past participle (PASSIVE)
Examples
She/he may be with her/his relatives in countryside.(PRESENT)
Someone may have abducted her/him (PAST) and may be keeping her/him
hostage.
During listening
Make notes while listening to the tape. Write down all important details.
After listening
You have just listened to a police report. Use the notes you have made to answer the
following questions.
Activity 8
Translate the following text into English:
Un poliţist a fost ucis cu focuri de mitralieră, iar un altul a fost izbit cu maşina în timp ce
urmăreau un autoturism furat. Este pentru prima oară când hoţii recurg la mitralieră în
confruntarea cu apărătorii legii şi ordinii
Un poliţist din Timişoara a fost ucis cu focuri de mitralieră, în zori zilei de duminică, 4 martie
2001, în timp ce urmăreau o maşină furată. Un alt poliţist implicat în urmărire a fost izbit cu
maşina. Poliţia din Timişoara a primit, sâmbătă noaptea, o sesizare privind furtul unui autoturism
Mercedes de pe o stradă din oraş. Maşina a fost dată în urmărire locală şi a fost identificată, la
puţin timp, de o patrulă mobilă de poliţie, care i-a făcut semn şoferului să oprească. Persoana
aflată la volan a redus iniţial viteza, după care l-a lovit în plin pe unul din subofiţerii de poliţie,
Ioan Mateescu, aruncându-l la doi metri distanţă, pe carosabil.
Celălalt membru al echipajului de poliţie, plutonier major Saşa Disici, a urcat în maşina
personală şi a plecat în urmărirea autoturismului furat. Disici a luat legătura telefonic cu
poliţistul lovit, pe care l-a anunţat că în maşina urmărită se aflau trei persoane care au deschis
focul asupra sa, cu o mitralieră. „ Trag cu o mitralieră. Mă ciuruiesc!”- acestea au fost ultimele
cuvinte ale poliţistului. Mateescu a plecat cu un autoturism în căutarea colegului său, pe care l-a
găsit pe marginea şoselei, împuşcat mortal în piept şi cu pistolul din dotare în mâna stângă.
Poliţiştii timişoreni au realizat portretul robot al uneia din persoanele implicate în uciderea unui
poliţist în timpul exercitării atribuţiilor legale. Poliţiştii susţin că unul dintre agresori este brunet,
cu părul lung, are faţa ovală, nasul lung, ochi mari, negri, şi fruntea îngustă. Ei afirmă că
agresorul are în jur de 30 de ani, aproximativ 1,80m înălţime şi era îmbrăcat cu o geacă maro din
piele.
Activity 10
Identify and correct the mistakes in each sentence
Border police and other law enforcement officers have special training to enable
them to spot imposters! Can you identify from the two photographs if it is the
same man?
POLICE REPORT
1. Person reporting:
Address: Age Sex
Complainant:
Address:
Incident as Reported
Reported To: Time& Date
2.Where Committed Name of premises
House No. Street
District or Town
Time Day Date Month Year No.of
3.When committed (24hrs) witnesses
At/ Between
and
If M/Vehicle Used
Show Reg. No. (or Part)
Description of Suspect/Offender
Officers Attending Scene (Officers Time and Date of Arrival ) Section Officer
Reporting Officer Plain Clothes
C.I.D. Crime &Vandalism Squad
Crime Prevention Other Supervising Officer
Others
Liaison
C.R.O.
Crime Int.
P.N.C.
Activity 1 Discussion
1. Why do we have rules and laws? Why do people follow them? Why do people break them?
2. Is ignorance of the law an excuse? Why (not)?
3. A policeman on duty kills a criminal while defending a victim? Has the officer committed any
crime?
4. What is crime? Take two minutes to write a possible definition for crime.
5. There is more crime than there used to be. Do you agree? Why (not)?
6. You are innocent until proven guilty! Why do you think miscarriages of justice still occur?
7. Where can you find the following signs? What do they tell you?
WARNING ZONE
NO DUMPING
ALLOWED
NO
TRESPASSING Perpetrators will be 30
prosecuted
$500 FINE
Activity 2
What effects do you imagine the following have had on crime?
1. the invention of gunpowder 6. war
2. the creation of police 7. the discovery of fingerprints
3. street lighting 8. cars
4. employment in factories 9. the colour of man’s skin/religion
5. the payment of police 10. the welfare state
Activity 3
Look at the “spidergram” below and say what effect each of these factors has on the crime rate
and why.
Alcoholism/drugs
Individual Police/other
morality prevention
Poverty
Activity 4 Writing
Crime is on the increase. Offer some possible solutions. Use the following phrases in an essay of
around 200 words.
Activity 5 Crimes
Certain types of behaviour take place before the ……1……of a crime but are nevertheless
complete crimes in……2….. These offences – solicitation, attempt and conspiracy – give the
police the opportunity to prevent the intended crime. Each offence can be punished even if the
……3….intended never occurred.
A number of states make …4….. a crime for a person to solicit (ask, command, urge, advise)
another person to commit a crime.
In most states an attempt to commit a crime is in itself a crime. To be guilty of the crime of
attempt, the accused must have ……5….intended to commit a crime and taken some substantial
…6….toward committing the crime. …7……preparation to commit a crime is not enough. The
difficult problem with the crime of attempt is determining ……8….the actions of the accused
were a step toward the …9…..commission of a crime or mere acts of preparation. A common
example of attempt is the situation in which a person decides to shoot and kill someone but,
being a poor…10……., misses the intended victim. The person doing the shooting would be
……11…for attempted murder.
A conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to commit a crime. The crime of
conspiracy is designed as a means of preventing other crimes and ……12…against criminal
activity by groups. ……13…..it is sometimes criticised as a threat to freedom of speech and
association.
Using dictionaries and working in pairs, give definitions to the following crimes.
Share your results with the class. One has been done for you.
Hate crime is defined as "the violence of intolerance and bigotry, intended to hurt and intimidate
someone because of their race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, or
disability."
(Community Relations Service, 1997)
N.B. In the texts, some of the crimes are specific to the American legal system, some to the
English. The two systems have different terminology, the more serious crimes in the US
system are called felonies and the less serious are called misdemeanors. There are different
terms for specifc crimes, too, e.g. larceny (US) is divided into petty and grand. In English
law, the crime is theft.
arson, burglary, computer crime, embezzlement, extortion, forgery, mugging, receiving stolen
property, robbery, shoplifting, unauthorised use of a motor vehicle, vandalism, theft
The category of crimes against property includes crimes in which property is damaged or cases
in which property is stolen or otherwise taken against the will of the owner.
a) … is the willful and malicious burning of another person’s property, whether owned by the
accused or not. If any property is burned with the intent to defraud an insurance company this is
usually a separate crime.
b) … also known as malicious mischief, is the willful destruction of, or damage to, the property
of another. It includes such things as smashing telephone kiosks, breaking windows, ripping
down fences, flooding basements and breaking car aerials. Depending on its extent, it can be
either a felony or a misdemeanor in the USA.
c) … is the unlawful taking of property of another with intent to steal it permanently. This crime
also includes keeping lost property when a reasonable method exists for finding the owner, or if
you keep property delivered to you by mistake..
d) … is a form of theft (or larceny in US). It is the crime of taking items from a store without
paying or intending to pay for them.
e) … is the unlawful taking of property or money by someone to whom it was entrusted. IN UK
it is a form of theft.
f) … is the unlawful taking of property from a person’s immediate possession by force or
intimidation, generally in banks, trains etc. In fact, it involves two criminal intentions: theft of
property and actual or potential physical harm to the victim
g) …, popularly called blackmail, is the use of threats to obtain the property of another. Its
statutes generally cover threats to do future physical harm, destroy property or injure someone’s
character or reputation.
h) …, originally defined as breaking and entering the dwelling of another during the night with
intent to commit a felony (commit theft –UK), now includes the unauthorised entry into any
structure with the intent to commit a crime, regardless of the time of day.
i) … is a crime in which a person falsely makes or alters a writing or document with intent to
defraud. It can also mean altering or erasing part of a previously signed document.
j) … is a crime of receiving or buying property that you know or have reason to believe is stolen.
Knowledge that the property is stolen may be implied by the circumstances.
k) … is committed when a person takes, operates, or removes a motor vehicle without consent of
the owner, including joy-riding. A passenger in a stolen car may also be guilty if that person had
reason to believe the car was being used without permission.
l) … can be broadly defined as the unauthorised access to someone else’s computer system. Most
of the time such action is designed to steal government or trade secrets and sell them to business
rivals or foreign governments.
m) … is attacking and violently robbing a person out of doors (e.g. in a park, in a car park or in
the street).
Activity 8
Work with a partner and test each other. One person turns the page over, the other asks
questions.
e.g. What do you call the crime of burning another person’s property?
Define ‘forgery’.
“Thief” is a very general term. Write more specific names for a thief in each space.
THIEF
Activity 9 Listening
Listen and complete the sentences below with a word, phrase or number.
Student kidnap case against bus driver on hold for mental review
Activity 11 QUIZ
• Among people victimized while working, men are more likely than women to experience a
violent crime. True or false?
• Which of the following methods is more likely to be used for killing a person? Why?
a) shooting b) hitting or kicking c) sharp instrument d) strangulation e) other
• Who among the following is least/most likely to kill you? For what reasons?
a) a friend or acquaintance b) a present or former spouse or lover c) another member of your
family d) a stranger e) a terrorist
• More women than men are found guilty of shoplifting. True or false?
Activity 12 Crime Fixation
We all tend to be cynical about tabloid media sensationalism, but do you realise just how much
your perceptions of crime have probably been distorted? Take a look at the table below and then
discuss on it with a partner.
“Violent crime accounts for roughly a half of all Violent crime accounts for only 6% of all crime.
crime” (average estimate in public responses to
NOP poll).
“Young children and the elderly are the most at Those least at risk from violent attacks are young
risk from violent attack”. children and the elderly (only 2% of mugging or
beating victims are elderly).
25% of people expect to fall victim to violent Only 1% of people ever experience violent crime.
crime.
“It’s dangerous to be out on the streets after A greater number of violent attacks take place in the
dark”. home than on the street.
85% of adults believe it’s more dangerous for Over the last 25 years there has been no increase in
children after dark now than when they were child murder by strangers. The overall murder rate
young. Attack by strangers is the biggest fear (all age groups) has been almost static over the last
(survey by Dr Barnardo’s children’s welfare 10 years.
agency).
“There are weirdoes everywhere these days” In most cases of violence, the offender is known to
(quoted from a bystander at a child murder case, the victim, rather than fitting the stereotype of
interviewed on BBC News). suspicious stranger or ‘weirdo’.
“They (violent offenders) are all on drugs these The offender is seldom on illegal drugs, but is often
days”. drunk.
57% of women fear going out at night alone Only a small percentage of victims of outdoor
(compared to 11% of men). violence are female. Those most vulnerable
(statistically) are young males.
Activity 13 Punishments
1. A policeman on duty defends a victim and kills the criminal. What is he guilty of?
2. Do you agree with the death penalty? Why (not)? If you do, under what circumstances?
3. Imagine that you discover that your best friend has found a way of cheating in an important
exam which the two of you are taking soon. What would you do and why? Mention any
personal experience you may have had.
4. Should police officers carry guns? Why (not)?
What reasons can you give for choosing punishments? Select the three that seem most important
to you. Justify your choice(s).
Activity 14 Sentencing
Read about the court sentences in the text and think of a crime to fit each one.
If it is someone’s first offence, and the crime is a small one, even a guilty person is often
unconditionally discharged. He or she is set free without punishment.
The next step up the ladder is a conditional discharge. This means that the guilty person is set
free but if he or she commits another crime within a stated time, the first crime will be taken into
account. He or she may also be put on probation, which means that regular meetings with a
social worker must take place.
A very common form of punishment for minor offences is a fine, which means that the guilty
person is sentenced to a certain number of hours of community service.
Wherever possible, magistrates and judges try not to imprison people. This costs the state
money, the country’s prisons are already overcrowded and prisons have a reputation for being
“schools for crime”. Even people who are sent to prison do not usually serve the whole time to
which they were sentenced. They get “remission” of their sentence for “good behaviour”.
There is no death penalty in Britain, except for treason. It was abolished for all other offences in
1969. Although public opinion polls often show a majority in favour of its return, a majority of
MPs has always been against it. For murderers, there is an obligatory life sentence. However
“life” does not normally mean life. A parole system operates to give prisoners, even convicted
murderers under certain circumstances, an opportunity to be released "earlier".
Activity 15
Work with a partner and discuss the following questions:
1. What purpose do prisons fulfill in current society? What purpose should they fulfill?
Comment on the points in the list below.
2. What kinds of problems do prisoners face, both while they are in jail and after they are
released?
3. Why are people sometimes tempted to take the law into their own hands? Are there any
circumstances in which this is justifiable?
Activity 16 Writing
Write a short essay- about 200 words- on punishment.
Try to use the following words and phrases:
depression, humiliation, fear of violence from guards or other inmates, contact with more
experienced and hardened criminals, drug abuse, ostracism, stigma attached to it, slip back
into his old ways, finding housing and employment, the law has failed them, a code of honour,
a blood feud, a vendetta, to take revenge on somebody
Activity 17 Appropriate sentences
Read the accounts of nine cases. The sentences have been left out. What do you think the
sentence should have been? Choose from the following:
1) SAN FERNANDO, Jan. 14 - A 16-year-old boy convicted of murdering two other teen-agers
on a La Crescenta playground over about $660 worth of marijuana was sentenced today
to……...
2) A former Immokalee man who has been in prison since 1996 pleaded no contest Monday to
shooting and killing another Immokalee man. Willie Barrett could have faced the death penalty if
convicted of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Henry Jean "Baby Ruth" Marshall on
Dec. 22, 1995. Instead, Collier County Circuit Judge Lauren Miller formally found him guilty of a
reduced charge of second-degree murder and sentenced him to …….
3) A former baby sitter was sentenced to ………. for causing the death of a toddler in her care.
Tawny Sue Gunter had pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter for causing 2-year-old Billy
Deon Blankenship to fall over the side of a staircase Nov. 15, 1990, at her Concordia, Mo.,
residence. Last Nov. 15, Gunter admitted grabbing Billy in a burst of anger and causing his fall.
4) A former police officer who admitted killing his wife was sentenced in Rockland County Court
yesterday to …………. after appeals from his daughter for leniency and from his former mother-
in-law that he be jailed longer.
5) Thursday, September 06, 2001 OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. — The city's new district attorney is
pressing ahead with state murder charges against bombing conspirator Terry Nichols — and is
seeking………... - despite Nichols' federal conviction and the high cost of prosecuting him.
6) Shooting spree leader gets ……….Three bored Athens teen-agers with idle time, a car and
a hunting rifle spent a weekend last February shooting up empty schools, cars, and occupied
homes for kicks.
7) A man who did cocaine, ecstasy and cannabis in a nursery school in Edinburgh, was sent to
prison for…………... John Curran was arrested by police after a successful operation was
mounted. The drugs recovered had an estimated street value of £220.000.
8) An all-white jury in Oklahoma City yesterday convicted a Negro, aged 22, of raping a white
employee of a telephone company. They sentenced him to …………..after the prosecution said
that 500 years would be just a “slap on his wrist”.
Read the following newspaper stories. The class will be divided into 2 groups, one will be the
prosecution and one will be the counsel for the defence. Elect three representatives in each team.
After preparation, each representative will talk to his/her counterpart, in turn. Decide on the
appropriate punishment for the offenders in each case; prepare to make demands, plead, justify,
negotiate.
A B C
An innocent man was
A boy and a girl were in A young mother
released from prison today
hospital yesterday after appeared in court
after serving ten years of a
being attacked by guard yesterday. She was
thirty year prison sentence
dogs. They had climbed charged with £20
for murder. The man had
over a factory wall to fetch worth of food from a
been found guilty on false
their football. “If they supermarket. The
police evidence. Before
hadn’t been in the factory woman told the court
leaving the court, the man’s
this wouldn’t have that she had stolen the
solicitor spoke to the
happened”, said the owner. food for her children.
reporters: “Thank God we
“My dogs were just doing She had lost her job
don’t have capital
their job.” and had no money.
punishment any more”, he
said.
Activity 19 Listening
Listen to the following report on drink-driving and fill in the blanks in the table below with a
number, word or short phrase.
Son of Sam
PART ONE
….a)… Two young women, Donna Lauria, and her friend Jody Valenti, were talking in Jody's car in the
Bronx, New York City. A man pulled out a Charter Arms .44 Bulldog handgun from a paper bag,
squatted down and fired into the car five times. Donna died immediately, hit in the neck. Jody, shot in the
thigh, leaned on the horn while the man continued to pull the trigger, even though the chamber was now
empty.
On the night of October 23, 1976, three months after the Lauria girl’s senseless murder, twenty-year-old
Carl Denaro was shot five times in the head. A little more than a month later, on the evening of November
26, 1976, Donna DeMasi and her friend Joanne Lomino were fired at and barely survived.
Of these three assaults which had occurred in two different areas, the Bronx and Queens, only one bullet
had been recovered intact. Consequently, police were not yet able to link these attacks to a single
individual.
Things quietened down for two months. Then in the early hours of January 30, 1977, the killer went
hunting for his next victim. Christine Freund and her finance John Diel left The Wine Gallery in Queens
around 12:10 A.M. and strolled towards his car. As they sat in the car, two shots broke the night,
shattering the windshield. Christine grabbed her head; both shots had struck her. John rested her head on
the driver's seat and ran for help, trying to flag down passing cars, but to no avail. People in nearby homes
had heard the shots and had called the police. A few hours later Christine died in hospital.
Forty-three-year-old Detective Sergeant Joe Coffey and Captain Joe Borrelli started to work on this latest
homicide. Coffey could see that the bullets used to kill her were not typical. …b)…Investigating further,
he discovered that her murder matched those other assaults on Donna Lauria, Donna LaMasi and Joanne
Lomino.
Coffey had a hunch that they were dealing with one psycho using a .44, stalking women in various parts
of the city. As his investigation began to bear fruit, a homicide task force was formed under Captain
Borrelli. After probing into the backgrounds of the murders and their victims, police were unable to find
any suspect on record; ….c)…It was beginning to look as though a psycho had randomly targeted
attractive young women for assassination.
• When did the police realise that the attacks belonged to the same individual?
• What information can the type of the bullet provide?
• Why is the background of a murderer important in solving a crime
PART TWO
On the evening of Tuesday, March 8, 1977, an attractive young Barnard College honor student named
Virginia Voskerichian was shot in the face and died immediately.
The next day, the police had a match on the bullet. It had come from the same gun that had killed Donna
Lauria. The following day, the police commissioner held a press conference to announce to the City of
New York that they had linked the various shootings. …d)….
As expected, the phantom reappeared. On April 17, 1977, Valentina Suriani, and Alexander Esau.
Valentina was shot twice. She died immediately and Alexander a bit later at the hospital. This psycho
who would keep on killing until he could be found among the millions of men who fitted his description.
But -- this time there was something different: the killer's letter left at the scene of the murders addressed
to Captain Borrelli. The letter did not have any useful fingerprints and the envelope had been handled by
so many people that if there were any of the murderer's prints, they were lost…. e)…..
Operation Omega was growing in size and resources. It had expanded to some two hundred detectives.
Catching the perpetrator of six murderous assaults would mean tremendous awards for the detectives
involved -- and they knew it. It was an extra incentive to put in long hours to catch this nut. Such long
hours, however, brought frayed nerves.
The Omega task force was flooded with calls. Everyone, it seemed, knew the killer: …f)….Every one of
these thousands of leads had to be checked out and disqualified -- a huge chore for any task force.
While the police were chasing down every suspect, checking registrations for .44 weapons, tracing
activities of former mental patients and generally running themselves ragged, the Son of Sam had become
emboldened by the publicity. He decided to write to a reporter for the Daily News.
Partial fingerprints were salvaged from the letter, which were of no value in finding the suspect, but
would be valuable to match against a suspect once captured.
Donna Lauria, Son of Sam’s first victim, had been murdered on July 29, 1976. Considering the Son of
Sam’s letter, police were worried about an anniversary killing. …g)… The Omega task force was
desperate. How to protect a whole city of young women from a random killer? Detective Coffey even
considered placing cops in bullet-proof cars with mannequins to try to lure the killer. …h)…Tensions
built steadily until July 29 and nerves were at a breaking point all that day and night, but no Son of Sam.
Not that day. Two days later when the police were beginning to feel relieved that the anniversary had
passed without another murder, the Son of Sam took his last victims.
In the early morning of Sunday, July 31, 1977, a pretty young woman named Stacy Moskowitz and her
handsome young boyfriend Bobby Violante were shot. He barely survived. She didn’t.
• Why is important for the press to know the development of the case?
• What is the impact of hunting a dangerous criminal on detectives’ lives?
• Why are fingerprints important?
• Why did the police expect the killer to strike again on July 29?
PART THREE
A Sam Carr remembered then the odd guy, David Berkowitz, who had briefly rented a room in their
house in early 1976. "He never came back for his two-hundred dollar security deposit when he left. Well,
he was always bothered by our dog, too."
On August 3, 1977, the two Yonkers cops, Chamberlain and Intervallo, proceeded cautiously and queried
the state computer network about Berkowitz. The computer gave a brief profile of him from his driver's
licence. Berkowitz appeared to be approximately the same age, height and build as the Son of Sam, as
described by various witnesses.
In the meantime, things seemed to be popping all over. Officer Chamberlain of the Yonkers PD
responded to a call about a suspected arson at Berkowitz's apartment house at 35 Pine Street.
That same afternoon, Sam Carr, upset over the shooting of his dog and what he saw as non-action by the
police, independently pursued the matter with the Omega Task Force…. i)…
The day of Berkowitz's arrest, Sergeant Joseph Coffey was called in to interview him. Calmly and
candidly, David told him about each of the shootings. When the interview was over there was no doubt
that Berkowitz was the Son of Sam. The details that he supplied about each assault were bits of
information that only the killer would know. ….j)….
While David did not start his life under the most auspicious circumstances, he grew up in a middle-class
family with doting adoptive parents who showered him with gifts and attention. His real mother had
arranged for his adoption even before David was born on June 1, 1953.
Perhaps the most significant factor in his life was that he was a loner. His parents weren't particularly
socially oriented and neither was David. He was always big for his age and always felt different and less
attractive than his peers. His neighbors remember him as a nice-looking boy but with a violent streak, a
bully who assaulted neighborhood kids for no apparent reason. He was devastated when his foster mother
died of breast cancer in the fall of 1967. His faith in God was shaken. He began to imagine that her death
was a part of some plan to destroy him.
David joined the Army in the summer of 1971 and stayed there for three years. He was an excellent
marksman, particularly proficient with rifles. Anger and frustration with women, coupled by a bizarre
fantasy life, started him down the road to violence when he got out of the Army in 1974. Even before the
murders began, David had set some 1,488 fires in the city of New York and kept a diary of each one. He
was acting out a control fantasy. Robert Ressler in his book Whoever Fights Monsters explains: " …k)…
With the simple act of lighting matches, they control events in society that are not normally controlled;
they orchestrate the fire, the screaming arrival and deployment of the fire trucks and fire fighters, the
gathering crowds, the destruction of property and sometimes of people."
His former tenants’ German shepherd was a noisy dog and howled frequently. The neighborhood dogs
howled back. In David's diseased mind demons lived within the dogs and their howling was the way they
ordered David to go hunting for blood -- the blood of pretty young women.
David's apartment on Pine Street also had its dogs: Sam Carr's black Labrador, which he shot with a gun.
Sam Carr, in David's elaborate delusion, was the host of a powerful demon named Sam. When David
called himself the Son of Sam, it was the demon living in Sam Carr to which he referred. David was
classified by the defense psychiatrists as a paranoid schizophrenic…. l)….This story is repeated time after
time in every city experiencing the attacks of a serial killer. The demands of the citizens to know what is
happening is balanced against the reality that feeding these demands for information virtually ensures that
the killer will keep on killing. Legitimate police work is seriously hampered by a deluge of bogus tips
from well-meaning citizens. The only party that benefits from this common problem is the media.
Here are the sentences you must put into the correct places.
Activity 21
Activity 22
1 To be alleged a law
2 To break on the run
3 To be arrested a crime or an offence
4 To be convicted of theft
5 To commit for questioning
6 To go/ be a violent suspect
7 To have for stealing a diamond ring
8 To restrain to have killed someone
9 To serve a criminal record
10 To be sought a sentence
Activity 23
Complete these sentences using the word associations from the exercise above. You will have to
make some changes to fit the grammar of the sentences.
1. She … three times in the last two years and because she … no one is willing to give her a
job.
2. You must realise that you … when you park on the pavement.
3. He is … in cold blood and then … ever since.
4. The police … and he will remain in custody until his behaviour improves.
5. The man who … is suspected of having received stolen goods.
6. He … when he was 19 and he … in a high security prison ever since.
7. She … although she claims she got it as a gift.
Activity 24
How good are you at detective work? The following conversation includes many slang words.
Match the words to their definitions.
Down:
A-B killing someone unintentionally or in mitigating circumstances
UNIT 3 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
Before you read the text, discuss with a partner the steps undertaken by the
police in detecting and solving a crime
Exercise 1
Read the following text, complete it by putting in appropriate prepositions and discuss the
issues involved.
Intelligence
In summer 2000 the Metropolitan Police Flying Squad developed intelligence that pointed to
a major armed robbery plot. Its location was unclear, but police knew the identities of some of
the robbers. They also knew the gang was highly organised and would probably be armed.
Over a period of months detectives worked tirelessly to develop the intelligence picture. A
major surveillance operation was launched, using officers from the Met’s Directorate of
Intelligence. Within weeks, police were sure they knew the venue of the robbery – The
Millennium Dome in Greenwich. The exact target within the Dome was not yet clear.
Discuss: how big a risk were the police taking at this point?
Surveillance
On 1 September 2000 three of the suspects, William Cockram, Raymond Betson and Aldo
Ciarocchi were seen at the venue filming with a camcorder and studying the plans of the
Dome.
Over the coming weeks the surveillance continued, and further members of the gang were
identified and some of the men were spotted testing a speedboat in a harbour in Kent.
Detectives thought the gang might use the boat as a getaway. The robbery was getting close.
Discuss: What practical steps should the police already have been taking?
The JCB Mechanical Digger
By early October police inquiries had identified another venue linked to the robbery – The
Old Coal Yard in Whitehart Road, Plumstead. The detectives observed gang members with a
yellow mechanical digger, registration L245 AJU. The digger had been reported stolen some
months earlier and would clearly have some role to play in the robbery.
Discuss: JCBs ( yellow construction/digging vehicles) had been used before in a new
version of the “smash and grab” raid known as “ram raids” What precautions should the
police have taken?
The River
Police could not be sure when or indeed exactly how the robbery would take place On a
number of days in October the gang looked as if they were about to commit the offence. On
three separate days they towed a speedboat to Greenwich and placed it in the river opposite
the Dome. Other activity on those days tended to indicate that the robbery was close – but
strangely it didn’t materialise. Detectives were sure that there was more to this than merely a
loss of nerve on the robbers’ part. They analysed the times and days of the aborted attempts
and found that they had something in common – the tide. On each of the days when the
robbery was aborted the tide was at its highest possible level. This was vital to the robbers’
escape, since the boat could only be launched on the north side of the Thames when the water
was high. Through studying the patterns of the tide, police were able to predict the optimum
times for the robbery to take place. One of these days was 7 November 2001
Discuss: Speedboat .. river.. possible mooring and launching locations.. tides.. a very
obvious deduction and conclusion by the police ?
Activity 1 The Day of the Robbery
Match the two parts of the sentences to complete the text.
2) They were prepared for a tactical operation which had been months...
3) Public safety was the prime consideration and officers had plans....
7) A further 60 armed Flying Squad officers were stationed around the Thames....
Officers also moved to a number of observation points between the Old Coal Yard in
Plumstead and the Dome.
8) The Dome’s CCTV room was turned into a police control room...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Discuss: If you had been a gang member would YOU have been keeping surveillance on
the Dome?
Timetable of events on the morning of 7 November 2001
7:26 A white Transit van registration N770 AHE was seen towing the red and
white speedboat along West Ferry Rd on the Isle of Dogs. The passenger was
later identified as Kevin Meredith.
8:11 White Ford Transit van, registration number C673 COR, drove into the Old
Coal Yard in Plumstead. The JCB was parked there.
8:39 A red and white speedboat was seen travelling east along the Thames towards
the Dome. The driver, later identified as Kevin Meredith, then crossed the
river into Bow Creek where he tied the boat up and waited.
8:43
The JCB and van drove out of the Yard towards Plumstead. The
JCB driver – later identified as Betson- was wearing a fluorescent
waistcoat. The JCB traveled towards Greenwich, turning right into Anchor
and Hope Lane. At this point the white van was lost. The driver was not
identified and the vehicle has never been recovered.
9:07 The JCB travelled along Bugsby Way towards the Dome. It turned left
beneath the A102 Blackwall Tunnel Approach and parked up out of sight.
Police believe that this is where Ciarocchi, Cockram and Robert Adams got
into the JCB alongside Betson. The gang had modified the cabin to fit four
people.
The JCB turned left into Ordnance Crescent towards the Dome. It stopped
in Drawdock Road, just short of the Dome’s perimeter fence.
9:33 The JCB crashed through a gap in the fence, flattening a metal bollard as it
went. It headed towards Gate 4 of the Dome.
9:35 The JCB rammed open the double locked gates at Gate 4 and moved into
the grounds of the Dome.
9:36 The speedboat crossed the Thames toward the Dome from Bow Creek. It
got into position at Millennium Pier where it waited for the robbers.
9:37 The JCB crashed through the side of the Millennium Dome and careered
towards the Money Zone. It braked quickly outside the diamond
exhibition, and Adams, Ciarrocchi and Cockram jumped down from the
cabin.
All three were wearing gasmasks and body-armour. Adams and Cockram
entered the vault while Ciarrocchi kept watch outside.
Inside the vault, Cockram dashed to the cabinet containing the 777-carat
Millennium Star diamond. He fired into the glass with a loaded Hilti gun.
Adams then set about smashing the cabinet with a sledgehammer. Having
broken the glass he started on the second cabinet - where the De Beers
Millennium Diamonds were displayed: eleven rare blue stones and the 777
carat flawless Millennium Star. Worth over £200 million, the diamonds are
second in value only to the Crown Jewels.
At this point Det Supt Jon Shatford gave the order to arrest the suspects.
9:37
Outside the vault Ciarrocchi was still keeping watch. As armed officers
approached him, he threw a grenade in their direction - which exploded
into a ball of blue smoke. Ciarrocchi was quickly overpowered and
arrested. When searched he was found to be carrying further grenades, a
firework and ammonia.
Meanwhile officers on the river moved in to arrest Meredith. Armed officers deployed on
three boats left their hiding places and moved towards Millennium Pier. They quickly cut off
his escape route, and arrested him. Meredith was carrying a large quantity of petrol – which
police believe would have been used to set fire to the boat after the robbery.
A sixth man was arrested on the north side of the river Thames at the Lower Lea Crossing. He
was parked in the White Ford Transit van (N770 AHE) which was seen towing the speedboat
earlier that morning.
The robbers were taken to different police stations in South East London for questioning. On
8 November, the following day, they were charged.
On 18 February 2002 at the Old Bailey, Adams, Ciarrocchi, Cockram and Betson were
convicted of conspiracy to rob and Meredith was convicted of ……………………….. Betson
and Cockram were each jailed for …………………... Adams and Ciarrocchi were each jailed
for 15 years and Meredith was jailed for 5 years.
A sixth man involved in the robbery plot was jailed at the Old Bailey on Wednesday 20
February. Lee Wenham, aged 33, was sentenced to four years in jail …………………….to
conspiracy to steal. ………………………….. he was sentenced to nine years after pleading
guilty to an attempted robbery which took place at Aylesford, in Kent, in June 2000.
Exercise 5
Comprehension check. Complete the statements with the correct answer:
1) The police operation was
a) poor and superficial
b) massive and meticulous
c) obstructed by local politicians
d) detected by the gang at an early stage
2) ‘Magician’ was the codename of the
a) police operation
b) intervention strategy
c) robbers’ plot
d) gang leader
3) The gang was supposed to be
a) badly organised and unarmed
b) well organised and armed
c) a group of criminals unknown to each other
d) former security officers at the Dome
4) The getaway of the gang was
a) a white van
b) a mechanical digger
c) a speedboat
d) a tunnel through the vault
5) The day of the robbery was connected to
a) an eclipse of the sun
b) the position of the stars
c) the phases of the moon
d) Atlantic high tides
6) The police ensured that the arrest would go
a) calculating a high risk to the public
b) quickly although riskily
c) spectacularly to set an example
d) rapidly with minimal risk to the public
7) The plan of the robbery
a) was known from the very beginning
b) had to be carefully figured out
c) had been instigated by police “agent provocateurs”
d) was based on a previous foiled plan
8) The prime consideration of the police was
a) their own safety
b) the apprehension of the robbers
c) the guarding of the diamonds
d) public safety
e) ensuring long prison sentences for the gang leaders
Activity 2
Caution in UK:
‘You do not have to say anything. But it may harm your defence if you do not mention,
during questioning, something which you later rely on in court. Anything you do say
may be given in evidence’.
Caution in US: ‘Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law’
Activity 3
Try to classify the following actions according to the person who performs them. Sometimes
more than one answer is possible. There may also be a natural sequence or “chronology”
related to some actions.
WORK IN GROUPS! Use the following abbreviations.
Investigating Officer = (IO) Victim=(V) Witness= (W) Offender= (O)
(CPS) = Crown Prosecution Service Court = (C)
GROUP 1
to detect a crime, to report a crime, to commit a crime, to catch a criminal, to arrest a
suspect, to interrogate, to make a confession, to break the law, to put an APB on a
criminal, to take into custody, to browse a mug-shot book, to gather evidence, to
prosecute, to send to prison, to handcuff a suspect, to commit to trial, to send to court,
to take a statement, to give a statement, to release on parole, to release on probation, to
plead guilty,
GROUP 2
to charge, to execute a search warrant, to press charges, to drop charges, to issue an
warrant, to be on call, to perpetrate a crime, to conduct a crime scene examination, to
report for duty, to follow a lead, to shadow a suspect, to apprehend a criminal, to be
served with a subpoena, to admit an offence, to perform a ballistics match, to resort to
the polygraph, to conceal facts, to combat crime, to conduct an interview, to exercise
their right to silence, to elicit information from a suspect, to deny involvement, to
establish the identity of a suspect
GROUP 3
to withhold information, to request legal advice, to locate a crime, to check an alibi, to
do the fingerprints’ match, to handle exhibits and evidence, to obtain a confession, to
record an interview, to prove an offence, to caution a suspect, to conspire with, to view
an identification parade, to accuse, to carry out an intimate search, to detain a suspect,
to witness an offence, to have the power to stop and search, to be assigned to a case, to
be put on a case,
GROUP 4
to question a suspect, to pass sentence, to be under subpoena, to do a positive ID on
somebody, to violate the law, to find guilty on all counts, to find guilty as charged, to
bring charges against, to invalidate a confession, to dismiss a case, to hear a case, to
disclose evidence, to arrest in anticipation of violent behaviour, to reach a verdict, to
return a verdict, to sign a restraining order, to institute criminal proceedings, to testify,
to arrest on suspicion of murder
Activity 4
Word association
Each of these four words below can be linked by one other word. All the words are to
do with police matters. What are the missing link words?
1. intimate body
house-to-house underwater
vehicle
3.
first-time juvenile
repeat habitual
4.
detention search
arrest eviction
5.
open-and-shut hit-and-run
murder unsolved
When a criminal is caught by the police he is first (a)(an) ……..…….., then (a)(an)
…………….., after that (a)(an)……………, probably both the …………………… and
the ………………….. when he is in court, after sentencing he is a frequently (a)(an)
……………………………!
Choose from the following and put them in the right order:
Are there any other possible stages (with names!) for a criminal?
Grammar focus
Modal verbs can also express possibility- may, could or might for greater
doubt to replace phrases such as ‘it is possible’, ‘maybe’, ‘perhaps’, ‘it is likely’
etc; probability or deductions - must to replace phrases such as ‘it is probable,
it is almost certain, I am sure, etc. and impossibility - can’t or couldn’t to
replace phrases such as ‘it is impossible that’, ‘it is unlikely that’.
Exercise 6
Re-phrase the following sentences by using an appropriate modal verb.
EXAMPLES
Exercise 7
Complete the text with the verbs in brackets in the infinitive (active or passive) or the –
ing form.
When (1) ………………………. (investigate) crime, the police choose between reactive and
proactive policing. The reactive approach involves the police in (2) ………………..
(respond) to public calls for help. It has the advantages that the police operate openly and in
response to real public demand and with the consent of the public. When (3) ……………….
…..(not answer) calls, the police are expected (4) ………………….. (patrol) openly (5)
……………….. (deter) wrongdoing – but it has been pointed out that the strategy, especially
patrolling, is very inefficient – the police rarely bump into criminals who are on their way
home from a burglary.
The proactive approach involves (6) …………………. (build) up pictures of threats to law
and order and potential criminality through the targeting of potential criminals and the
surveillance. Intelligence is vital so that threats can (7) ……………………….. (identify) and
appropriate counter-measures (8)…………….. (take). This form of policing tends (9)
…………….. (involve) specialist squads who are reliant on the analysis of crime patterns and
information from the informants.
Activity 6
A key part in modern criminal investigation is played by DNA testing. This activity is
based on materials from the UK Forensic Science Service (FSS).
www.fss.org.uk
These are two of their FAQ – Frequently Asked Questions.
Q: Can a DNA profile ever be exclusive to one person?
A: Apart from the case of genetically identical twins, the DNA contained in every person’s
cells is different from that contained by any other person. The FSS looks at eleven
information sites using the current DNA profiling technique
Q: What is the best reference sample to submit – a blood sample, a buccal scrape or hair
sample?
A: DNA can be extracted from any cells that contain a structure called the nucleus. This is
where the DNA resides within the cell. Nucleated cells are found in (white) blood cells,
buccal (cheek) cells, spermatozoa, vaginal cells, hair root sheath cells and body tissue cells.
The choice of the appropriate reference sample depends on the case. The DNA unit would
prefer to receive blood samples because of the ease of processing. Alternative samples such as
buccal scrapes (as used for the National DNA Database) or hair samples (pulled) may be
taken. The Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE) gives the police powers to take buccal
scrapes or hair roots (non-intimate samples), by force, in certain circumstances and with the
authority of a very senior police officer.
Activity 9
Put together the parts of the sentences to get true information about SALIVA stains
1. DNA in saliva can be analysed from a variety of A. is very variable.
places
2. The DNA is NOT present in the liquid saliva B. for example, swabs from the body, drinking
.
3. There are occasions when DNA may be C. while a well-chewed cigar butt would have
recovered from drinking vessels or straws or even many.
food
4. It is impossible to predict the quantity D. so all items should be stored frozen or submitted
to the laboratory as soon as possible.
5. For this reason the success rate of DNA profiling E. of any mouth cells in any saliva sample or stain.
on saliva
6. A partially smoked cigarette may have few cells F. but currently this is rare.
present
7. DNA in mouth cells is very prone to degradation G. but in mouth (buccal) cells which are shed
due to high numbers of bacteria in the mouth (released) into the saliva.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
B
UNIT 4 CRIME, INVESTIGATION AND SOCIAL RELEVANCE
In this unit, after some revision activities, we look briefly at the safety of the citizen,
considering the responsibilities of the police to investigate crime.
The unit also highlights the social pressures which the police find themselves under and
some of the factors which lead to successful (or unsuccessful) results.
The race issue- from the troubled times of the 1950s and 1960s in the USA and in
modern Britain- is one that should be taken into careful consideration by anyone studying
crime in contemporary European or American society.
The bombing of a Jewish Temple in Atlanta, Georgia in 1958 and of the Baptist Church
in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963, may not seem to have much to “teach” the
contemporary police officer. However, the issues involved were and are highly complex
and all-too-relevant, as the 2000 case involving the murder of a young Nigerian boy in
London shows.
On a different level, the FBI investigation of fraud connected with murder underlines the
fact that more “white-collar criminals are turning to violence to achieve their ends.”
Rewrite each of the following sentences to mean the same as the sentence printed before it. Use
the words given. Two EXAMPLES are given.
2. The policeman told us to fit new locks on all our doors and windows.
He suggested ………………………………………………………………….
6. No, Jerry definitely didn’t steal the jewels. I had the only keys with me.
Jerry couldn’t ………………………………………………………………….
7. The police informed the reporters that the number of crimes had decreased.
The reporters ………………………………….………………………………..
10. If there is a road traffic accident causing injury the police are obliged to make a full report.
The police …………………………………………………………………………….
Activity 1
Before hearing about a case in England, read the following text and discuss the
issues involved.
Norway, which fancied itself to be free of the xenophobia which infects other Nordic
societies, has been forced to confront a less palatable reality. The verdict is expected this
week in a trial of three neo-Nazis accused of stabbing a black teenager to death, simply
because they did not like the colour of his skin. Prosecutors demanded the maximum
sentence of 21 years for one man. 19 years and 4 months for another and a lesser sentence
of two and a half years for a third defendant. It is Norway’s first recorded racially
motivated murder.
The killing, which, in the words of the former Prime Minister, Jens Stoltenberg, marked a
“watershed’ in Norway’s history, happened in January 2001. Benjamin Hermansen, a 15
year-old boy of mixed Norwegian-Ghanaian extraction, was attacked only 500 metres
from his home in an Oslo suburb. He died of multiple stabbing wounds and had received
a severe kicking. Joe Erling Jahr, 20, one of the defendants had admitted stabbing
“Benny”, but said he had “ just wanted to give him a scratch” and that the death was an
accident.
But another of the defendants, Veronica Andreassen, 18, told the court that she, Jahr and
a third accused. Ole Nicolae Kvisler, 22, went looking for “foreigners” in their car and
she picked out Benny Hermansen as a perfect target.
Activity 2 Listening
POLICE ACTION UNDER SCRUTINY IN DAMILOLA TAYLOR TRIAL
PERSONS TIMES/DATES
- 6 passersby who …………………………
……………………………………………. - four months ago (August 2000) ……………
……………………………………………. ………………………………………………
- 3 youths ………………………………… - 4:45 p.m
……………………………………………. ………..…………………………….…………
……………………………………………. ……………………………….……..
- Mr Mark Parsons ……………………….. - 5 p.m.
………………………………………….. …………………………………………………
………………………………………….. ………………………………………
………………………………………….. - “minutes later” …………………………..
- Maynard Cox George …………………… ……………………………………………
…………………………………………
………………………………………… PLACES
- Mohammed El-
Nagdy………………………………………… - stairwell in the council apartment block
………………………………………………… …………………………………………….
………………………………… …………………………………………….
- Jordan - North Peckham Estate
Fayemi…………………………………… ……….………...………………………………
………………………………………………… …………………………………
……………………………………… - Oliver Goldsmith Primary School
- Superintendent Rob Jarman …………………………………………………
………………………………………………… …………………………………
……………………………………… - Blakes Road …………………………
- Gloria Taylor ………………………………… ……………………………………….
………………………………………………………
ENVIRONMENT OFFENCES AND ANTI-SOCIAL
- housing estate (council blocks)………………. ACTIVITIES
………………………………………………… - bullying
………………………………………………… …………………………………………………
- street lighting ………………………………… …………………………………
……………………………………………….. - stabbing
……………………………………………….. …………………………………………
- rubbish chute ………………………………… …………………………………………
……………………………………………….. - stealing
………………………………………...
………………………………………...
Activity 4
Consider the vocabulary items in the box. How many of these words would you consider
to be absolutely essential “core vocabulary” for your own language progress?
VOCABULARY
The judge criticised the police for breaking rules and offering inducements to their key
witness, a 14 year-old schoolgirl, which had contributed to making her evidence
unreliable.
The defence said officers gave the girl clothes and mobile phones and told her she was
more likely to get a ₤50000 newspaper reward if she said she saw the killing, as police
believe she did. Justice Anthony Hooper said there was “a very real danger” that
detectives persuaded the girl to tell lies when they offered her the inducements to
convince her to give evidence in court. “No part of the evidence which is adverse to any
defendant can be relied upon,” Justice Hooper told the jury at London’s Old Bailey.
Even though the trial against the other three juvenile defendants continues, Wednesday’s
ruling once again put the spotlight on police practices in high-profile cases.
A government report in 1999 lashed the Metropolitan Police for its bungled investigation
into the murder of black teenager, Steven Lawrence, who was stabbed to death by a gang
of white youths in 1993 as he waited at a bus stop. His killers have never been brought to
justice. Both cases sparked soul-searching in Britain and led to calls for a crackdown on
gang violence and thuggery.
Police chiefs say the force has worked hard to clean up its image, but the pressure to
solve crime is acute as street crime in the capital rockets, with figures in January 2002
49% higher than a year before.
Cortenay Griffiths, QC, a defence lawyer in the Taylor case, told the court that police had
“manufactured” the schoolgirl to become their “star” witness because they could not
afford another unsolved murder like that in the Lawrence case.
Griffiths said criticism aimed at the police after the Lawrence enquiry had motivated
officers to “break every rule in the book” in their handling of the schoolgirl, who cannot
be named for legal reasons. The defence said officers had told the girl that she could help
one of the defendants, who was her friend, by saying she saw the killing. According to
the defence, she was also told that reward money offered by a newspaper would be “more
guaranteed” if she said she had witnessed the murder.
Defence lawyers produced evidence that she and her mother had run up a ₤ 4100 hotel
bill before the trial and that police had bought her clothes, mobile phones and had paid
₤ 1000 of telephone calls to her friends.
Police admitted to the hotel bills and to buying the girl clothes and giving her two mobile
phones, but denied that this was meant to entice her into giving evidence at the trial.
Exercise 3
Read the text and answer the questions: TRUE or FALSE or NOT CLEARLY STATED
Exercise 4
Find words from the text in the box which mean …
inducements/ blow / adverse / soul-searching / rockets / run-down
be relied on
The 4 students should exchange and complete the information by means of SPOKEN reports
about the part they had read.
In this way, all students should have knowledge about all aspects of the case without necessarily
having read all 4 texts. This may be done at a later date, as a homework assignment or for self-
study.
It was a widely respected police-force, an award-winning police force. Murders were solved,
speeding autos were apprehended, drunks and transients were dealt with, order was maintained.
In the 1950s, the secret of exposing wrongdoers lay not primarily in the retrieval of microscopic
evidence from a crime scene (although the FBI was making rapid strides in matching bullets to
gun types and Detective W.K. Perry solved a rape case in 1957 by matching pubic hairs and
underwear fibres). The emphasis was on knowing about people’s characters – the ability to spot a
“bad apple”, to recognise suspicious behaviour, to make out an alibi as “not holding water” and
the ability to break a suspect under interrogation and pressure.
Good, upstanding moral character radiated from the top- from Mayor Hartsfield and from Chief
of Police Jenkins and from all the clean-cut, straight-arrow, square-shouldered police officers on
the force – white and black- because the force had been integrated under Hartsfield and Jenkins
since 1948.
Social deviants in the community stuck out like the proverbial “sore thumb”, especially in
Atlanta. Here, the city’s civilized acknowledgment of the Supreme Court’s ruling on integration
was being implemented at the highest levels. Elsewhere in the South, mayors, police chief, city
councillors were cutting themselves loose from the rule of law. While long lines of social misfits
followed their example. Community leaders ignored the federal courts and the directives from
Washington – it was like opening the doors of the insane asylum! Klan-robed trash paraded
through the streets, they bribed and accepted bribes from public officials and knew themselves to
be untouchable. But in Atlanta, the names of the trouble-makers were known, appeared on the
police chief’s desk and the police patrols were instructed to drive slowly through certain areas
looking for trouble.
Text A Answer the questions by choosing the best alternative , a, b, c, or d.
1. The Atlanta police force was a) corrupt and inefficient b) racist and intolerant
c) competent and capable d) linked to the Ku Klux Klan
4. The situation in Atlanta was a) quite different from other cities in the South
b) much less tolerant than other places
c) about the same as most cities in the Southern states
d) extremely tense with Klan leaders in control
5. The City leaders and officials in Atlanta a) were known for their corrupt practices
b) had a high moral code
c) rejected Washington’s directives
d) were in the pay of the Ku Klux Klan
At the top of Police Chief Jenkins list of suspects in the Temple bombing were the men arrested that
summer for the anti-Semitic picketing of the newspaper trial. (The Constitution had been charged with
publishing anti-Jewish statements and was found guilty.)
George Bright, Chester Griffin, Luther Corley all members of the white extremist organisation, the
National States Rights Party (NSRP). The Atlanta police moved towards locating, detaining and
questioning these men. But the FBI had earlier gone a step further than the Atlanta police. They had
had an informant within the NSRP almost from the beginning.
George Bright had been suspicious of informants infiltrating their group and he was right in his
suspicions. L.E. Rogers –a vulgar, overweight, out-of-pocket, unskilled janitor services man. He was
an FBI spy- or in the language of the day- a sneak. He had joined both the NSRP and the KKK for the
purposes of relaying information to the FBI- he had done it, according to his own high-minded
statements, for the highest motives of citizenship. Meanwhile he earned $50 to $75 for each report and
had earned $1,150 by October 1958, filling the FBI files with reports of discussions such as the one in
May 1958, where the NSRP members’ talk was of shooting down Jews in the streets.
The FBI therefore concurred with the Atlanta Police Department, contributing three more names: the
brothers Richard and Robert Bowling, known since boyhood for trouble-making and experimenting
with explosives, and who had been spotted recently in the company of some of the South’s most
dangerous extremists.
TEXT B Answer the questions by choosing one of the alternatives a, b, c or d.
3. The NSRP members were a) totally unaware that there might be a spy among them
b) aware of the possibility that they were being spied on
c) aware of Rogers’ role but were feeding him false
information
d) able to identify Rogers easily
On Monday 13 October 1958, the day after the bombing, Atlanta police detectives were sent out
by Police Chief Jenkins to arrest the suspects. Robert Bowling was apprehended without incident,
but Chester Griffin and Richard Bowling had disappeared.
The moment that Griffin learned of the bombing- on the morning of the bombing-, he guessed
that he would be the target of a massive manhunt and had taken off. He had gone to Stone
Mountain in search of James Venable, the Imperial Wizard of the National Knights of the Klan,
who had represented Griffin and the others when they were arrested for picketing the Constitution
trial.
“ Knowing the warped minds of the FBI, the Atlanta police, the Anti-Defamation League and the
Atlanta newspapers, I well enough anticipated what lay in store for me. They had already
broadcast that regardless of whether I was guilty or innocent, they were going to come over and
try to pin anything that happened on me. So, that’s why I drove out to Stone Mountain and tried
to get in touch with Mr Venable.” But Venable was out. Griffin delayed returning home.
“I decided the best thing to do was to lay low and try to get in touch with my attorney first thing
bright and early on Monday morning,” he said later.
“So, I went to East Point and saw a show and then I came back to Atlanta and caught a cab and
went over to Highland Theater and I saw it was the same one I had already seen, so I just stayed
around that drug store at the corner of Highland and Greenland until the show at the Plaza was
due to come on, and finally around eight o’clock, I went on to that show and it was a long one
and it was about 11:30 before I got out and I walked across the street, caught a taxi at the Briarclif
Hotel, went home. When I got home, there were 2 FBI men and a city policeman who surrounded
me and they didn’t … they tried to prevent me from paying the taxi operator and it was necessary
to shove them out of the way before I could do so. I hollered for my brother so he would know
what was happening and do something about it, and I demanded that they show me a warrant for
my arrest which they did not have and they commenced questioning me about where I had been.
4. Griffin claimed the police and FBI a) dragged him out of the taxi
b) prevented him from getting out of the taxi
c) beat him up and shoved him around
d) stopped him giving the driver the fare
Detective W.K. Perry drove forty minutes north of town to arrest Wallace Allen. Allen was home
when the detectives appeared. He let his dog loose on them.
“Well, we had a warrant to go up there and arrest him,” said Perry, later the chief of homicide.
“We got up there and he had a chain link fence right up against the sidewalk and the gate was
closed. He had a large front yard to his house and he was on the porch. I told him I had two
uniformed men with me as well as my partner. I started to open the gate and he told me not to
come in the yard. He was real arrogant. And I told him who I was and I said, “I’ve got a warrant
for your arrest.” About that time he turned his dog loose on us. He called him “Adolf”- that was
the dog’s name and the dog started running towards the gate. Well, I knew I was going in that
gate, so I off and told him “When that dog gets to this gate, I’m going to kill it.” So, I pulled my
gun and the dog stopped just before it got to the gate. He hollered at him and he stopped, because
I would have shot him.”
“ But anyway we went on in, and he had a picture of Hitler over the mantle with little electric
candles burning underneath it. He was in the printing business. He had all kinds of pamphlets that
he would print. We were looking for explosives or anything pertaining to the bombing, but we
didn’t find it.”
1. Perry set out to arrest Allen a) with uniformed officers and his partner
b) alone
c) with agents from the FBI
d) through the local sheriff
One hundred officers were assigned to the case, given highest priority by Chief Herbert
Jenkins. FBI laboratory technicians were flown in from Washington. Police departments
in Alabama, Florida and Tennessee opened their bombing files to the Atlanta police.
Atlanta detectives were paired with FBI agents to visit hotels, and railway, bus and air
terminals; they set up roadblocks on Peachtree and questioned drivers; and knocked on
doors in a block-by-block search of the area around the Temple.
On Monday, detectives announced the recovery from the rubble of a piece of brown
wrapping paper, which they turned over to the FBI. In an announcement to the press, FBI
laboratory experts confirmed that the paper was “similar to that used in wrapping
dynamite.”
This was the extent of the information collected at the crime scene.
GRAMMAR FOCUS
The remainder of this text concentrates on what …
If modern FBI and ATF experts had visited the Temple on October 12 1958, they
(1) (recover) __________________________________ chemicals, gunpowder, fuse
fragments, footprints and tire markings.
Within a few weeks, they (2) (know) _____________________________ precisely the
type of nitroglycerine used in the bomb, how much of the substance was “available” in
America. They (3) (find out) __________________________________ the names of
people with access to it, how it (4) (transport) _____________________________ into
Georgia and whether it had been in any of the vehicles or houses of the suspects.
They (5) (know) __________________________________ what kind of timing device
was used and (6) (check) ________________________________ in what other locations
such a device had been used.
Whereas the 1958 experts announced the recovery of a small piece of brown wrapping
paper that they thought was “similar” to that used to wrap dynamite, modern experts (7)
(know) ____________________________ precisely.
Not all brown wrapping paper is identical. The piece of wrapping paper recovered from
the bomb crater (8) (reveal) _________________________________ a lot of information
to modern experts, it (9) (be imprinted) ___________________________________ with
a grain of gunpowder, a fleck of skin, a hair follicle or even a fingerprint that (10)
(cause) _________________________________________ computers to become active
and lights to flash back at headquarters.
The children killed in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963 might be alive today, raising
children in an integrated world because the criminals who bombed their church
(15) (be identified) ________________________________ earlier or (16) (be
imprisoned) ______________________________________ for their earlier crimes.
Almost forty years ago, all the police could say with any degree of certainty was that
whoever had planted the bomb was knowledgeable about explosives.
They “believed” that funds for the bombing had come from sources outside the South.
They “believed” that the bombing was linked to others around the South.
They “knew” the bomb had been wrapped in paper commonly used for wrapping
dynamite.
“The bombing was definitely done by someone who knew his explosives,” said one
detective in a news conference. “An amateur tends to set the fuse so that only one or two
sticks explode and the rest just scatter.”
That “knowledge” narrowed down the field of suspects to several thousand army
veterans and munitions experts!
Activity 6
Read the details of an “old” case with a fairly recent end result!
Church Bombing Case at a Glance
Important dates in the investigation of the 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church
in Birmingham, Alabama.
September 15 1963 Dynamite bomb explodes outside Sunday service at 16th Street
Baptist Church, killing 11 year-old Denise McNair and 14 year-olds Cynthia Wesley,
Carole Robertson and Addie Mae Collins and injuring 20 others.
May 11 1965 FBI memorandum to director, J.Edgar Hoover concludes the
bombing was the work of former KuKluXKlansmen, Robert E.Chambliss, Bobby Frank
Cherry, Herman Frank Cash and Thomas Blanton Jr.
- 1968 FBI closes its investigation without filing charges
- 1971 Alabama Attorney-General Bill Baxley reopens investigation
November 18 1977 Chambliss convicted on a state murder charge and sentenced to life
in prison.
- 1980 Justice Department report concludes Hoover had blocked
prosecution of the Klansmen in 1965
October 29 1985 Chambliss dies in prison, still professing his innocence.
- 1988 Alabama Attorney-General Don Siegelman reopens the case,
which is closed without action
- 1993 Birmingham-area black leaders meet with FBI, and agents secretly
begin new review of the case
February 7 1994 Cash dies
July 1997 Cherry interrogated in Texas; FBI investigation becomes public
knowledge
October 1998 Federal Grand Jury in Alabama begins hearing evidence
May 2000 Blanton and Cherry surrender on murder indictments returned by
grand jury in Birmingham
April 10 2001 Judge delays Cherry trial, citing defendant’s medical problems
amid questions about Cherry’s mental competency
May 17 2001 Blanton convicted of murder and sentences to life imprisonment.
Activity 7
Discuss the following issues with a colleague.
1. What do you think the case illustrates about the American justice system?
2. Without the pressure in the 1990s under a Clinton regime, do you think the
investigations would have been re-opened?
3. How would the majority of Americans react to this most recent verdict?
4. Do you think the FBI engaged in some sort of cover-up?
5. Find some information on the Grand Jury. Does it seem like a necessary step?
6. What laws are there in Romania relating to the time a crime has been committed and
when a person may be charged with that crime?
7. What laws relate to “double jeopardy” i.e. not being able to try a person twice for the
same crime?
There was not enough evidence to successfully prosecute the case as murder. Therefore, a
special agent from the Chicago field office investigated the case with an eye to
prosecuting it as a fraud. The agent did research on SIDS and found reports suggesting
that multiple SIDS deaths in a single family were most likely the result of homicide by a
parent.
The Special Agent worked with the US Assistant Attorney’s Office on the theory that
baby Tara had not died of SIDS but had been suffocated by a troubled young mother.
By proving murder, they would be able to prosecute the case federally as a fraud against
the insurance company and the murder of the child could be considered “relevant
conduct” during sentencing. The evidence began slowly to point to the truth.
The initial investigation revealed that Abdel Haq was addicted to gambling, having
engaged in a series of financial crimes, insurance frauds and health care frauds for years
to obtain money to support her addiction. Original gambling records documented Abdel
Haq’s winnings at Illinois riverboat casinos and established her whereabouts on
important days, proving that she had lied on numerous occasions to insurance
investigators.
Further, Abdel Haq was found to have submitted claims to at least 8 insurance companies
regarding various thefts, accidents and injuries she allegedly suffered since 1980. The
Special Agent combined the information he had subpoenaed from public and private
agencies with other evidence including police reports of Abdel Haq’s confessions to petty
crimes, domestic incidence reports and civil lawsuits where Abdel Haq was the
defendant. The Agent created a comprehensive crime time-line from 1980 through 1998,
showing an increasingly common pattern of criminal conduct.
The circumstantial evidence was overwhelming and in February 1999, a federal jury in
Chicago returned a guilty verdict in the case on all counts. AT the conclusion of the one-
month trial with many witnesses and hundreds of exhibits, the jury found that beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendant had deliberately killed Tara, thus committing a fraud
against the insurance company.
6. The mother’s behaviour immediately after the baby died was described as being
a) highly suspicious
b) highly distressed
c) cold and calculating
d) extremely calm
10. The false insurance claims Abdel Haq had made between 1980 and 1995 related to
a) accidental injuries she had supposedly received
b) the costs of contesting custody hearings for the first child
c) the accidental death of her husband in a car crash
d) increased unemployment benefits which she was entitled to from public aid funds.
11. The FBI Agent’s gathering of the evidence showed a lot of information came as a result of
a) extremely methodical investigation
b) Abdelhaq’s own confession to the murder charge
c) a raid on an Illinois riverboat casino
d) the public telephoning the FBI with evidence
INFORMATION BOX
• The West Yorkshire Police alone took reports of 26,000
incidents of domestic violence in the year 2000. In 75% of the
cases the complaint was withdrawn and the case terminated.
• In Bucharest, of 500 violent incidents in 1999, 300 were
domestic violence cases, and of 110 killings, 70 were victims at
the hands of family members
• 983 is the Romanian helpline for victims of domestic violence
• Between January and October 2000, when a study was
published, 350 had used the helpline number.
• People throw around statistics saying that up to 70 or 80% of
children of batterers are also abused. That statistic is wrong.
EVERY child who witnesses abuse is a victim of abuse.
• 4 million American women experience a serious assault by an
intimate partner during an average 12-month period.
Before reading the text, discuss with a partner what domestic violence really entails.
Who commits it and why? Who are the victims and how can it be eradicated?
Text A
There is still a lot of confusion and misunderstanding about domestic violence – what it
is, who suffers from it, who commits it and why. Violence or abuse suffered by women in
their home which is carried out by their partner, ex-partner or anyone they are living with
is known as domestic violence. Victims of domestic violence are usually women, but this
is not always the case.
Women experience domestic violence regardless of their social group, class, age, race,
disability, sexuality and lifestyle. Violence and abuse can begin at any time – in the first
year or after years of marriage or living together.
Domestic violence can take a number of forms such as physical assault, sexual abuse,
rape, and threats. In addition, it may include mental and verbal abuse and humiliation.
Women experiencing domestic violence tend to play down rather than exaggerate the
violence. For some, the decision to seek help, to leave the abuser, or get the abuser to
leave is quickly and easily made. For many, the decision will be long and painful as they
try to make the relationship work and stop the violence. Women who leave often return to
their partners hoping for an improvement in the relationship or because of financial or
social pressures.
Men who are abusive to women do not necessarily abuse children, but it can happen.
Children will react in different ways to being brought up in a home with a violent person.
They may be affected by the tension or by witnessing arguments and assaults. They may
feel that they are to blame, or feel insecure, alone, frightened or confused.
Domestic violence is a crime which the police now deal with as a very serious matter.
Most forces have specially trained and experienced officers that can arrange medical aid,
transport and a safe place for the victims.
There are several organisations that can give practical and emotional support to the
victims. Refuges provide safe emergency and temporary accommodation, advice,
information, support and a range of other services for women and children escaping
violence.
Women’s Aid is a key support agency for women and children experiencing domestic
violence and runs a domestic violence helpline. Their services are confidential and
completely free.
The Samaritans offer confidential emotional support 24 hours a day by phone, face-to-
face or by letter. There are over 200 branches in the UK and Eire staffed by trained
volunteers.
Activity 1
Match a line in A with a word/phrase in B and a line in C:
A B C
There is still a lot of about all the changes and upheavals.
confusion and
misunderstanding
Women experience domestic because of they have left the relationship.
violence
Victims of domestic violence after women and children
are usually women experiencing domestic violence.
Domestic violence can take a regardless a very serious matter.
number of forms of
Victims should seek legal despite domestic violence.
advice from a solicitor
Women who experience for this is not always the case.
domestic violence feel
Women do have legal rights as their social group, class, age,
in relation to their children race, disability, sexuality and
lifestyle.
Women’s Aid is a key such as what their partners say.
support agency
The police now deal with that physical assault, sexual abuse,
domestic violence rape and threat.
Women often experience but they are concerned about their
depression and anxiety children.
This may happen if they are to blame.
Activity 2
Fill in the blanks with one of the following adverbs:
Text B
For over a year before she was murdered by her husband Avelino, Maria Teresa Macias
pursued every possible avenue to escape his years of violence against herself and their
three children. She reported to Child Protective Services, obtained restraining orders,
cooperated with investigators, talked to friends, went to churches, attended counseling,
brought her mother in from Mexico and her sister from Ireland, and tirelessly reported
new incidents to authorities, verbally and in writing.
In just the last three months of her life, between January and April 1996, Teresa and
witnesses reported Avelino’s crimes against her to the Sheriff’s Department on at least 18
different occasions. Teresa’s struggle to be free of Avelino’s violence was relentless. And
it was doomed. The help she reached for, failed her at every turn. After Child Protective
Services took her children because she was unable to keep Avelino away from them,
Teresa made a comment to her mother that seemed to describe the efforts of her entire
last year. “Instead of helping me,” Teresa told her mother, “ they sank me even more”.
On April 15, four days before she was going to take the final step of fleeing north with
her kids, Avelino lay in wait at the Sonoma house she and her mother were due to clean.
Avelino ended Teresa’s life with a bullet to the head, shot her mother through the legs,
and then turned the gun on himself. In the last couple of weeks of her life, Teresa became
enveloped by an ominous sense that Avelino would indeed succeed in his threats to kill
her. If he did, she told her mother, she wanted the story told. “If I die, I don’t want other
women to suffer what I am suffering”, she said, “I want them to be listened to.”
Activity 3
Decide on the appropriate collocations:
marriage form
consent of adultery
evidence violence
extra marital relations
domestic certificate
change officer
patrol in policy
police service
to produce help
to grant a divorce
to seek an organisation
to take a decision
to experience evidence
to run abuse
to express action
to take concern
Exercise 1
Put in the correct past participles of the verbs in brackets to complete the list:
Women who experience “domestic abuse” could be...
• (call)………………..names
• (give) ………………. no money
• (rape)………………..
• (stop) ………………. from seeing family and friends
• (punch)…………………
• (tell)……………………. what to wear
• (threaten)…………………………..with worse violence
• (strangle)………………………….or (choke) ……………….almost to
death
• (humiliate)………………………..
• (not allow) ……………………to go out alone
• (degrade) …………………………
Exercise 2
Fill in the blanks with ONE suitable word. The first letter(s) is/are given.
The problems (1) con ………………… with domestic violence are widely recognised,
yet, only recently has the focus (2) sh………………… to helping the victims. As far as
the police service is (3) con ……………………., it is essential that positive action is
taken in all cases at the (4) sc…………………….. of domestic violence. Consequently,
wherever there is evidence of an (5) o…………………, in the first instance the arrest
should be made (6) irr…………………. of the wishes of the victim. The wife’s,
partner’s or girlfriend’s pleas of ‘Don’t lock him up’ or ‘Leave him alone’ to the (7)
a…………………. officer may be purely for her (8) o……………… protection for
when he returns home later. If there is (9) in……………………. evidence to make an
arrest but problems are(10) ant …………………in the near future, then an arrest for
breach of the (11) p……………………. is appropriate. This will effectively remove the
victim from immediate (12) d………………………and provide time to (13)
dis………………..…the circumstances in private. This process must be carried (14)
o……………….. without fail, despite previous instances of withdrawals of (15) com
……………… by the victim. Moreover, the quality of the files (16) rel…………………
to DV assaults must be high, otherwise the CPS cannot do their (17) j……………… A
large number of files are being withdrawn by the CPS on the (18) g…………………that
the complainant no longer wishes to prosecute. So, the police service is reconsidering the
situation to decide whether, even without such witness (19) st. ……………….. and
formal complaints, a prosecution should be (20) all.………………. to proceed. In
addition to the role of the police and the CPS, the judiciary also has an important part to
play and should (21) p………………….. more custodial sentences. Locked away, the
(22) per……………………………… would have time to consider his situation
carefully. Concerted, long-term 23) str…………….., implemented by police, judiciary
and the government are absolutely essential, while substantial financial (24)in
……………….. must be continued for those agencies which are trying so (25)
h………………. to help and rehabilitate. The time for fine words and good intentions has
made way for action.
Activity 4
Project work: Choose a topic from the following and make a project about crimes of
domestic violence and associated punishments giving as many details as possible and
using charts, pictures and photographs:
a) Watch the news on TV and read newspapers to find out which crimes are reported
and how many of them relate to domestic violence in a week
b) Retell a case of domestic violence that you know or have heard of, either recently or
in the past
c) Is punishment for domestic violence effective or should it be changed?
d) Conduct a survey on how people feel about domestic violence (Is it ever necessary …
acceptable … not a case for concern?)
e) Responsibility in the case of domestic violence
f) The role of the police in preventing, detecting and solving Domestic Violence cases.
See if the police in your town or sector have information leaflets related to Domestic
Violence.
Activity 6
Form the adverbs from the following adjectives:
attentive, cautious, comfortable, cowardly, early, efficient, equal, fast, fatal,
fearless, friendly, good, hard, hopeful, immediate, kind, late, lively, lucky, mental,
near, noisy, poor, proud, simple, skilful, sudden, terrible, wrong.
Exercise 3
Paraphrase the following sentences using an adverb in the place of the words in
italics.
1. Our public order forces behaved like heroes in the riot. 2. The policeman left
the room in a hurry. 3. One can often see homeless people in the streets looking
with hunger at the people in restaurants. 4. The woman told the police she had
hurt herself by accident. 5. The victims were beaten without mercy. 6. The chief
constable spoke with pride about his force. 7. The demonstrators marched to the
parliament building in peace. 8. The two policemen handcuffed the aggressors
with ease. 9. The witness at the crime scene seemed unbalanced in his mind. 10.
‘We hope that we’ll bring the suspects in for interview by noon’, said the officer
in charge.
Activity 7
Remember that an adjective qualifies a noun while an adverb qualifies a verb, an
adjective or another adverb! Decide which are the adjectives and which the adverbs
in the following sentences:
A B
1) I work late. I work late hours.
2) These are hard times. She tried hard to compile the weekly report.
3) I can hardly walk. They could hardly see a friendly face.
4) Why do you drive so fast? That was a fast movement.
5) He came home terribly early. There was a terrible storm outside.
6) He speaks English well. Get well soon!
7) That’s very kind of you! We kindly ask you to send us your offer.
8) The report was extremely badly written.
9) The increase in violent crime is surprisingly easily explained
Grammar focus
The verbs be, get, become, seem, look (=seem), taste (i.v.), feel (i.v.), smell (i.v.), etc
always require an adjective if used to express a state or sense relationship.
(i.v.) = intransitive verb
Compare
The soup tasted delicious (intransitive)
The cook tasted the soup and said it needed more salt. (transitive usage)
Exercise 4
Choose one of the variants (adjective or adverb) to complete the sentences.
Violenţa în familie reprezintă violenţa sau abuzul suferit de un membru al unei familii
comise de către orice persoană care locuieşte cu el. Victimele sunt, în cele mai multe
cazuri, femeile şi copiii, dar câteodată şi bătrânii sau soţii.
Acţiuni de violenţă în familie sunt considerate violenţa fizică, ameninţarea, abuzul
sexual, violul, abuzul psihic, umilirea şi crima, în cazul în care se înfăptuiesc în familie.
Cum este normal, toate reclamaţiile ajung la poliţie. „În ultimii 10 ani, în Bucureşti, s-a
înregistrat o creştere a infracţiunilor de acest gen. Ele reprezintă mai mult de jumătate din
totalul actelor de violenţă”, a declarat col. G.R., de la Direcţia de ordine publică a Poliţiei
Capitalei.
Violenţa fizică şi cruzimea psihică în cadrul familiei sunt principalele cauze ale
tendinţelor infracţionale şi violente la tinerii în prezenţa cărora se comit astfel de acte.
2. Practise how to get out of your home safely. Identify which windows, elevator or stairs
(be) ______________ best.
3. (have) __________________ a packed bag ready and keep it in a secret but accessible
place so you can leave quickly.
4. Identify a neighbor you can tell about the violence and ask them to call the police if
they (hear) _________________ a disturbance coming from your home.
5. Devise a code word to use with your children, family, friends and neighbors when you
(need) _________________ the police.
6. Decide and plan where you (go) _________________ if you (leave) _____________
home ( even if you (not think) __________________ you (need) ______________ to).
7. If the situation (be) ________________ very dangerous, use your own instincts and
judgements to keep yourself safe. Call the police as soon as it is safe to do so.
As a result of your Domestic Violence Complaint you are required to meet with an
Assistant State Attorney to talk about your case
on ___________ at ______________.
Only one woman in _____________ reporting a rape will see her assailant convicted
according to the first study to look at the investigation and prosecution of rape cases from
start to finish. The report, produced jointly by __________________________________
and the CPS, the ____________________________________ , finds failures throughout
the system and calls for a package of measures to ________________________________
The report found that 7.35% of all cases reported to the police _____________________
______________________________________. Home Office statistics show that the rate
of conviction for rape _____________________________ from ______________ of
reported cases in 1977 to ______________ in 1999.
The study of 10 police forces and CPS areas found that only ________________ of cases
reported to the police resulted in ____________________________________________
and only _______________ of cases referred to the CPS reached court.
When cases reached court, the conviction rate (including guilty pleas) was 60.8% but
________________________________________________________________________
were acquitted.
Stephen Wooler, chief inspector at the CPS inspectorate, said the figures were “ quite
disturbing in relation to what is an awful crime, there being few crimes which have such
a lasting effect on their victims.”
Activity 10
For four years, Fadime Sahindal’s father threatened to kill her. But last week, she took a
risk and went to say goodbye to her mother and her sisters before leaving to study in
Africa. Just before 10 p.m., as they sat in her sister’s flat in the Swedish city of Uppsala,
the doorbell rang. Her father burst in and shot Fadime in the head. She died in her
mother’s arms.
Sahindal paid the ultimate price for falling in love with the wrong man and defying the
patriarchal values of her culture. Her father was an illiterate Kurdish farmer who moved
to Sweden in 1980. His family arrived four years later when Fadime was seven. Her
parents discoraged her from speaking to Swedish children at school. Instead she was told
the important thing was to return to Turkey and get married.
She grew up under the control of her father and younger brother, who physically abused
her.
During a computer course in 1996, she met and fell in love with a Swedish boy called
Patrik Lindesjo. Sahidal was under no illusion as to her father’s reaction. She knew that
he would think she was dishonouring the family. They kept their relationship a secret for
over a year but when her father eventually found out, his first reaction was to beat them
both up.
Her father disowned her, but the couple refused to be intimidated. Lindesjo’s parents
went to Fadime’s parents to propose on his behalf but were turned down. Sahindal moved
to another town , only to be pursued and threatened by her brother. The police simply
advised her to stop talking to her family. Instead she turned to the press, giving
interviews about the conditions facing Kurdish girls in Sweden. Single-handedly she
started a debate about integration and double standards. The police’s inaction in the face
of her father’s threats infuriated the public.
On a visit to Uppsala her father spotted her with Lindesjo. He attacked her, spat in her
face and screamed: “Bloody whore. I will beat you to pieces.” She told police: “He said I
was rejected from the family and was not allowed to come back to Uppsala. If I did I
would never leave the city alive.” Her father was charged and in 1998 was convicted of
making unlawful threats. Her brother, who had cursed her as a whore during the trial, was
also found guilty.
It was a bitter-sweet victory for Sahindal, who had stood up for her beliefs but had lost
her family. She often said that she loved her father and that he understood no better way
of treating her.
Then in June 1998, as the couple prepared to move into a flat together, Lindesjo was
killed when his car crashed into a concrete pillar. A police investigation, which found
nothing suspicious, has now reopened.
Fadime carried on and in November 2001 spoke to the Swedish parliament about her
struggle for freedom. Then last week, her father caught up with her. He was arrested a
couple of hours later. In court, he called Fadime “the whore” and then confessed to
having killed her. He said that he had to protect the family’s honour.
The story has stirred deep emotions in Sweden. The government has promised about
US$170,000 to help girls in the same position. The legal age of marriage for foreigners
will be raised from 15 to 18, on a par with the age for Swedes.
Six groups representing foreigners in Sweden want to turn Sahindal’s funeral into a
demonstration against patriarchal cultures that allow “honour” killings. Sahindal, who
had said she did not want a funeral according to the rites of her native religion, may be
laid to rest beside Lindesjo at Uppsala’s Protestant cathedral.
The topic “Child Abuse” is an extremely sensitive and delicate issue. As a police officer,
concerned with legal and social circumstances, you should know about the realities of this
sad topic, both in your own country and elsewhere. Although, many of the texts and
activities seem to focus on language, the serious nature of the subject underlies everything.
Please keep this in mind and remember the human misery and suffering which is involved.
Discussion points
What is the status of children in Romania?
How serious is the issue of “street children”?
How do you view the issue of “institutionalised children”?
Is it a European issue or a national issue?
Read the text and comment on the issues raised.
Refugee children in Britain
According to Amnesty International, around 100,000 children who have escaped from
war, torture and intolerance are living in Europe, separated from their parents. For
example, around three thousand arrived in Britain in 2000. Responsibility for the care of
refugee children living alone lies with social services departments. The children are
covered by the Children Act (as are UK-born children) in which according to Section 20,
the local authority has a “duty to safeguard and promote the safety of the child”. The
child is “fostered” or accommodated in a children’s home and checks are kept on the
child even after the 18th birthday. But for separated refugee children, Section 20 of the
Act is not applied (although it could be and is applied by some local authorities). Instead,
Section 17 covers the status of separated children and only obliges the authority to house
the children in bed-and-breakfast hotels, with little support from social services.
It is very difficult for these children to provide any evidence of age, risk of persecution or
personal danger and the Home Office still considers it necessary to “eliminate the
incentives which attract unaccompanied children”. The Home Office policy is to prevent
them from settling in UK but suggests that “where there is no prospect of safe return,
exceptional leave to stay may be granted to unaccompanied children for 4 years or until
their 18th birthday.” The Home Office seeks to “enforce the removal of unaccompanied
asylum-seeking children who have been refused asylum and who have no other basis to
stay in the UK when they reach 18”.
As Amnesty International comments: “It becomes clear why these children are almost
never granted refugee status – at 18 anyone can be deported, under 18 there are
impossible protective measures which have to be met before a child can be returned.”
COLLOCATIONS
Activity 1
Decide on appropriate collocations
tragic | driving
sadistic | event
careless | conduct
vicious | cruelty
negligent | stress
wilful | disability
habitual | treatment
acute | drunkenness
severe | attack
serious | injuries
| assault
| circumstances
| need
| behaviour
THERE MAY BE SEVERAL POSSIBLE COLLOCATIONS WITH SOME ITEMS
Activity 2
Read the text and complete the exercises.
It was hot and the baby had been Great Yarmouth yesterday he had
fractious but, finally, he had dropped off intended to be away for only a few
for his afternoon nap. Steven minutes, but the time grew into hours.
MacDonald, glad of the peace and quiet, With the car window left just a couple of
wanted to go for a walk along the East inches open, Robert soon woke and
Anglian beach so he could feel the began crying.
family really was on holiday at last. The alarm was raised more than an hour
Elder son, Jamie, seven, was impatient later by Louise Watkinson, an off-duty
to get going, but what to do with baby special constable, who was parked in the
Robert? clifftop car park in Marine Parade,
He looked so peaceful in his cot in the Gorleston, near Great Yarmouth, and
car. After all, he was fast asleep and five heard the baby’s cries.
minutes would not do any harm, despite Ray Osborne, prosecuting, told
the rising temperatures. magistrates: “She went and looked and it
That five minutes, however, became appeared the baby was in distress, so she
hours and still the mercury rose. called for police officers to attend.”
Now 30-year-old MacDonald is facing MacDonald, of Ferguslie Park Avenue
jail. Paisly, pleaded guilty to an act of cruelty
It had started as a holiday to help a to his son by allowing him to be wilfully
family to forget its mounting troubles, assaulted, ill-treated, neglected,
but ended in a magistrate’s court with abandoned or exposed to danger.
the Paisley father accused of child Sentence was adjourned until August 17
cruelty. MacDonald told magistrates at for reports.
Exercise 1 Rephrasing
Rephrase the underlined sections using a word or phrase from the text
B. A member of the public contacted the police because she thought there was danger.
She _____________________ the alarm.
C. The father wrongly believed everything would be all right, leaving his son in the car.
He didn’t think this ______________________________
D. Except for this incident, there is no indication that the family neglected or abused the
child
There does not appear to be any evidence that the child __________________
_________________________________________________________________.
E. The counsel for the prosecution, Mr Ray Osborne, summed up his case by praising the
action of Ms.Watkinson.
Mr Ray Osborne, __________________, praised Ms.Watkinson’s action.
Activity 3 Please read the text about a recent extremely shocking case in Britain.
The “evil and sadistic” stepmother of reminiscent of a car crash victim, the
six-year-old Lauren Wright was court had been told.
convicted of her killing yesterday, as Acting Chief Superintendent Martin
was the father who “turned a blind eye” Wright, who led the police investigation,
to the abuse against her. said: “ There will be a significant
A jury at Norwich Crown Court found amount of satisfaction in many quarters
Tracey Wright, 31, and Craig Wright, that she has been convicted. Her
38, guilty of manslaughter and cruelty behaviour can only be described as evil
after a four-week trial. The pair will be and sadistic and our thoughts, of course,
sentenced at a later date. will be with Lauren today.”
Lauren’s emaciated body was covered in The Department of Health ruled out a
60 bruises and she weighed just over two public enquiry after the Norfolk social
stones (about 14 kilograms) when she services chief, David Rogers, said he
died on May 6 last year. The girl, whose was writing to Lord Laming, the
digestive system collapsed after a severe chairman of the hearings into the death
blow to the stomach, died in agony, with of Victoria Climbie, another child abuse
“terrible and disgusting” injuries victim, to ask him to consider the case.
I am sure you agree that this a very sad and shocking case
These 3 link headlines were next to the article. What do they suggest?
Discuss the issues involved in such cases.
Activity 4
In trying to improve your language skills, you should think of vocabulary
priorities. These will not be identical for all learners but it is clear that for
a police officer, certain terms have more frequent use and occurrence than
for non-specialists. Discuss the “location” of the vocabulary items from
the text and headlines.
Complete using the correct form of the verbs given to express the circumstances of the
two cases. You may select an appropriate MODAL form, add negatives as necessary or
use a PASSIVE version.
2. If the special constable (call) the police the father (charge) with cruelty.
___________________________________________________________________
3. If the family (have) problems perhaps the father (act) in this cruel manner.
____________________________________________________________________
4. If the father (be) alone (i.e. not with his other son) he (come back) earlier.
______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
6. If the local social services (be) more observant they (notice) the signs of child abuse.
_______________________________________________________________________
7. If the father (care about) his own daughter he (prevent) the stepmother from being so
cruel to Lauren.
________________________________________________________________________
8. A public inquiry (hold) if there (be) another child abuse case hearing.
________________________________________________________________________
9. If social workers (have) such a heavy workload they (be able) to help cases like
Lauren’s.
________________________________________________________________________
Exercise 8 Children in need
Classifying needs.
Look at the descriptions of the official “need code” categories for Children in Need.
Locate the headings for each description.
1. _________________________
Children in need as a result of, or at risk of, abuse or neglect.
2. ___________________________
Children and their families whose main need for services arises* out of the children’s
disabilities or intrinsic condition*.
3. __________________________
Children and their families whose main need for services arises because the capacity of
their parents or carers* to care for them is impaired* by disability, illness or mental
disorder.
4. ___________________________
Children whose needs arise from living in a family going through a crisis such that
parenting* capacity is diminished* and some of the children’s needs are not being
adequately met.*
5. ____________________________
Children whose needs arise mainly out of their living in families where the parenting
capacity is chronically inadequate.
6. ______________________________
Children and families whose needs for services arise primarily out of their children’s
behaviour which impacts* detrimentally* on the community.
7. _______________________________
Children living in families or independently, whose needs arise mainly from being
dependant on an income below the standard state entitlements.*
8. ________________________________
Children, whose need for services arises* mainly from having no parents available to
provide for them.
Add the items marked with an asterisk * to the appropriate core vocabulary collection.
Activity 5 Children in Need
Listening
This text is taken from an official report, published in England (i.e. not including
Scotland, Wales and Ireland) in early 2000. Local authorities, responsible for
dealing with the problem of children in need, had been asked to provide statistical
data. As you listen, complete the statistical information and other details.
MAIN RESULTS
Numbers of children in need
• There were just under (1)__________________ Children in Need in England in
February 2002
• (2) ___________________ of them were “children looked after” and the remaining
317.000 were other Children in Need
• Social Services are providing services for nearly a (3) _______________ Children in
Need in a typical week
• 92% of Children Looked After and 54% of other Children in Need receive a service
or have money spent on their behalf in a typical week (either in terms of
(4) ________________________ or in terms of the Local Authority paying for
facilities (e.g. accommodation/ residential costs)
Characteristics of Children in Need
♦ The main need for social service intervention is cases of “abuse and neglect” which
account for (5) ______________________ of all Children Looked After and 28% of
other Children in Need
♦ About 12% of the Children in Need population are (6) _________________disabled,
and they received (7) ___________________ of the gross expenditure on Children in
Need
♦ At least 16% of Children in Need are from (8) __________________ which is about
one and a half times the figure for the under 18 population as a whole)
Costs and resources
Services for Children in Need cost Social Services on average about ₤41 million a
week ₤26 million per week on Children Looked After and ₤15 million on other
Children in Need.
About half of these costs are accounted for by regular welfare benefit payments (on
residential/ fostering/ adoption costs) for Children Looked After
The average Child Looked After costs Social Services (9) ₤ ________________and
other Children in Need cost ₤85 per week to maintain.
Activity
The average Child Looked After receives 4.3 hours per week of service from Social
Work staff, either in (10) ________________________
Other Children in Need receive on average about 2.9 hours per week of staff or centre
time
EXERCISE 9 Adverbs in official texts
Notice the way adverbs are used in official communication and select from these adverbs
to complete the sentences. In some sentences, there are several possibilities.
A. This need arises _________________ because of parental neglect although there are
some other less significant factors.
C. The parents both have drinking problems which means they are ________________
prepared to look after the children.
E. Removing the child from the home environment would impact _________________
on its obvious improvement in behaviour and social responsibility.
F. The social services “Children in Need” report deals ________________ with those
children who are in the care of local authorities. There must be many more whose
needs are ______________________ met by present social services arrangements.
1. Social services assess the action to be taken to help a child as the need raises.
_________________________________________________________________
2. If a parent is ill or has acute or chronic mental problems, the capacity of that parent is
said to be imperfect.
_______________________________________________________________________
3. A child’s anti-social behaviour has an impression on the family, school-life and social
surroundings.
________________________________________________________________________
4. The payments which the state (social services) might make to an individual or to a
family are called wellbeing payments.
________________________________________________________________________
5. Social services spend a lot of money to mention the needs of children at risk.
____________________________________________________________________
UNIT 7 WOMEN – FOR BETTER AND FOR WORSE
Activity 1
Before reading the text, discuss with a partner the different types of offences which
come under the category of sex crimes.
A B C D E F G
A) Ministers also want to strengthen the law on rape to tackle the appallingly low 9%
conviction rate, and define consent by setting the prosecution the lower test of proving that
the victim had not given their ‘voluntary and genuine agreement’.
B) It is expected that the new offence would apply to a man or woman over 18 who was
involved in a sexual act with a child under 16. This would ensure that all children under 16
get the same level of protection. The law would cover those who incited, induced or
compelled a child to carry out a sexual act, “whether on the accused, another person or the
child himself”.
C) Ministers want to call the new offence “adult sexual activity with a child”, rather than
“adult sexual abuse of a child” so it might include offences involving no physical contact,
such as a recent case where a man incited two young girls to undress.
The offence would cover an adult who forced a child to witness a sexual act, whether it was
live or recorded. It would ensure that much heavier penalties were available to courts for
child sex offences. It is also expected that the offence would not carry any time limits.
D) A new crime of “adult sexual activity with a child”, and a reform of the law on rape are to
be included in an overhaul of Britain’s laws on sex offences, which are to be introduced into
parliament this year.
The catch-all criminal offence – the first of this kind anywhere in the world – recognizes that
sexual activity between adults and children is unacceptable, and that some cases are so
serious that they warrant a life sentence.
E) It would still be for the prosecution to prove that the woman did not consent to sex if the
defense said that she did. The law will still list examples where such consent is not present,
such as where the person was asleep, or too affected by alcohol or drugs to give “voluntary
and genuine agreement”.
F) Ministers have begun to thrash out their detailed response to an internal Home Office
review of the law on sex offences, published in July 2000. The new crime of “adult sexual
activity with a child” will replace the seven different sex offences used to prosecute in child
sex cases such as indecent assault, intercourse with a girl under 13, gross indecency and
buggery
G) The changes in law on rape will not see the introduction of a lesser offence of “date rape”.
The legal concept of “consent”, however, is to be clarified and defined as “voluntary and
genuine agreement”.
The battered woman is pictured by most people as a small, fragile, haggard person who
might once have been pretty. She has several small children, no job skills, and is
economically dependent on her husband. It is frequently assumed that she is poor and from a
minority group. She is accustomed to living in violence, and her fearfulness and passivity are
emphasized above all. Although some battered women do fit the description, research proves
it to be a false stereotype.”
Activity 2 DEBATE
A.
Do you agree with this point of view?
Does the description above fit your perception of “battered women”?
Present your personal point of view on the issue.
B.
In pairs discuss the subject according to the following key issues on the topic of domestic
violence
Low self-esteem; violent background; traditionalism; economic factors; cultural factors;
family stress; changing pattern of family life
Exercise 1
Fill in the gaps using the words in the table:
advertisements, across, able, and, clutches, condemn, contract, director, difficult, end
entrepreneur, efforts, fate, involved, nation, of, Patriarch, personal, romantic, southern,
streets, they, threatens, Ukraine, with, wound.
One shrewd 1)..… formed a company called "Love You". This company is 2) ..… in enlisting
Ukrainian women and girls to marry Serbian men, who live in the mountainous regions of
southern Serbia. 3) ..… say that this program of marriage received the unofficial approval 4) ..…
the Yugoslavian government and the blessing of the Serbian 5) …... Paul, because it proposes to
renew the gene pool of the 6) ..…. Obviously, this firm has enough profits to place TV 7) ..… for
enlistment of women from the Orthodox world especially from 8) ..….
Beginning in the spring of 1997, the city of Cherkass 9) ..… the oblast (region) had the
opportunity to view several 10) ..… TV advertisements proposing marriage in the picturesque
mountain region of 11) ..… Serbia, with similar ads in the local newspapers.
Some women were brave enough to make radical changes in their 12) ….. lives. We cannot
13) ..… them in this. We are all aware that life in Ukraine at this time is 14) ..… and
especially so for women. But if our women knew the 15) ...… that awaited them they would
make all 16) …. to remain at home.
One resident of Cherkass was 17) ..…, through a miracle, to escape the 18) ..… of her new
Serbian husband. But now she has a problem with the 19) ..… of this marriage agency who
threatens her 20) ..… death if she doesn't compensate him monetarily for breaking the 21)
..…. This "businessman" 22) ..… to find her in Ukraine if she manages to get 23) ..… the
border of Yugoslavia. This woman might easily 24) ..… up without any documents or help
on the 25) ..… of Belgrade.
Activity 3
Read the text
Serbian police have begun to crack down on “white slave trade” in women tricked into
prostitution in the Balkans. In the biggest operation conducted so far by the organized crime
department, hundreds of officers raided more than 400 nightclubs, dance bars and cafes,
freeing dozens of young women. They arrested 150 people on charges ranging from
procuring prostitutes to possessing drugs and arms.
“This is good news”, said Enrico Ponziani, head of the international office for migration in
Belgrade, which is opening a safe shelter for liberated women and children. “We are talking
about thousands, not hundreds, of women and children who are trafficked through Serbia
every year. We need more operations of that nature”.
He said that Serbia was often the starting point for the trade in women and children as young
as 14. Most were from Romania and former Soviet republics of Moldova and Ukraine,
fleeing economic misery at home. They arrived in Serbia believing they were going to jobs as
nannies and waitresses in Western Europe.
“When they cross the border they are housed somewhere in Serbia and ordered to hand over
their passports, Mr. Ponziani said. “At that point they start to realize they have been tricked.
They are slaves because they’re being forced to do things they had no idea they would be
forced to do”.
He said the women were traded between Albania, Serbia and Bosnia many times. They were
moved illegally into Macedonia, Kosovo and Bosnia to serve new clients.
In Serbia one of the women freed said that she had been sold for $500. She escaped from
Kazanova dance club in Panchevo, near Belgrade, which is run by Rade Spelovic.
Serbian police describe Mr. Spelovic as one of the untouchable leaders of the slave trade.
They said that he had threatened to unleash fierce dogs on any of the women who tried to
escape.
Western officials say that for every Serb running the trade, there are many more people in
Romania, Ukraine and Moldova organizing their end of the business. The officials are
mounting an awareness campaign in the Balkans and in the former Soviet Union to alert
police and victims to the realities of “work abroad”.
Exercise 2
Match these words or phrases with the underlined expressions in the text.
a) to untie, to let loose b) to accommodate (often temporarily)
c) to tighten up, to restrict severely d) to vary between,
e) to fool, to cheat f) to start, to launch ( a programme/ campaign etc.)
Activity 4
Translate into English
După mai multe săptămâni de cercetări, poliţiştii Centrului Zonal de Combatere a Crimei
Organizate şi Antidrog Timişoara şi colegii lor din cadrul Direcţiei Generale Bucureşti, au
reuşit să dezlege misterul care blocase cercetările într-unul dintre ultimele dosare referitoare
la activitatea unei reţele de trafic de carne vie. La începutul lunii februarie, poliţiştii
timişoreni au descins într-un apartament de pe malul Begăi şi au găsit aici cinci tinere, între
care două minore, care urmau să fie trecute ilegal în Iugoslavia, pentru a ajunge în Italia şi
Spania, ca să se prostitueze. Atunci a fost reţinut şi unul dintre proxeneîi – Buciu Raoul, de
24 de ani, din Timişoara, care a fost arestat pe 30 de zile pentru proxenetism. Din cercetări s-
a stabilit ca adevăratul ‘creier’ al afacerii era alt barbat, despre care nu se ştia decât ca-l
cheamă Dan. S-a aflat doar că acesta are o concubină în Timişoara. În urma descinderii la
locuinţa acesteia s-a stabilit că nici femeia, care era gravidă în luna a opta cu cel căutat, nu-i
ştia adevărata identitate. A fost găsită o fotografie, care a constituit punctul de plecare. În
urma verificărilor, poliţiştii Direcţiei Generale de Combatere a Crimei Organizate şi Antidrog
l-au identificat pe cel din poză ca fiind Buciuleac Ioan, de 31 de ani, zis Dan, care avea
domiciliul in Bucureşti. Ofiţerii de la Crimă Organizată din Bucureşti au descins la locuinţa
acestuia, dar o persoană aflată în interior a refuzat să le deschidă uşa. Dupa obţinerea
autorizaţiei de percheziţie, poliţiştii au intrat în forţă, reţinându-l pe suspect. Acesta are la
activ mai multe furturi, înşelăciuni şi alte infracţiuni. Demn de remarcat este faptul că, de
multe dintre pedepse a scăpat, ascunzându-se până la prescrierea faptelor. Sâmbătă,
Buciuleac a fost prezentat Parchetului de pe lângă Tribunalul Timiş, cu propunere de
arestare preventivă pe 30 de zile, sub acuzaţia de proxenetism în formă agravată. În cazul în
care va fi găsit vinovat, el riscă o pedeapsă între 2 şi 7 ani de închisoare.
(Dragoş Boţa)
Activity 5
Read the text
WOMEN’S LIBERATION MOVEMENT
From suffragettes to policewomen
Born in Worthington in 1820, Elizabeth Greer was educated at the Female Seminary in
Worthington where she later taught. In 1844, Elizabeth married Harvey Coit and moved to a
house on 3rd street in Columbus where she eventually had eight children. An avid supporter
of women's rights, Elizabeth Greer Coit became the first president of the Woman's Suffrage
Association in Columbus. For many years, the Suffrage Association met in her home once a
month to plan the advancement of women. A friend of such luminaries as Susan B. Anthony,
Lucy Stone, Frances Willard, and Mary Livermore, Elizabeth opened her home to suffragists.
Her husband and children sympathized with her work. A delegate to a state convention for
women's suffrage that met in Columbus in 1884, she was also treasurer of the state
association, attended their meetings, and served as an effective speaker on the suffrage
lecture circuit in Columbus and neighboring towns when this cause was singularly
unpopular. As a reward for her hard work, Elizabeth received much public opprobrium,
spiteful personal remarks, and hateful letters. She bore it all with great patience.
Once her eight-year-old daughter Belle ran home from school sobbing, "Mother, are you
strong-minded and do you wear pants?" In response, Elizabeth calmly replied, "My dear, I
hope I am strong-minded. I should be very sorry to have had children if I were feeble-
minded."
INFO BOX
Suffragette
A suffragette was a woman in Britain, Australia and the United States in the early 20th
century who was a member of a group that demanded the right of women to vote and that
increased awareness of the matter with a series of public protests. In one incident, the
suffragette Emily Davidson threw herself under the King's horse at the Derby in 1913 in
order to draw attention to the campaign.
Suffragist
A suffragist is someone who supports suffrage, esp. a supporter of the right of women to
vote in the early 20th century.
Suffrage
Discuss the idea of emancipation, women’s rights and women’s liberation in the modern
world.
The text above contains a paradox:
As a reward for her hard work, Elizabeth received much public opprobrium, spiteful
personal remarks, and hateful letters.
Activity 6
DEBATE:
This text was written before the intervention in Afghanistan in October 2001
MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan (AP) - The deal was arranged even before the baby's birth.
The price for the infant: enough to feed the family for another month
In an extraordinary act of desperation, some Afghan parents say they've sold their children
for about the price of a restaurant meal in the West — an amount that even in this
impoverished country is not huge but can make the difference between life and death for the
poorest of the poor.
"Parting with my baby was hard. But watching my family die slowly of hunger is even
worse," said Agha Mir, 25, who claimed he turned over his 4-day-old son in December to a
relatively prosperous Afghan family for the equivalent of $60.
The money, he said, paid for about a month's worth of food for his wife and six remaining
children in the teeming Dashteh Arzana refugee camp outside the northern city of Mazar-e-
Sharif. He said a middleman from the city's bazaar made the arrangements while his wife
was pregnant.
"And now the money is gone," moaned Mir's mother, Oyna Khal. "We're back to living on
wild grass and carrots. Maybe we will have to sell another child."
It is impossible to independently verify all the claims of baby selling or estimate the number
of children sold. There is no record-keeping, and the transactions occur on the murky
margins of society.
But relief coordinators and others acknowledge the reports and note that setting a price for
family members in Afghanistan is not taboo. Traditionally, dowries of several thousands of
dollars — huge sums for Afghans — are paid for brides. Infants — especially boys for
families with only girls — also apparently have commanded a good price in the past.
"We get information about baby selling, but it's hard to say how widespread it is," said
Mahboob Shareef, head of northern Afghanistan operations for UNICEF. "We knows this
happens among the poorest of the poor."
Mohammed Hashim can only walk a few paces before the pain becomes too much. Severe
arthritis has left his joints swollen and misshapen. In mid-January, he set off by car from his
villages in the Dar-e-Suf region south of Mazar-e-Sharif for a refugee camp along the main
northern roadway. To pay for the journey, he said, he sold his 2-year-old son to a family in a
neighboring village with only daughters. He received about $30.
"I was alone. There was no other way," said Hashim, a 25-year-old widower whose wife died
two years ago. "I miss my boy so much. I could only sell the little one. They didn't want the
other."
His remaining son, 9-year-old Sejawdin, is almost completely deaf.
Faisal Mohammed, administrator of the central orphanage in Mazar-e-Sharif, said he came
across a man in the city's bazaar begging someone to buy his 6-year-old daughter.
"It struck me how bad our country has become when you can put your child for sale like a
piece of fruit," Mohammed said. "We cannot deny that people are selling their children. After
23 years of war, people are left with nothing and, worst of all, no hope. They see no other
options."
In past generations, poor Afghan families would sometimes send children to live temporarily
with better-off relatives. Now, it appears that system may be eroding because of the twin
hardships of warfare and drought, Mohammed said.
"We saw this happening during the Taliban time. Some people saw their children as a way to
make quick money," he said.
Eight months ago — while the Taliban was still in power — a pushcart porter and his wife
said they sold their 4-day-old son to neighbors because they couldn't afford the medicine to
treat the woman's postnatal bleeding and other medical complications. They received about
$30, said the couple, who have six other children.
"We used to go see the boy, but the family now has told us to stay away," said the mother,
Dilaram, who like many Afghans goes by one name. "The money was soon gone. I am still
sick and our child is gone forever."
QUESTIONS:
• How can war affect the lives of ordinary people?
• Is selling children a solution for the Afghan’s future life?
• Has selling their own children anything to do with the social condition of the Afghan
woman?
A young lady in Kosovo
Activity 8
THE PROBLEM OF WHITE SLAVERY AT THE END OF THE SECOND MILLENNIUM
- Listen to the tape. You will hear three prostitutes talking about their distressing lives.
- How do you see prostitution- as a job, a profession, a scandal for a civilised society?
- Do you agree with any form of legalisation of prostitution in Romania? Give reasons
for and against.
Activity 9
Below you have a fragment of a letter.Who do you think has written this letter? What
could you do in answer to the plea in the letter?
Choose two class mates and devise a plan of action meant to counter the situation
described in the letter.
"...Help the girls from Ukraine. Their situation is hopeless. They need
immediate help. They were taken in a deceiving manner to local bars to work
as dancers, where they are forced into prostitution. The girls do not receive
any money and the bar owner makes a tremendous profit on them. The
corrupt local police help to establish these places and to avoid planned police
raids.
The girls' documents are taken away. They threaten and harass them. They
have no way of escaping from this hell and almost all want to return home.
During the day they keep them prisoners in a room, and at night force them to
sleep with clients. In one such night, with one girl, the owner makes 200-300
German marks and for one hour- 100 marks. If the girl begins to protest, they
get harassed, beaten and not given anything to eat. They have no place to
look to for help. They are later resold to the Muslim part of Bosnia, from where
there is no return forever.
These people are without heart, horrible mafiosi, who work in close contact
with the police. Often the girls commit suicide. In their name I turn to you to
help them return home to Ukraine. My name I cannot give because I will be
killed by the mafia if they find out about this letter. In the name of God and
Truth help! Each woman has a right to life, has a right to manage herself and
her body. She is not a white slave who can be discounted or killed.
Activity 10
Using the words in the box, enlarge on the ideas emphasized by the seminar by writing
a few sentences about each point.
- Human capital
- Human resources management
- Police service
- Equal treatment of women and men in the police
Compare your ideas with your partner's.
Look at the objectives below.
What organisation do they belong to?
Can you think of standards and processes you could employ to achieve the objectives ?
A police graduate fresh from the Academy is on the beat. He sees a priest in the street.
Without any warning he begins beating him. After a while, having beaten him severely, he
says panting: “A Ninja, ha? So you think you’re a Ninja from the American movies, do you?
That’s what I think of you, Ninja!!!”
What did the policeman say after coming out of a sewage canal he had fallen into?
It’s a good thing the lid wasn’t on!’
GRAMMAR
Verb + full infinitive (with to)
Verb + -ing
agree, aim, ask, decline, demand, fail, hesitate, hope, hurry, manage, offer, plan, prepare,
refuse, want, wish.
EXAMPLES
admit, avoid, consider, delay, deny, detest, dread, envisage, feel like, finish, imagine, recall,
regret, resent, risk, suggest
EXAMPLES
4. The British police have sometimes considered carrying guns but many officers can't imagine having
them as a matter of routine.
5. The defence counsel regretted calling the accused's brother as a character witness.
Some verbs are followed by a short infinitive after an object; there are also a few verbs, with idiomatic
meaning, that require a short infinitive after them:
feel, hear, overhear, see, watch, have, let, make, hear, tell, make believe, let go
6. The surveillance officers overheard the suspects admit to have been in the building at the time.
7. The officers could only watch the kidnapper leave with his hostages.
Exercise 3
REPHRASE using the correct form of the verb in capital letters and one of the
patterns.
1. Maybe this is the hotel we are looking for. (APPEAR)
2. They said they would like me to come with them on the trip. (INVITE)
3. I’m sorry I haven’t seen the movie. (REGRET)
4. The police believed he was the criminal because of the evidence. (LEAD)
5. Does using the hotel sauna cost a lot? (PAY)
6. Coming first in the race meant we could buy a new car. (ENABLE)
7. It is compulsory for all students to be present at lectures. (REQUIRE)
8. She might fail her driving test again. (RISK)
9. Susy succeeded in finishing the assignment in time. (MANAGE)
10. Calling Bob is pointless, because his phone is out of order (BE NO USE)
Exercise 4
Choose the most appropriate answer(s)
1. We needed …
a) the car to be mended b) the car mending c) the car to be mending
d) the car mended
2. The teacher reminded ……… the papers.
a) us where to leave b) us where we had to leave c) where we had to leave
d) where to leave
3. I’d advise …… more.
a) to study b) you to study c) you studying d) your studying
4. I remember …… the contest.
a) he winning b) he to win c) him winning d) him to win
6. The burglar confessed…….
a) commit the crime b) to commit the crime c) to have committed the crime
d) committing e) having committed
7. We persuaded……… a new car.
a) him to buy b) him buy c) him buying d) his buying e) to him to buy
8. He ……… that he had caught the huge fish himself.
a) made us to believe b) makes us believe c) made us believe d) made us believing
9. We waited for the taxi …… before saying goodbye.
a) coming b) to come c) come d) came
10. They noticed …… away from school.
a) him to run b) him run c) him running d) him ran
UNIT 8 POLICING THE MULTICULTURAL SOCIETY
At the Majestyk nightclub in Leeds city centre, neon lights cut through dry ice to reveal
huge quantities of bare flesh. In two separate cages, suspended from the ceiling, women
in white bikinis and huge snow boots writhe to the pulsating music then step aside for
young men with torsos shimmering with baby oil to replace them. Down below, with the
help of sweet, fizzy alcohol, the dating game is slowly evolving into the mating game.
Young people with lust in their eyes and a drink in their hand are coming down with a
ritual attack of Friday night fever. (1)
Outside, the bouncers stand with their backs to the main entrance looking over the city
square. It is the ideal vantage point from which to retrace the flight of Sarfraz Najeib as
he ran from his attackers. But these were no ordinary assailants. Among the accused
were footballers Jonathan Woodgate, who has been found guilty of affray, and Lee
Bowyer, who has been cleared of all charges. Though race was ruled out as a motive (2)
in the retrial of Woodgate, Bowyer and two other men, the case came as a blow (3) to
the club which has spent more than a decade struggling to shake off a reputation as one
of the most racist in Britain.
The Asian student had been beaten to within an inch of his life (4) and the two were
originally charged with racially aggravated assault. The players' fame would ensure
national headlines; the race of their victim initially ensured national debate. The
combination of the two would send both the city and the criminal justice system into
denial.(5) The first trial collapsed in April, when the media also found itself in the dock.
(6) While the jury was still deliberating, the Sunday Mirror published an interview with
Najeib's father insisting that the attack was racist. The judge ruled it the "most serious
form of contempt". (7)
When the trial restarted last month, the jury sat in a quite different world. Nearby
Bradford had been scarred by some of the worst racial unrest since Brixton 20 years
earlier. The events of September 11 added fuel to the fire and once again racial tensions
were running high.
So while media attention this time has not been anywhere near as intense, the
ramifications are still considerable. For in a one-team city which has spent much money
and energy reshaping its image, the repercussions will begin now the trial has ended. In
the past, when club supporters have been involved in violence, the city council has been
quick to distance itself. (8) This time it will not be possible.
Leeds United, despite having, in the 1960s, one of the first black players to play in the
Football League, has always considered itself to be a whites-only club. But the reality of
life in the city ran counter to that. More non-white immigrants settled, particularly in the
Chapeltown area, and the wave of organised racism that spread through the country in
the 1960s and 70s settled on the terraces of Elland Road, where the National Front
recruited openly.
Nick Varley, a Leeds supporter and author of the authoritative Park Life, a Search for
the Heart of Football, recalls hearing at his first match a call-and-response chant
involving "hundreds, possibly thousands of fans", aimed at the one black player on the
pitch.
"Trigger, trigger, trigger," called one side of the stand.
"Shoot that f****** nigger," came the reply.
"Which f****** nigger?"
"That f****** nigger," was the answer, as the crowd pointed at the target of their
venom.
"All around me were fans who joined in," writes Varley. "Not everyone, by any means,
but a lot." By the late 70s, a white Leeds fan, Paul Thomas, had had enough of standing
among what he felt was the silent majority. Along with friends and activists from the
local trades council, he set up Leeds United Against Racism, in order to challenge the
presence of fascists at the ground. "I thought either you tolerated the racism or you did
something about it," he says. When they told police they intended to leaflet (9) the
ground with an anti-racist message, the initial reaction was hostile. The police made it
known through the press that they feared political violence would break out. The club
considered suing the campaigners for unauthorised use of the club badge on the leaflets.
But, says Thomas, the response from fans was encouraging. "Quite a few came up and
congratulated us, saying stuff like: 'It's about time somebody did something about that
lot.”
Under pressure from the council, which then owned the ground, club officials were
persuaded to meet the demonstrators. Despite the choruses of hate ringing from its
stands, the managing director refused to believe there was a problem and demanded
proof. The anti-racists produced Terror on the Terraces, recording the abuse. "It's not as
though we did any great undercover work," says Thomas. "We were just reporting what
had already been reported."
Gradually, thanks to persistent activism, a change of management at the club and more
pressure from the council, the atmosphere started to improve. There were statements
condemning racist chanting from senior management and regular adverts in the
programme against racism. The club developed its links with local black and Asian
communities (it is presently working with Kosovan refugees). It also distributes anti-
racist certificates to schools.
Racism has not been eliminated there, any more than it has anywhere else in the
country, but it is no longer the dominant culture. Recently Thomas sat near a racist
heckler and was backed by other fans when he asked him to stop. When the man
threatened Thomas, he called the club's anti-racist hotline to complain. The club called
him back quickly, asked detailed questions about the incident, and then called again to
say the man's
season ticket had been withdrawn.
Now, once again, Leeds United finds itself associated with allegations of racism,
although this time very much against the run of play. Many Leeds fans - including
committed anti-racists such as Thomas - believe racism was not a factor: "I think it tells
you more about young men and alcohol than it does about race," he says.
Activity 1
Explain the meaning of the underlined words
Discuss with a partner the issue of racial abuse, football ‘culture’ and the roles of the
police and the authorities.
The above poster is part of the Metropolitan Police (London) campaign to stop so-
called “hate crime”. There are other posters in the series which can be seen at their
web-site
www.met.police.uk
Read this text about the approach to multi-ethnic society policing in the
Netherlands.
“Some years ago, it might still have been possible to wonder whether the multiethnic
society was a reality. Nowadays, we would do better not to fool ourselves with such
basic questions any longer, and to face the facts instead. Allow me to use a metaphor to
illustrate our vision. In major European cities, there are probably still a number of small
local shops, such as the greengrocer on the corner of the street in an old quarter of the
city. There are shops like that in Rotterdam, too. The greengrocer has always sold
traditional Dutch vegetables such as sprouts and cauliflower, which are displayed, fresh
from the auction, in wooden boxes in front of the shop in the morning. But the
population in these districts has changed and many residents of exotic origins prefer
eggplants, olives and rice to traditional goods like cauliflowers and potatoes.
The greengrocer now has two options:
* he may either adjust the range of products he sells to the altered population of
the neighborhood and stay in business;
* or he can keep on selling what he has always sold, and as a result he will have
to close down his shop after a while.
The police are, in fact, in the exact same situation as this greengrocer. But there is one
major difference: the police can never close down their shop: they will always be in
business”.
Discussion
What do you regard as your police service mission in “Policing a multicultural society”?
With a partner, speak about the necessary changes, aims and objectives with reference to
this dimension of policing.
Exercise 1 Complete the text using the words in the box below:
Law must be ......(1) if civilized man is to survive. Society cannot depend completely on
simple persuasion to induce law observance, and therefore it must require enforcement
of law. The term .......(2) implies, as does the very nature of man, the potential use of
........(3) and this potential, then, is necessarily a part of the police role. But the manner
in which this potential is viewed by the public ......(4) often determines whether the
police .....(5) is good or bad. Because good police image tends, to affect favorably an
individual’s willingness ........(6) the law voluntarily, police retain a rightful interest in a
good image. The law enforcement officer .....(7) the law so visibly and directly that
neither the policeman nor the public find it easy to differentiate between the law and its
enforcement. Relatively few citizens recall ever having seen a judge, fewer still, a
prosecutor, coroner, sheriff ........(8) officer or prison .......(9). The patrolman is
thoroughly familiar to all this ......(10) picks him ....(11) from the crowd so distinctly that
he becomes a living symbol of the law. Whether the police like it or not, they are forever
marked men.
Read the text about a strategy developed by the Dutch police in order to meet the
needs of a multicultural society.
A few years ago we came to the conclusion that was necessary to develop a police
policy in our service that would address the issues of multi ethnicity and the
consequences for our organization. We especially aimed at Turkish and Moroccan
youngsters for several reasons. One of the reasons was that we already had police
officers with another ethnic background coming from our former colonies. We have
chosen an integrated approach.
BACON
BEARD
BEER
ADULTERY
Question: What does not belong in this series?
In this example, it is important to realise that you have to approach it from an Islamic
reference in order to be able to answer the question.
We also learned that it is very important to involve colleagues from the “grass-roots”
level in recruitment and selection. Colleagues were trained to do selection interviews.
This way they have the idea that they are able to recruit their own future colleagues, and,
by doing this, feel committed to the newcomers from a very early stage. More changes
were needed to offer a friendly environment to these newcomers. A very simple
example is the menu in the police restaurant. This also became more and more
multicultural over the past few years.
Discussion
Do you think that it is necessary to recruit members of minority groups into all aspects
of the justice system? Does this happen in Romania and in our police organization?
Exercise 2 Select the correct answer ( True or False)
1. The government recently stated that measures .........(take) at both the administrative
and legislative levels to guarantee the freedom of religion.
2. The authorities announced that the process of restitution of properties confiscated
under the former regime......(accelerate).
3. The new legislation.......(pass) in June 1997.
4. Allegations .......(transmit) to the government in a number of cases related to issues of
wrongful arrest, harrassment and ill treatment.
5. It.....(decide) by the authorities that, there is a need to create a multicultural
perspective in the juvenile system.
6. The portrait of the wanted man ..........(issue) by the police.
7. The new strategy ........(discuss) nowadays by the Ministry of Interior.
8. The anti-discrimination legislation.......(implement) by next year.
9. The fact that many Western European countries become multi-ethnic communities
........(cause) by postwar migration.
1. It is not only nice to know but there also is a need to know what is going on in society
and anticipate those changes. No one is born with the necessary skills to provide full
police services.
2. To establish their importance as a legitimate force in society, the police have a
professional interest in reflecting the same ethnic diversity in their organisation.
3. Racial incidents reported to the police must be treated carefully. Victims must be
heard and helped. Procedures should be transparent, especially for victims.
4. Learning from and respecting each other. It is obvious that you will only learn to
overcome cultural differences if you meet and interact with other cultures.
Exercise 7
Decide on appropriate collocations. (A + B) and (B +A)
A B
behaviour, undercover, to take, statutory, legislation, authority, minority, law,
to enforce, racial, liaison, community, racist, action, operation, officer, of
code, ethnic, protection practice, sexist, ombudsman, incident
Reading text 3
Briefing Paper for discussion on Muslim Delegation’s meeting with Home Office
Minister, Ms. Angela Eagle.
A delegation of Muslim community leaders met the Home Office Minister Ms. Angela
Eagle this afternoon. The meeting was planned in order to raise with her their serious
concerns over the dangerous fault lines that have shown up in recent weeks in
community relations in Britain as manifested by the outbreak of disturbances in
Northern England.
The most blatant example of rash and mindless police behaviour, if not, let us assume,
an act of deliberate racism, was the senseless and brutal beating up of none other than
the Labour Party National Executive Member Shahid Malik – and in front of the rolling
TV cameras. Everyone watched Shahid Malik telling the police to hold back, “It’s OK”,
he was saying to them after having restrained a group of angry youths behind him. He
was instead pounced upon by the police and hit ferociously, thrown on the ground and
handcuffed. This one incident did raise a few important questions the delegation told the
minister.
Didn’t the police in Burnley know who Shahid Malik was, instead of mistaking him for
one of the “thugs”? If they did not know Shahid Malik nor even his father, the deputy
mayor of the town, then it says a great deal about the police relationship with the local
community. However, even if they happened not to know who the gentleman was,
couldn’t they see that here was a citizen trying to prevent a clash between the police and
the youths?
The case is highly significant, said the delegation, in that it served as a powerful and
poignant reminder to the eyes and minds of the community on what it meant to be a
Pakistani or Bangladeshi in Britain.
Exercise 8
Find a word in the text that has the same or similar meaning to the following:
worriers
outburst
unashamed
sudden attack (v)
conflict
reproduce
ask for
DISCUSSION
1. Do you think the police have failed in their relations with the community? Why?
2. In what way do you think this article and the way the events are emphasized influence
public opinion?
3. Discuss the role of the media in conflicts like this.
3) Another seven people of unknown nationality were arrested after police allowed a
“mule” on the same flight to _______________________________________________
and ________________________________________ where he was delivering the
drugs.
A British Customs and Excise spokeswoman said the arrests underlined the fact that the
British authorities would not tolerate drug smuggling and those who swallowed drugs
were likely to get caught.
12. Senior Superintendent Carl Williams of the Jamaican Police Force Narcotics
Division stated that, since the beginning of 2001, _______________________________
and at least __________________________________ .
1. Which force (apart from Northamptonshire) has been the most succesful in
recruitment of ethnic minority officers?
2. If you were Chief Recruitment Officer in Merseyside how would you feel about
achieving the target?
Very worried? Worried? Confident? Very confident?
3. And for Staffordshire?
4. Lancashire?
5. How successful has West Yorkshire police force been in recruiting ethnic minority
officers?
Very successful? Quite…? Not very…? Not at all …?
6. What do you think of the Met’s situation?
With your partner, practice talking about the statistics in the table in a fluent, cohesive
way.
For example: The West Midlands police force has around 300 ethnic minority officers
from over 7000 in the force. This represents just over 4% of all officers and compares
with about 16% of ethnic minorities in the West Midlands region. To achieve the 2005
target, the West Midlands police will need to recruit 862 new officers- almost three times
the present number.
Activity 8
Read the text and answer the questions below.
The number of black people who have been stopped and searched by police has
increased, according to official figures released by the Home Secretary, David Blunkett.
The latest figures show that the police use of their stop-and-search powers fell by a
further 17% in the year to April 2001 but the number of black people stopped went up
by 4%.
Black people are still seven times more likely to be stopped by police.
The new figures dispel the claim that the police have retreated from using powers to
stop and search black people because of fear of being branded as racist. In an attempt to
restore both the confidence of both the police and the ethnic minority communities in
the use of stop-and-search, Mr Blunkett says in an interview published in the black
newspaper
The Voice, that he will publish new guidelines. All those stopped by the police in future
will be given a written ticket recording the event. It is expected that the extra
bureaucratic burden on the police will be minimised by the uuse of hand-held computers
by officers at the scene.
INTRODUCTION
Discussion
Throughout the 1990’s, Central and Eastern Europe witnessed a massive increase in migration
from the Commonwealth of Independent states, in comparison with the previous levels under
communist rule. The reasons that prompt people to move across international borders, are deeply
embedded in the basic features characterizing many former socialist and third world countries
(e.g. economic hardship, poor living conditions, ethnic tensions, armed conflicts, political
instability etc). At present, another main point of entry into Europe from Asia and the Pacific is
from the tip of North Africa to the southern regions of France and Spain.
The smuggling of “illegals” from South-East Asia is one of the biggest problems facing the
European Union at the moment. A variety of immigrants enter Europe from all areas of the globe
because of the array of possibilities that are available to the average “citizen”. It is believed that
the Baltic States, Finland and Sweden are the main points of entry into Europe from the North.
Two main migration routes lead through Poland. The Eastern route, controlled by Russian
organized crime, is used to transport Asians, mainly Armenians, Indians, Afghans and Africans,
mostly Somalis, Algerians and Nigerians. The southern route is most used by Balkan residents,
with groups of Romanians, Albanians, Kosovars and Turks all heavily involved.
Activity 1
Having read the text, discuss how trafficking is a gross violation of human rights.
Make a list of the violations that are involved. Here is a surprising and shocking piece of
information
West Sussex Social Services Department is among the best in the country (UK) in relation
to treatment of separated children. Yet a total of 71 child asylum seekers –most of them
girls from poor Nigerian families- disappeared from its care between October 1995 and
December 2000. So far, only two of the missing children have been found and nobody
knows the fate of the others. Police conclude that most have been taken by traffickers for
prostitution, forced domestic labour or crime.
Consider …
TRAFFICKING IS
- increasing rapidly all over the world
- a cross- border issue with regional and global dimensions
- closely linked to, but distinct from, illegal labour migration
- a web of hidden, profitable, and expanding trade networks and movements of people,
between countries of origin, transit and destination countries
Exercise 1
The following definition of trafficking of human beings is widely used.
Complete the definition by filling in the blanks with appropriate words:
The illicit and (1)…………….movements of persons across national borders, largely from
developing countries and some countries with economies in (2)…………, with the end goal of
(3)………human beings into sexually or economically oppressive and (4)…………….situations
for profit of recruiters, traffickers and crime syndicates, as well as other (5)……..activities
related to (6)…………., such as forced domestic labour, false marriages, clandestine
employment and false adoption.
Exercise 2
Women and children… trafficked for what reasons?
Tick the illicit purposes in the tables. Discuss your answers with a colleague.
All acts and attempted acts involved in the (1)………….., transportation within or across
borders, purchase, sale, transfer, receipt or harbouring of a person involving the (2) of
deception, coercion (including the use or threat of force of the abuse of authority) or debt
bondage for the (3)………….of placing or holding such person, whether for pay or not, in
involuntary servitude (domestic, sexual or reproductive) in forced or bonded labour, or in
(4)……….-like conditions, in a community other than the one in which such person
(5)……… at the time of the original deception, coercion, or debt bondage.
Despite the diversity and complexity of the (6)………… of trafficking in human beings, it is
in all cases exploitative and extremely dangerous. Only by ascertaining the true character of
trafficking can we hope to adapt appropriate (7)…………. against it. Interestingly, routes and
patterns of trafficking are not static phenomena. They are dynamic, changing networks that
are affected as much by culture as by technology and history. Moreover, in addition to
following to some extent the historical trafficking (8)……………. within the family, many
trafficking routes tend to resemble legal migration flows. As autonomous labour migrants
must live in thriving economic (9)…………. in order to find lucrative work, so must
traffickers exploit locations with a high population density, a demand for informal labour, and
a base of fluid capital. Further, some types of trafficking, particularly trafficking for purposes
of illegal adoption or sex tourism, are facilitated by advances in telecommunications
technology, like the Internet. Not only is the sale of children itself made more accessible and
inexpensive through telecommunications advances, but the expansion of existing criminal
networks is (10)……………. by rapid and enhanced contact-gathering and information
exchange capacities.
Exercise 5 Some trafficking techniques
Match the first part with the second to make appropriate sentences.
A B C D E F G H
Now look back at the underlined vocabulary items. Add them to your “core” vocabulary
lists.
A trafficking in human beings incident a few years ago ended in the death of over 50
Chinese “illegals” who were being transported in a refrigerated truck from Holland. The
Dutch driver was later convicted of manslaughter.
Activity 2
IMPLEMENTATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS
The Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (the Helsinki Commission) was
established by U.S. Congress in 1976 to monitor and report on the implementation of the
decisions of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (C.S.C.E).
Read the text, discuss with a partner and argue from different points of view about the issues
involved.
Activity 4
SEX, DRUGS AND ILLEGAL MIGRANTS: SARAJEVO’S EXPORT TRADE TO
BRITAIN
Read the text
Adapted from an article by Ian Burrell in Sarajevo, from” The Independent (UK), 21 January 2002 “
There are wolves, bears and unexploded mines in the snow-covered elm and pine forests that
divide Bosnia-Herzegovina from the outside world. Yet the borders of the young state that has
become a springboard for illegal immigration to Britain are so porous that thousands of people
are smuggled through its 432 mostly unmanned crossing points every month.
The situation is so serious that Tony Blair has persuaded the Bosnian government to allow a
team of British immigration officials to try to plug the gaps being exploited by international
organized crime.
Last week, in a mountain gorge that separates Bosnia from Montenegro, Steve Parke, a British
immigration officer, and Ian Johnston, a Merseyside police officer, were checking lorries, cars
and buses for signs of people headed illegally for the European Union and Britain. Mr. Johnston,
who works for the United Nations as deputy chief of the Bosnian border service, said: "The
border is crossable anywhere. All 1,600 kms [1,000 miles] are passable, depending on how
desperate you are to cross into the next country."
Mafia gangs in Istanbul and Kosovo are exploiting the post-war destabilization in the former
Yugoslavia, with its weak laws, liberal visa regimes and widespread corruption, to ferry Turkish,
Iranian, Iraqi, Albanian and Afghan migrants into Europe for £5,000 a head.
A report from the International Organization for Migration says 120,000 women and children are
trafficked into the European Union each year for the “sex trade”. In Bosnia, 34,000 foreign
visitors have disappeared after flying into Sarajevo airport during the past two years. Most have
remained for just a few hours before being taken to the border by people smugglers.
In his third-floor office in the blue and white United Nations building overlooking Sarajevo
airport, Graham Leese, the project head of the British-led immigration team, is under no illusions
about the scale of the problem. "For the EU as a whole - and the UK in particular - the Balkan
route has long been identified as the most productive route in terms of illegal migration flows.
It's quite easy to bribe border guards to turn a blind eye when you are smuggling across a lorry
load of illegal immigrants."
Bosnian organized crime is turning over an estimated £170m a year and, according to one
member of the British team, government corruption is a major problem. "There are big fish here.
They have massive influence and a lot of them are holding senior positions," he said. The view is
shared by Ian Cliff, the British ambassador in Sarajevo, who said there was "massive" corruption
among government officials administering the districts and cantons established in Bosnia after
the Dayton Accord in 1995.
Exercise 6
Decide if the sentences are TRUE or FALSE
1. Tony Blair has persuaded the Bosnian government to allow a team of British immigration
officials to help.
2. Mr. Johnstone works for the United Nations as deputy chief on the Bosnian border.
3. Mafia gangs in Ukraine and Kosovo are exploiting the post-war destabilization in the former
Yugoslavia.
4. For the E.U., the Balkan route isn’t the most problematic route in terms of illegal migration
flows.
5. Bosnian organized crime is turning over an estimated £ 170 million a year.
6. The British ambassador in Sarajevo is John Clifford.
7. The present districts and cantons in Bosnia were established after the Dayton Accord .
8. A report from the International Organization for Migration says 1,200 women and children
are trafficked into European Union each year for sexual exploitation.
9. It is not easy to bribe border guards to turn a blind eye when smuggling a lorry load of illegal
immigrants.
10. In Bosnia, 34,000 foreign visitors have disappeared after flying into Sarajevo airport
during the past two years.
Activity 5 Writing
“When I realized that I had been sold from one place to another like goods I felt ashamed and
disappointed. I’m a human being. I have the right to live like other people”.
A Cambodian woman
What is your point of view? Write a short composition of about 200 words on this subject.
Exercise 7 Grammar
Put the words into the correct sequence to complete the sentences
How will the passage of people and goods be between the two countries?
Exercise 8
Form nouns from the verbs given and make sentences with them.
To achieve
To improve
To sign
To agree
To collaborate
To meet
In December 2002, 14-year-old Rachel Lloyd from North Wales returned to British soil after
having earlier run away to Turkey with her ‘fiancé’, 24-year-old Mehmet Ocack.
Her family claims that she ‘married” the barman, whom she had met on a Summer holiday.
The teenager’s return prompted chaotic scenes at Manchester Airport as the media struggled to
speak to the girl who left Britain on a forged passport. In November, police had conducted a
manhunt before ascertaining she had flown to Turkey. Interpol and Turkish police were brought
in after Rachel phoned her family to say she had married her lover. She was traced to her
fiancé’s home town and taken into the care of Turkish social services. Mr Ocack was detained
and then released without charge.
Read through the report from a European Assembly debate. Make notes on the given
topics and match the underlined words with words or phrases with similar meanings from
the box.
Europe's governments want to crack down on human trafficking and stiffen asylum laws. But
their economies can't afford to turn back the tide Immigration is the subject Europe's politicians
would rather not talk about. Vowing to act tough on illegal immigrants and false asylum seekers
plays well in the heartland; but crackdowns merely send refugees underground, forcing them to
take ever-deadlier risks to get in. Easing entry requirements makes good economic sense, since
Europe needs 75 million new workers over the next 50 years to replenish its aging population;
but try telling that to downsized factory workers in Stuttgart or Glasgow. And diversity doesn't
sell in the E.U.: just 5 million of its 350 million citizens live outside their native country. But
they're still coming. Flung out of their native lands by war or persecution or poverty—or simply
the promise of a better life—immigrants are crossing Europe's borders in unprecedented
numbers. Last year 390,000 people applied for asylum in the E.U. Britain alone received 76,000
asylum applications, up from 4,000 in 1988. An estimated 500,000 foreigners entered the E.U.
illegally last year, five times the number in 1994. And as the demand to enter Europe has
widened, so have the opportunities for traffickers who would profit from these masses on the
move.
A common E.U. asylum policy isn't expected before 2004. Until then European countries will set
their own standards, which isn't great news for immigrants. A new Spanish law that aims to
crack down on smuggling also provides for the expulsion of immigrants residing in the country
without legal permission. In the absence of a common E.U. immigration policy, governments are
racing to the bottom in the level of benefits they offer immigrants hoping to stay. While refugee-
rights groups have criticized Britain's Labour government for issuing a meagre $50 weekly to
asylum seekers, two-thirds of it in vouchers, other countries' policies are even worse. Germany,
for instance, has slashed monthly pocket money to $40 and requires would-be refugees to stay in
detention centers for their first three months. At a time of upheaval throughout the developing
world, Europe's parsimony has done nothing for its reputation.
If international opprobrium doesn't prod Europe to throw open its doors, there are signs that
economic self-interest will. Last November the European Commission declared that "there is a
growing recognition that the 'zero' immigration policies of the last 30 years are no longer
appropriate." Germany announced plans last March to admit 20,000 foreign computer experts
over the next three years, and Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder is pushing to expand this green-card
initiative to workers in other sectors. Ireland has loosened immigration requirements for non-
E.U. workers in technology, nursing and construction. Even Italy's government has introduced
measures to admit 63,000 industrial laborers a year. Says British European Parliament Member
Graham Watson: "Many states are seeing that in order to close the back door, we need to open
the front door a bit more." Europe may still resist the idea that it is a Continent of immigrants.
But in order to thrive, it has no choice but to become one.”
TOPIC COMMENT/INFORMATION
Economic realities
Activity 9 Listening
This activity is adapted from material on the web-site for OSCE
www.osce.org
The options for trafficked women are limited. If they get out of the environment in which they
are (1)___________________ - either because the premises have been
(2) ____________ by the police or because they have escaped- they are in unknown and often
(3) _________________ territory. If they have escaped, there is often the question of where to
go; whether they have the courage to go to the police and ask for help, or whether, (4)
__________________, they have heard about the IOM (5) _________________________ and
that there is an OSCE-sponsored safe house. The OSCE Mission in Kosovo has been supporting
this safe house (6) ___________________ an international NGO, for some of the women who
do succeed in (7) ________________________ of the trafficking ring. But is only for those who
have chosen to be repatriated. It provides temporary (8) ________________ for 15 people. At
present, more than 20 are there, with some women (9) ________________________________.
The only alternative place to house them is the (10) _________________________ in Lipljane
near Pristina and this is a very limited option.
If the place they have been working has been raided, the women are still
(11) ________________, possibly (12) _________________ charges of prostitution and having
entered Kosovo illegally. Their papers have been taken by those who trafficked them and in
cases involving trafficking the women have to have the courage to face their (13) ____________
______________ in the courtroom and accuse them of kidnapping, or trafficking and of human
exploitation.
One of the priorities of the OSCE mission in Kosovo is to develop a (14) __________________
____________________________ for trafficked women. Under the present system, there is
almost no protection for women who do go to court or for those who return home. The main
problem is the huge role played by organised crime in trafficking of women. Women who testify
in open court are (15) ______________________ those criminals. If they return home, they
could face the very same men who organised their move in the first place. But such programmes
are expensive and complicated and, at the moment, those who qualify are usually under
protection for political reasons, not in cases where people have been trafficked.
Activity 10
Read the text and discuss the implications.
Based on a report from December 2002
The Sangatte Red Cross Centre in France closed on December 30 but a few weeks earlier, the
British government had granted 1200 Iraqi and Afghan migrants four-year work permits. The
deal was worked out as a compromise between the French and British governments and meant
that Sangatte would close three months earlier than originally planned.
The French authorities agreed to take responsibility for the remaining 4800 migrants in the camp
who had registered before it closed its doors to new arrivals in November 2002. The French will
also deploy an extra 750 border police to seal the Channel ports from illegal migrants. Britain's
immigration control will, in effect, be moved to Calais in France when British Home Office
immigration officers will begin to operate a full border control, including vehicle searches while
still in France.
The British Home Secretary, David Blunkett, defended the decision in the House of Commons
and demanded that the opposition Conservative party should join him in condemning those anti-
immigration pressure groups which were "bordering on fascism".
The British Refugee Council welcomed the decision but said that the proposal to extend
immigration controls outside its own borders was a worrying precedent. This could jeopardise
the rights of refugees to obtain sanctuary in Britain.
UNIT 10 DEALING WITH VEHICLE CRIME
INTRODUCTION
1. What is the link between cross border crime and organized crime?
2. What is cross border crime?
3. What aspects of car theft are you aware of?
4. Do you think that people must be imprisoned for smuggling stolen cars? Is this
such a serious criminal offence? Isn’t it enough to pay a fine, or to do some social
work?
5. In the Border Police, is there a need for specialists in stolen cars or is the
assistance provided by the police forces enough?
Activity 1
In pairs, read one text and relate the facts in your own words to your partner.
Comment from the professional point of view and consider the social implications
of these circumstances.
STUDENT A
In Estonia, smuggling stolen cars is almost risk free. Very few people in Estonia have
been convicted for smuggling stolen cars. The laws are incomplete in the courts have yet
to rule on on matters of legal interpretation. In contrast to the Interpol section of other
countries, Estonian officers work a lot in the streets. Thousands of stolen cars come to
Estonia every year. They arrive from all over Western Europe on ferries and overland
from the south. Most cars pass on to Russia. Estonia’s involvement is usually limited as
couriers deliver cars to buyers in the St.-Petersburg area. Last year the Estonian police
managed to return about 100 vehicles of which approximatively 20 had belonged to
Swedish and 30 to German owners.
STUDENT B
It’s an open secret that Montenegro is the best hot car market in Europe: new models,
priced to go. Most of the inventory however, appears on Interpol’s list of stolen vehicles.
The International Police Agency has no authority here, for Yugoslavia- a pariah state-
has no relationship with Interpol. A long time member of a car theft gang explained how
the cars arrived in Montenegro: “The best method is to find someone in, say, Germany,
who needs extra money and who is willing to have his car stolen. We drive the car over,
and the owner declares it stolen once it’s already here. The owner collects the insurance
policy plus a bonus from us, depending on what kind of car it is. Few cars stay in
Montenegro or Serbia, and most often continue on to the Middle East.”
SMUGGLING. The offence of importing or exporting specified goods that are subject to customs or excise
duties without having paid the requisite duties. Smuggled goods are liable to confiscation and the smuggler
is liable to pay treble their value or a sum laid down by the law (whichever is the greater); offenders may
alternatively, or additionally, receive a term of imprisonment.
Activity 2 ORGANIZED CRIME
The following definition of organised crime can be given, based on the practice of
fighting against such crime:
Exercise 1
Make sentences using some of the underlined words.
1. Almost all criminal activity has as primary motive the idea of _______________.
2. It is remarkable how varied and ________________ the criminal imagination can
be.
3. There is evidence to indicate that more criminals are prepared to use _____________
nowadays, particularly as guns are relatively easy to obtain.
4. Getting officials on your side, or to turn ‘a blind eye’ is indicative of the pattern of
______________ vital to any “successful” organised crime activity.
5. The secret criminal organisation or _______________ is not a new phenomenon.
Even
medieval society had secret societies, some committing criminal ________________ .
Exercise 2
Match the two parts to form sentences
Exercise 4
IN MONTENEGRO, STOLEN CARS ARE WORTH THEIR WEIGHT IN
MEAT!
Put in one correct word from the box. There are 18 words in total.
At a time when Montenegro’s political situation is (1) …….., Western countries are
inclined to look the other way at Montenegro’s (2) ……. little secret.
Montenegro is a key part of the West’s effort to (3) ……. Yugoslav President Slobodan
Molosevic, indicted for war crimes last year by the Hague Tribunal. Montenegro’s
President Milo Djukanovic has (4) …….himself with the West and has consequently
received financial and (5) ……… blessings from the European Union.
Though Montenegro is (6) ……….. as a place teeming with stolen goods, Western
countries are (7) ……… to protect the republic’s image. While the Milosevic regime
often categorized the Djukanovic administration as a (8) ……. of criminals and
smugglers, the West points to the Djukanovic government as an example of ethnic
tolerance that is a model for the Balkans.
Meanwhile, Montenegrins are reaping the fruits of a shady trade.The deals don’t stop at
cars. Podgorica’s (9) …. street, Sloboda Ulica (Freedom Street), is filled with people
dressed in Italy’s latest fashions, their (10) ….. cars parked in front of busy cafes, where
mobile phones lie next to cups of expresso and ashtrays.
A visitor would never guess that Montenegro’s average monthly (11) ….. is less than $
100 per month. Montenegrins have a reputation in the Balkans for valuing a good (12)
….. “Visitors often say that it seems nobody does anything in Podgorica, That the cafes
are filled with well-dressed people sipping coffee all day, ” says a cosmetics “importer”
named Milos.
Yet there is hardly any industry to provide jobs for Montenegro’s 600,000 citizens, aside
from a smattering of fishing, textile and tourism. Factories are (13) ….. down. The
republic imports much of its food.
The (14) ……. car trade could be seen as a legacy of Montenegro’s geographical
location and history. With (15) ……. Italy to the West, and Balkan conflicts in other
directions, Montenegro is a natural transit point for goods across the Balkans
In their defence, Montenegrins say they’re only doing what they’ve done for hundreds of
years. This independent people eked out a living for centuries on one of the most
inhospitable pieces of European territory while surrounded by Ottoman Turks. The land
is so undesirable that the Turks simply gave (16) … trying to conquer what was then a
much smaller Montenegro.
Just as they receive Western patronage today for their role as a buffer state, in the 19th-
century Russia supported Montenegro for (17) …….. political reasons. In this context,
Montenegrins spent centuries raiding and smuggling to survive.
(18) ……. cars can be seen as part of that tradition
1. Are you the owner of the vehicle? A. Certainly, officer. Here it is. Is there
any problem?
2. Get out of the car and open the boot, B. I didn’t notice it at all. My papers are
please. in order.
3. The customs seal applied to the door C. Right away, officer.
of your vehicle shows indications of
having been tampered with.
4. You can’t continue your trip because D. Yes, here are the documents.
you had a serious accident on
Romanian territory
5. When and under what circumstances E. It wasn’t my fault, but I do want to
did you make the hiding place for the clarify everything regarding the
illegal exit of a foreign citizen? accident.
6. I must inform you that this is a signed F. I don’t want to speak about this, I
and authorised statement of the need a lawyer
offence in question.
7. We intend to prosecute you and you’ll G. Give me the statement, please
go on trial.
8. What is your relationship with the H. Yes, I did.
person found hiding in your car.
9. Show me the bill of sale for the I. I met him near the border, on the main
vehicle, please. road. He begged me to take him.
10. Did you buy this car abroad? J. I have the right to have an official
lawyer
Exercise 6
Circle the synonym (s) of the following words.
Activity 4
Comment on the statement below and write a short composition (200 words) :
Activity 5
Read the text carefully and make an imaginary dialogue between the Swedish
officer and the car smuggler. Choose the moment when the officer is checking the
passport and the visa.
On the Swedish visa officer's desk the visa applications pile up. Earlier the same
morning he had found a false passport of a known car smuggler. Frowning, he compares
the photograph in the passport with the ones in two visa applications, one old and one
new. "This passport is false," he concludes and puts it away to give it to the Estonian
police. The Swedish Embassy has information on about 60 people who have been known
to be involved in car smuggling in Europe and therefore are not granted visas. Some of
these are known by the staff after trying too often to get a visa.
Currently several north European governments are discussing abolishing the visa
requirement for Estonians. "The consequence is that you completely lose control over
who will come to your country," says the Swedish Embassy. Of course, there are
competing interests. Business would benefit from an abolishment. Several people the
reporter has spoken to at the Swedish Embassy stress that Estonia is on the right track
compared to Lithuania, Latvia and Russia. They believe that Estonia is readier and more
suitable for European Union membership than the other two Baltic states.
Corruption is on the decrease and the Soviet system is losing ground. Interpol
and several other institutions get good marks. The institutions are new and the staff is
young. Lack of experience is balanced by a strong will to rectify the problems. Also, the
Embassy officials stress that car smuggling is mainly a problem for the countries from
where the cars disappear. "You just can’t complain about the Estonians and say that it is
their fault."
At the car market.
Under a pine tree in Kadaka car market in the outskirts of Tallinn a BMW 730 is parked.
As we come closer a man appears from the van parked next to it. He wears a blue winter
jacket which is tight around his fat belly and the man definitely needs a shave. "It is a
nice car," he explains to us in Russian. "It was bought in Kiev only two weeks ago, and
all the documents are in perfect order." His golden teeth glitter as he assures us that there
are no problems whatsoever with the car. And it is a very nice car, and even better, the
price is only $ 10,800. In Sweden, a similar car is twice as expensive.
Exercise 7
Decide if the following sentences are true or false (T / F) or not stated (NOT
STATED)
1.A Swedish officer has discovered a false passport carried by a known car smuggler.
_______
2. The car smuggler’s photograph was new on the passport and old on the driving
licence. _______
3. The Swedish Embassy has information about sixty Estonian car smugglers. _______
4. There is a discussion about abolishing the visa requirement for Estonians.
5. Estonia is likely to be invited to apply for European Union membership. __________
6. The car smuggler from the market has no teeth. _________
7. The car was nice but has no documents and was very expensive. _______
8. In Sweden the cars are twice expensive than in Estonia. _________
According to Romanian law, decide on the legal liability of all parties concerned in this
case study. Consider the implications.
A Romanian citizen is offered a 2001 BMW for 8000 US$ which is far below its real
value.
The seller states that the car was bought in Germany from a reliable dealer and that the
papers are in order. The prospective buyer looks at the documents, sees that there seems
to be no proof of purchase but is satisfied that the seller is the legal owner of the car as
his name is on the (German) registration book. He pays the money and receives the car
and its documents.
When the Romanian takes the car for registration, he is informed that the car is on a list
of stolen vehicles that has been circulated by Europol. He is informed that he will be
charged with a criminal offence.
Activity 7
Make a dialogue ( in English!) between the buyer and a police officer.
Activity 8 Homework task or just for fun?
International vehicle registration
Read the names of some European countries and their capitals and then match the
international identification letters with the right country.
e.g. CROATIA/ ZAGREB/ HR SWITZERLAND/ BERN/ CH
International Identification Letters
AL F BY L RUS SK UA V TR GB
FL PL LT N DK BG AND IRL LV MK
BIH A MC I H RO M IS MD P
Before considering this topic it might be useful to start at the theoretical end.
These texts are derived from the U.S. Army, Field manual “Stability and Support Operations”,
Combatting Terrorism, Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
What do you think? Do these constitute terrorism?
1. Weapons and financial support for “freedom fighters” in their struggle for
independence.
2. People sabotaging important electric and communications installations during an
invasion of their country by a stronger power.
3. Nationalist separatists blowing up the ruling group’s administration buildings to
reinforce their demands for independence.
4. Supplying weapons to groups opposed to a democratically and legally-elected
government because it conflicts with the supplier’s ideological position.
5. Supplying equipment and installations to a “dangerous” state knowing that it may use
these offensively or threateningly.
Activity 1
VOCABULARY
Which words go with ..
goals For example: to achieve goals
fear (N) For example: to induce fear
attack (N) For example: terrorist attack; carry out an attack on …
cause (N) For example: to fight for a cause;
compel/ unpredictability/
virtually/ aborted/profound/
incidental/ granted/ sought/undermine/ concessions
Throughout history, extremists have practised terrorism to generate fear and to (1)
__________________ a change in behaviour.
Terrorists are inspired by many different motives. They may be classified into three
categories: RATIONAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL OR CULTURAL. A terrorist, of course,
may be shaped by all three.
a) The terrorist thinks through his goals and options, making a cost-benefit analysis.
b) “Splinter-groups” among terrorists are often more violent than their “parent” group.
c) Terrorists do not even consider they may be wrong although others’ views may be
assessed on merit.
d) Terrorists tend to project their own anti-social motivation on others, creating a
polarized “us” and “them” perspective.
e) Some political systems have no effective non-violent means for changes in power
structure or “succession”.
f) Terrorist groups ask a crucial question: Can our actions be successful in attaining our
goals without causing a backlash that will destroy the cause and perhaps our own people?
g) A terrorist group must terrorise. As a minimum it must commit violent acts to maintain
group self-esteem and legitimacy.
h) Society generally rejects as unbelievable such actions as vendettas, self-destruction,
ethnic cleansing, religious martyrdom, etc. when we observe it in others.
i) When a terrorist group approaches its stated goals, it is often inclined to re-define them.
j) A major determinate of terrorism is the perception of outsiders and anxiety about ethnic
group survival. Fear of cultural extermination leads to violence.
Can you think of authentic examples of these? For example, from Northern Ireland, from
Spain, from Chechnya, from the Middle East, from North Africa …?
Activity 3 READING
Read the text. It is an immediate response by Noam Chomsky to the September 11 attacks.Chomsky is
perhaps the most famous living linguistic scientist. He has been critical of American policy for over 30
years and is considered an extremely intelligent person, although frequently very opposed to American
foreign policy. What are your reactions to this?
Noam Chomsky
For the first time since 1962, a high-ranking French army officer has been tried in a criminal
court on charges of justifying the use of torture during the Algerian war for independence.
General Paul Aussaresses, 83, whose memoirs caused a furore earlier this year, faces a jail
sentence of up to five years- for his writing rather than for his actions- even though he has
admitted the torture and killing of 24 suspected rebels in the eight-year conflict which ended in
1962.
A Second World War resistance hero, General Aussaresses is charged with “complicity in
justifying war crimes”. The actual crimes are covered by an amnesty offered in the 1960s to all
French soldiers who served in Algeria. Aussaresses regrets nothing, arguing that someone had to
do the dirty work in Algeria. He did it, he says, without pleasure and without pity. And he
dispassionately told the story in “Services Speciaux: Algerie: 1955-1977”, which was published
in June 2001.
The General called his witnesses, most of them army men, many retired generals like himself –
hoary, decorated, half-deaf, arthritic and full of war memories who came forward to defend their
comrade. But the court also heard evidence from Henri Alleg, 80, who, during the conflict
published Alger Republicain, a newspaper that was shut down by the French authorities. Alleg
was arrested and tortured. During the three and a half years he spent in detention awaiting trial, he
wrote The Question, a book that exposed the torture practised in French military jails during the
Algerian war. His manuscript was smuggled out page by page. Alleg was tried in camera and
sentenced to 10 years in prison. Giving evidence this time, he warned against a return to torture,
“to barbarism in the name of civilisation, or the struggle against barbarism”. But his audiences,
most of whom supported Aussaresses, were indignant.
The next witness, the 71- year-old general Maurice Schmitt, was of a different calibre. A product
of Saint-Cyr, the distinguished military academy, and a former prisoner at Dien Bien Phu
(Vietnam), he was also army chief of staff from 1987-1991- the highest-ranking officer of his
time. He got straight to the point: “Before they became terrorists, the members of the FLN (the
Algerian National Liberation Front) were torturers,” he said. While it could not be denied that
torture was practised in Algeria during the war, he argues that “it was the legitimate defence of a
people whose lives were at risk”. And he added “If the choice is between getting my hands dirty
or accepting the death of innocents, I choose to dirty my hands rather than risk losing my soul”.
When he was not giving evidence, Aussaresses sat impassively. During the three-day trial he said
little except to admit responsibility for everything, even for crimes he had not committed, such as
personally torturing prisoners. Fabien Goget, the deputy public prosecutor observed that the
plaintiffs saw the case as a trial of the Algerian war, while the defence saw it as a freedom of
expression issue. “I see it as a trial of a book: when history enters a courtroom, out goes the law.”
The prosecution called for the general and the two publishers of his book to be fined FF100.000
(about $13500) each. A verdict is expected in January 2002.
Activity 6
Discussion
The issues of “war crimes”, “ethnic cleansing”, “ responsibility for the acts of others” etc.
were discussed in the Adolf Eichmann trial in Israel in 1960. He had been seized by the
Israeli authorities in South America and put on trial in Isreal. Charged with ordering the
execution of millions of Jews, Eichmann claimed in his own defence that he was only
following orders. What do you think?
The trial of Slobodan Milosevic in The Hague is taking place without the defendant
entering any plea to the charges (i.e. he will not ANSWER the charges) because he
denies the authority of the Court to put him on trial. Does this change anything about the
court’s jurisdiction?
Exercise 6
New law allows eavesdropping on Internet users
A
1. Make …………………………………….
New investigative, 2. ……………….. or …………………. suspects
surveillance and legal 3. ……………………………on Internet
powers communication
4. monitor ……………………………………..
5. obtain ………………………………………
6. reduce the need for …………………… and
court ……………………………………….
B 1. portable ………………………………………
Technology developments 2. systems that can ………………………………
…………………………………………………….
C Access to personal data held 1. Banks
by … 2. …………………………………………….
3. ……………………………………………..
Example
Giving wider powers to the authorities should result in a reduction in terrorist threats.
Activity 10
TERRORISM DID NOT START ON SEPTEMBER 11
Article by Stella Rimington, former head of M.I.5.
Extract from ‘The Guardian Weekly’, September 12-18, 2002
There is one big difference in the al-Qaida threat from much previous terrorism, which makes it
particularly unpredictable and dangerous. The preparedness, even enthusiasm of the terrorists to
commit suicide, when most terrorists in the past have planned for their own escape, means that
certain forms of attack, the most potentially horrific – for example, chemical, biological and
nuclear – can no longer be regarded as unlikely.
But that does not mean that a totally different approach to countering them is needed. It is a case
of doing what has been done before but doing more of it and doing it more effectively. At the
heart of countering terrorism is intelligence and the events of September 11 have focused
attention on intelligence work as never before.
September 11 was immediately declared an “intelligence failure”. The allegation was that had
intelligence agencies been doing their job properly, they would have produced sufficiently precise
advance intelligence of the plot to enable it to be thwarted. To blame them for not doing so is to
totally misunderstand the nature of intelligence. Although precise intelligence on when and where
any terrorist act will take place is the ideal, it is, of all intelligence, the most difficult to obtain.
The complete plan for any operation might well be known to very few people indeed, perhaps not
revealed more widely until just before an attack begins, or perhaps never. An intelligence agency
would need to recruit one of those people to learn it. Though it is sometimes possible to learn
enough from well-placed human or technical sources for the full picture to be guessed at, there
may well be inadequate information for effective preventive action to be taken to forestall an
attack.
The most valuable sources against terrorism are human beings, long-term penetration agents, who
will stay in place for a long period and work their way into positions where they can provide key
intelligence. But they are the most difficult sources to acquire and, once recruited, are very
difficult to keep in place.
It is not normally possible to penetrate a terrorist organisation from the outside, to feed in
someone with no previous links at all. Terrorist groups usually recruit from a very small pond,
from among people who have known each other for years. Perhaps it might be an easier task to
infiltrate al-Qaida, which appears to be recruiting young men from all over the world for training.
It might be possible to insert a source at the recruitment stage, but it would be a slow process as
he built up his cover in the mosque or wherever recruiting was going on, hoping to be selected, as
well as very dangerous.
In the world of espionage, many of the best spies are volunteers, people who offer their services
to the other side. Experience has shown that, surprisingly, members of terrorist organisations do
volunteer to act as sources of information for the security authorities. Though it seems less likely
that members of al-Qaida will do so, given that they appear to be motivated by such intense
ideological or religious fervour, I have no doubt that some will. (543 words)
Read the text and answer the questions by marking the ONE correct alternative a), b), c)
or d) with X
Example
The author suggests that after September 11, future intelligence activity
1. In her view, September 11 underlined the fact that the tragic event …
5. Ms. Rimington believes that Al-Qaida’ s religious and ideological fervour means …
Activity 11
Listening INTERNATIONAL CRIME ALERT
Listen to the recording and fill in the blanks below:
IGOR ERLIKH:
Case details:
Between 1989 and 1993 (3) ………………..of the U.S. based King Motor Oil Company.
Acting with at least twenty –five others in an organized crime group, Erlikh used (4)
……………………… the U.S. government and the state of New Jersey of one-hundred
forty million dollars (5) …………………..Erlikh used threats and violence to collect
money from others involved in the conspiracy. He also (6)
………………………………….through Switzerland and other countries. He is charged
with (7) ..……………, wire fraud, money laundering, tax evasion, and other crimes.
CARLOS REMIGIO CARDOEN
is a (8) ………………… from Chile, born on May 1,1942. He is 180 centimeters in height,
weighs 77 kilograms, and has brown-grey hair and brown eyes. He wears (9) ………….. He
speaks English and Spanish .
Case details:
Cluster bombs are (10) ……………………………. ‘bomblets’. The bomblets are packed
with high explosives and shrapnel. Dropped from aircraft, (11) ……………………………….
with deadly metal fragments, some of which are powerful enough to pierce armored plate.
Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein (12)………………………………………………... is now an
international fugitive. Carlos sold over 150 million dollars worth of cluster bombs to the
Saddam Hussein regime during the 1980’s. The bombs were manufactured in Chile with
zirconium. (13) ………………………..arrest warrant issued on May 27 1993, Cardoen is
charged with (14) ………………………. zirconium and U.S.-made parts and moulds for
bomb fuses through his U.S. based company. The U.S. is seeking Cardoen‘s extradition to
the United States.
Tapescript/ Optional Reading Text
President Bush has given broad investigative and surveillance powers to law enforcement, signing
legislation that is aimed at helping the authorities to track and disrupt the operations of suspected terrorists
in the United States.
“Today we take an essential step in defeating terrorism while protecting the constitutional rights of all
Americans,” Bush said at a White House ceremony last week. “this government will enforce this law with
all the urgency of a nation at war.”
The new law gives the government a freer hand to make searches, detain or deport suspects, eavesdrop on
Internet communication, monitor financial transactions and obtain electronic records of individuals. It also
reduces the need for sub-poenas, court orders and other legal checks, to enable law enforcement to move
more quickly. Congress overwhelmingly approved the legislation.
The government is moving aggressively on a number of technology fronts to collect and evaluate
information about people and their movements more efficiently as it seeks to defeat terrorism. The Defense
Department, for instance, announced that it is seeking proposals from companies on an array of new
surveillance products, such as portable polygraph machines and systems that can see through walls at night.
With Attorney-General John D. Ashcroft promising an anti-terrorist campaign reminiscent of the war on
organized crime in the days of Al Capone, the FBI will demand personal data held by banks, Internet
service providers and credit bureaus. In many cases, these businesses will not be able to tell clients that
they have turned over medical, financial or other personal records.
With new powers to monitor computer use, sometimes without a warrant, Internet users will have to decide
whether they want to rely more on encrypting their e-mail or disguising their identities online.
After weeks of struggle on Capitol Hill, civil libertarians lost the argument that the government will gain
too many police powers to examine the activities of innocent individuals and erode personal privacy.
Russell D. Feingold, who cast the single vote in the Senate against the legislation a day after the House
approved it by 356 to 66, said:
“There have been periods in our nation’s history when civil liberties have taken a back seat to what
appeared at the time to be the legitimate exigencies of war. Our national consciousness still bears the stain
and the scars of those events: The Alien and Sedition Acts, the suspension of Habeas Corpus during the
Civil War, the internment of Japanese Americans, German Americans and Italian Americans during World
War II, the blacklisting of supposed communist sympathizers during the McCarthy era, and the surveillance
and harassment of anti-war and Civil Rights’ protesters, including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.”
The Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman, Patrick J.Leahy, who helped craft the legislation, said the
current crisis requires aggressive action. Leahy said he was satisfied with provisions limiting the duration
of some of the new surveillance rules to four years, subject to congressional review.
UNIT 12 COMPUTER CRIME, FRAUD AND FINANCIAL CRIME
Read the text and decide if you agree or disagree with the statements below.
Disgraced former Barings trader Nick Leeson has been paid $100,000 (£61,000) to speak at
a business conference in the Netherlands.
It was the first in a long line of lucrative celebrity-style appearances planned by the man
who single-handedly brought down Barings Bank.
He will also be endorsing products in advertisements and appearing on television shows.
Business people, brokers and bankers paid about £188 each to hear him speak at the event in
the Netherlands. Leeson was released from a Singapore jail four months ago after serving
three-and-a-half years of a six-and-a-half-year sentence for fraud. He was caught after going
on the run when his gambling on derivatives markets landed Barings Bank with £800m of
debt. Now, Leeson's assets are frozen and he has huge debts hanging round his neck.
He said: "I would like to go back into the financial world, but which company is going to be
brave enough to employ me? Who will let me trade again?"
Leeson has written a book of his story, "Rogue Trader", which was made into a film,
starring Ewan McGregor and Anna Friel. But his public relations adviser, Ian Monk, says
Leeson did not gain a
penny from either, because it went directly to Barings' creditors. Under an agreement with
the creditors, he will be allowed to keep 35% of money earned from public and media
appearances and advertising. The remaining 65% will go to creditors. Some of his portion of
the money will go on medical bills. Leeson found out while in prison that he has colon
cancer. After treatment, he is now in remission. Leeson also receives a monthly allowance of
£3,000 a month from his frozen assets. "This man is inundated with offers. It's great," said
Mr Monk. Asked where he wanted to be in 10 years' time, Leeson replied: "I hope I'm still
alive. " I would like to live with somebody, have children and be left alone."
Leeson spoke about his view of world stock markets to 250 members of the Amsterdam
stock exchange. It was a Dutch group, ING, which bought up Barings after its collapse and
bailed it out.
Exercise 1
Match these definitions with one of the words underlined in the text.
Discussion
19. When NCIS first started * collate intelligence on card fraud, the information seemed
20. to suggest * most of the criminals originated from South-East Asia. This may have in
21. part been * to the legitimate hologram-making businesses in Hong Kong. It may also
22. have been because of many Chinese criminal * predisposition for existing
23. types of financial crime. However, by the late 1990s, it had * apparent that this
24. criminal group had saturated its own market and had started to look * its own
25. ethnic group * recruits.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
F
A. Two such environments were readily identifiable – petrol stations and restaurants.
B. In such places the staff usually received low wages, were possibly temporary or transient
and likely to be under-supervised.
C. They had to find “front-line fraudsters” (those who attempt the fraud in the shop or other
retail environment).
D. Access to a network of vulnerable retail networks was needed.
E. These customers would be less likely to notice the card “compromises” than customers
in a familiar shopping environment.
F. The Chinese gangs sought out other ethnic groups, especially illegal immigrants as they,
or even their families, are most vulnerable.
G. Both networks have the added advantage of being used by legitimate transient customers
and tourists.
H. Some poorly-paid employment environments are also more likely to be staffed by the
less-skilled and less well-educated.
Exercise 4
Card fraudsters prey on high-class diners
Patrick Collinson, Guardian Weekly –November 2002
Put the verbs given to you in brackets in the correct form.
Plastic card fraud (1) (jump)______________ by more than 50% over the past two years to
L430m, banks said this week, warning that "skimming" (2) (reach) ____________epidemic
levels, particularly in the London area.
Skimming - the copying of a card's black magnetic strip - barely (3)
(exist)_______________ five years ago but netted L161m for criminal gangs in the year to
August 2002, according to the Association for Payment Clearing Services (APACS).
A third of that (4) (take)_______________ from card users in London, with fraudsters
targeting high-class restaurants in the capital. Second worst hit was Birmingham, where
losses from skimming (5) (be) ________________L6.6m.
An unscrupulous restaurant waiter processes a transaction but then, out of sight of the
customers, separately records the card's data on tiny devices that can be fitted on to a trouser
belt. He or she then (6)(sell) _________________the data to criminal gangs who (7) (use)
______________ it to mass-produce counterfeit credit and debit cards.
In the latest twist, fraudsters (10) (begin) _________________ attaching fake swipe
machines to the doors of bank ATM lobbies used by customers to gain entry at evenings or
weekends. The fake swipe devices (11) (remove) __________________ later, containing
thousands of customers' details.
APACS said this week that it hopes to beat the fraudsters with a dual strategy of PIN
numbers, first (12) (introduce) ________________ in France more than a decade ago, and
"smart card" technology.
Customers paying by card will no longer have to sign receipts at shop tills but will instead
type a four-digit PIN number into a keypad. Cardholders also (13) (issue)
________________with new-style cards that contain computer chips. These are more
difficult to copy than traditional cards.
To avoid fraudsters targeting overseas markets instead, Mastercard and Visa (14)
(coordinate) _________________an international roll-out of chip and PIN cards. By the end
of 2005 these (15) (replace) __________________ the 1 billion-plus plastic cards currently
in circulation.
Activity 2
Some shops in Bucharest accept credit cards such as VISA or MASTERCARD. Imagine a
dialogue between two criminals, one of whom works as an assistant in an expensive
clothes shop, suggesting ways they can make money out of “borrowing” credit card
information from legitimate customers. How might they also get hold of (i.e. steal!) the
credit card.
Try to think of the dialogues and the scenarios. If you can think of 2 or 3 ways, the real
crooks will think of more “scams”!
Exercise 5 Common Internet Fraud Schemes
Read the descriptions (1-7) of the different frauds. There are 7 "victim" situations described
(A-G). Identify which type of fraud (1-7) is involved with each situation (A-G)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1. Online Auction/Retail
The fraud attributable to the misrepresentation of a product advertised for sale through an Internet
auction site or the non-delivery of merchandise or goods purchased through an Internet auction site
2. Investment Fraud
An offer that uses false or fraudulent claims to solicit investments or loans, or that provides for the
purchase, use, or trade of forged or counterfeit securities.
3. Business Opportunity/ "Work at Home"
The offer of a “phony” job opportunity, often with associated charges such as "processing or
application" fees. Perpetrators frequently forge the name of a computer service or Internet Service
Provider.
4. Financial Institution Fraud
Misrepresentation of the truth or concealment of a material fact by a person to induce a business,
organization, or other entity that manages money, credit, or capital to perform a fraudulent activity.
5. Credit Card Theft/Fraud
The unauthorized use of a credit/debt card or credit/debt card number to fraudulently obtain money
or property. Credit/debt card numbers can be stolen from unsecured web sites.
6. Ponzi/Pyramid Schemes
An investment scheme in which investors are promised abnormally high profits on their investments.
No investment is actually made. Early investors are paid returns with the investment money received
from the later investors. The system usually collapses, and the later investors do not receive
dividends and lose their initial investment.
7. Non-Delivery of Goods/Services
The non-delivery of goods or services which were purchased or contracted remotely through the
Internet, independent of an Internet auction.
B. " I saw this advertisement on a web-site, offering really high profits for a small
investment. I transferred US1000 and I haven't heard anything since! Neither have lots more people, I
understand!"
C. "I have a computer and Internet at home and this Internet company said I could compose advertising
texts for them and be paid for them. But they charged me 50US$ for their application form and another
US$50 for "distribution of my credentials" and I haven't heard from them since."
D. "Well, you know I like to collect coins. There was a great selection in an on-line auction. I paid 200US$
for what was described as a 'Charles 1 token'. The Internet picture was certainly Charles I, but when the
coin arrived it was quite different...and virtually worthless!"
E. " I wanted a list of properties. This Internet agency promised to supply the list and I transferred US$100
to the account but I haven't received the list and they don't reply to my e-mails."
F. " I received several messages via the Internet and e-mail from this client who said he needed a credit to
extend his business premises. He wanted to build a new office section for his small factory, so he said. Well,
this is certainly part of our work in supporting small business. But what he didn't say was that he had
already received a loan from another bank for the same project."
G. "Have you ever heard of the "Re-development and Re-structuring Fund"? Well, from
the website description, the scheme is based on a bond or security certificate, paying 6% over 5 years. I
bought US$5000, received the certificate and now I find out it is all false. The company, the fund, the
certificate everything!"
2) Aside from the wounds inflicted on the drug lords, Casablanca caused acute
embarrassment to the Mexican government and its scandal-plagued banking system. US
law-enforcement agents had not breathed a word of the operation to their counterparts in
Mexico and even luring the bankers across the border was done to avoid the red-tape of
extradition. Even President Zedillo of Mexico was unaware of the slick operation, some
of it taking place on Mexican soil. Not surprisingly, Zedillo sent a stern letter of protest
to President Clinton.
3) US officials insisted that the safety of their undercover agents was the primary concern
but it is well-known that even high-ranking Mexican law-enforcement officers have been
found to be in the employ of the cartels, so, unofficially, US agents say they never
seriously considered briefing anyone outside the US.
4) For their part, US Customs officials say that probing higher for corruption would have
set off
alarms which could have compromised the sting. They hope that those arrested will
point the finger at other conspirators in order to cut their own potential sentences, which
could run as high as life imprisonment.
Activity 4
Which paragraph talks about...
A. An official (offended!) Mexican reaction
B. The impact of the "bust"
C. Strategic objectives of the operation.
D. The non-involvement of the Mexican authorities.
Exercise 6
FIND WORDS IN THE TEXTS (1-4) WITH THE FOLLOWING MEANINGS:
Section
1. - a slang word meaning final (dramatic) solution of a criminal operation
2. - a slang word meaning to discover
- financial resources
- surrounded by scandal
- had not revealed any information
- efficient, well-organised
- colleagues in same field/business
- to entice (attract) into a trap
- bureaucratic procedures
- on the territory of ...
- strongly-worded (e.g. warning/ protest/ reply)
3. - of major importance/ the most important factor
- in the pay of ... / working for...
- keeping a person informed
4. - searching carefully and more deeply for something
- accuse (slang)
- could amount to
The first step is the physical disposal of cash. This placement might be accomplished by
depositing the cash in domestic banks or, increasingly, in other types of formal or informal
financial institutions. Or the cash might be shipped across borders for deposit in foreign
financial institutions, or used to buy high-value goods, such as artwork, airplanes, and
precious metals and stones, that can then be resold for payment by check or bank transfer.
The second step in money laundering is known as layering, carrying out complex layers of
financial transactions to separate the illicit proceeds from their source and disguise the audit
trail. This phase can involve such transactions as the wire transfer of deposited cash, the
conversion of deposited cash into monetary instruments (bonds, stocks, traveler's checks),
the resale of high-value goods and monetary instruments, and investment in real estate and
legitimate businesses, particularly in the leisure and tourism industries. Shell companies,
typically registered in offshore havens, are a common tool in the layering phase. These
companies, whose directors often are local attorneys acting as nominees, obscure the
beneficial owners through restrictive bank secrecy laws and attorney-client privilege.
The last step is to make the wealth derived from the illicit proceeds appear legitimate. This
integration might involve any number of techniques, such as using front companies to
"lend" the proceeds back to the owner or using funds on deposit in foreign financial
institutions as security for domestic loans. Another common technique is over-invoicing or
producing false invoices for goods sold--or supposedly sold--across borders.
Activity 5
Match one of the expressions underlined or in bold type with these definitions.
The first international STOP Money Laundering! conference took place in London in
February 2001. This is the post-conference communique, summarising the main concerns.
Activity 6 Read the text. Identify where the 5 points (A-E) should be inserted into
the communique.
A) More seminars and conferences in the future with participation of the leading
organisations such as FATF, UN, World Bank, IMF etc. should be set up without further delay.
B) The international banking community should progress from the recommendation stage to
the stage of providing banking standards and requirements.
C) There should be enhanced co-operation between the developed countries and the
developing
countries in expediting the return of laundered money to the people from whom it was stolen.
D) Legal delays must be reduced and the whole process accelerated.
E) Established cases of financial crime must be dealt with promptly and severely. We all know
that without justice there will be no real peace.
Communique
The total sum involved in money laundering is huge and stands in the way of the economic
development of many countries. The Conference underlined the importance of fighting
money laundering which is also recognised as a major source of terrorist funding. This
communique, based on the recommendations of the Conference participants, is addressed to
all those involved in the regulation and prevention of money laundering, namely: the United
Nations, FATF, IMF, World Bank, Governments, Ministries of Finance, Central Banks,
Commercial Bankers; Associations and other national and international organisations and
regulatory and control bodies.
Taking into consideration the fact that different states around the world have varied political
and economic systems and levels of social development, each country may have a different
approach to fighting money laundering. The discussions showed that the definition of money
laundering as economic crime is not the same in all countries.
There are cases when the controlling authorities make mistakes in blocking or freezing
accounts suspected of being involved in money laundering activities. Where it is found that
the suspects are not involved in money laundering activities there should be compensation
for the aggrieved parties. Some progress has already been made. The banking system of the
Russian Federation has achieved significant results in achieving further transparency and in
anti-laundering activities.
It was recognized by the Conference participants that the Ukraine is making progress in the
fight against money laundering. Illustration from some recent investigations carried out by
the Ukrainian Tax Police show that the Ukraine is fulfilling FATF obligations in combating
money laundering. Significant arrests and the freezing of suspect accounts in the Ukraine
and abroad are examples of international co-operation in the fight against money laundering.
Taking into consideration the efforts of the Ukraine and the practical results achieved, it was
felt that its position on FATF black list was due for examination and reconsideration.
4)
_________________________________________________________________________
5) The developed countries should not hide under the due process of law as a reason for
delay before returning stolen money to the appropriate third world countries.
7) _____________________________________________________________________
8) All legislation that tends to encourage the receiving of dirty money into countries,
particularly the developed countries, should be amended and make it increasingly difficult to
bring in such money.
9) ______________________________________________________________________
10) It is clearly felt by some nations, and in particular by the African countries, that the West
is being hypocritical in criticising them for being the source of money which is laundered,
when it is the West which is to blame for facilitating money laundering by accepting the
funds in the first place.
11) The West should change its approach by showing genuine concern for anti-money
laundering particularly as it concerns developing countries.
12) _____________________________________________________________________
13) There is an urgent need to make banking instructions and other documentation of
leading Western banks and controlling authorities more readily available to the Central
banks of the emerging markets.
14) The training of bank officials should be organised on a multi-lateral level with
participation of IMF, BIS and FATF.
15) Monetary teams should be set up to improve compliance with money laundering rules
and regulations. Membership of the teams must be worked out later but there must be
equitable representation.
16) _____________________________________________________________________
Now read through the completed text again for better comprehension.
Exercise 7 CYBERCRIME: Glossary of Useful Terms
Put these words in the correct place in one of the definitions.
Application software
Includes word-processing, spreadsheet, database (1) _____________ and Internet
access utilities
CERT
Computer Emergency Response Team
Decryption
The reverse of encryption, a method of (2)_______________ encrypted information
so that it becomes legible again
Digital piracy
The unauthorised (4) ________________ and resale of digital goods (e.g. software,
music files)
Encryption
A method of transforming information using a cipher so that it (5)_______________
illegible
Firewall
(6) __________________ software that protects a computer system from
unauthorised intruders
Hacking
Unauthorised access to computers
IP Spoofing
A technique used to gain unauthorised access to computers
Macro virus
A virus attached to instructions (called macros) which are (7) _________________
automatically when a document is opened
Operating systems
Basic operating platform – the software foundation includes DOS, Windows or UNIX
Phreaking
Hacking the telephone system, usually to obtain free calls, by generating
(8)_____________ administrative commands to the network
Trojan Horse
A (9) _________________ software program that appears to be benign, but has
undesired side effects. Not strictly a virus in itself, because it does not replicate
Virus
A program that attaches itself to a legitimate one, makes copies of itself and may
release a ‘payload’
Worm
Similar to a virus, but runs as an independent program, rather than
(10)_________________ on transfer by the actions of the user
A B C D E F G H I
1. Europe’s first case of electronic blackmail occurred in 1998 when the German Noris
Verbraucher Bank offered a 10.000 DM reward for information leading to the arrest of a
hacker who was blackmailing the bank. The hacker had claimed to have raided several
customer accounts and to have retrieved data from the Bank’s central system. He was
demanding 1million DM otherwise he would release data on the Internet.
2. To date, there have only been a few known cases of unauthorised transfers. The most
notorious occurred in 1994 when the US Citibank was targetted by Russian criminals.
Losses of over $400.000 were recorded and never recovered.
3. The goal of many hackers is merely to gain unauthorised access to systems and then to
go no further. They are primarily motivated by the challenge offered or by wishing to
show up deficiencies in security. Although their motive is relatively harmless, they may
still cause damage to systems and give rise to financial loss for their targets.
4. Studies invariably show that most hacking incidents against companies and
organisations are committed by insiders. In a 1999 FBI/CSI survey, 55% of respondents
reported that they had experienced unauthorised access by employees and 30% had
suffered system penetration from outsiders. UK surveys do not suggest as many
businesses are victims there.
5. Sabotage against companies and illegal acquisition of financial documents, research and
development results or other secrets are acts which aim to damage rival businesses by
undermining its status or by causing it financial loss. The UK Metropolitan Police has
encountered instances of employees copying company data bases and setting themselves
up in competition. This copying does not (at the moment at least) constitute an offence
under UK theft law.
6. Numerous reasons have been suggested for non-reporting of hacking incidents- fear of
negative publicity, concern that competitors would exploit the case, fear of attracting
other hackers and the lack of confidence in the law to do anything about it. In addition,
there is usually the factor of the loss of the system while the investigation is carried out.
Exercise 2
Match the following verbs with their corresponding definitions:
1 – to thrive on (sth.) a) to start something such as a business, organisation or
institution
2 – to bring down b) to enter by force, especially to steal something
3 – to break into c) to find something or meet someone by accident
4 – to stumble on (sb./sth) d) to put someone in prison (or a mental hospital)
5 – to put away e) to be successful or happy in a particular situation, perhaps
even one that other people would not enjoy
6 - to set up f) to cause a government or politician to lose power; to reduce
the rate, level or amount of something
Discuss with a partner the aspects of fighting global crime outlined above.
Activity 1
Translate into English
Mafia este o lume logică, raţională, funcţională şi implacabilă. Mult mai logică, mai
raţională şi mai implacabilă decât statul. Mafia este o articulaţie a puterii, o metamorfoză
a puterii, dar şi a patologie a puterii. Mafia este un sistem economic, o componentă
obligatorie a sistemului economic global. Mafia se dezvoltă datorită statului şi îşi
adaptează comportamentul în funcţie de acesta.
Activity 2
Comment on Louise Shelley’s assertion:
“Organised crime will be a defining issue of the 21st century as the Cold War was for the
20th century and colonialism was for the 19th century”. These ideas may help you.
Organised crime
vast profits/ instability/ human weakness/ speed of communication/
“white-collar criminals/ corrupt governments/ built on poverty/ exploit greed and power
Cold war
Control of information/ climate of fear/ mutual distrust/ image of the “enemy”/
“superpowers only”- other countries mainly onlookers
Colonialism
exploitation/ benefit to whom? / notion of dominance/ legacy of colonialism/ mentalities
Exercise 4
Fill in the gaps with one of the following words:
social phenomena
effects growth
policies network
weak global
civil issues
1. Transnational organized crime and corruption are now acknowledged as high-priority
..... that need more attention and creative solutions.
2. These growing phenomena present a formidable challenge to international law, …..
society and both political and business communities.
3. They have a negative impact on the global political economy, and disproportionately
negative .... on transitional and developing countries.
4. Those most severely impacted are the less privileged, particularly women, children,
small businesses, entrepreneurs and minorities, and those not part of the ..... of
corruption.
5. Other serious impacts are decreased trade and investment, policy distortion, less
transparency and accountability, and reduced funding for key ..........services at the
national and local level.
6. The net result of systemic crime and corruption is a .... civil society incapable of
supporting a market-based democratic form of government.
7. It also results in unsound budgetary ....... that under-invest in the fundamental needs
and rights of citizens, such as basic healthcare, property ownership, quality education,
public safety, a clean environment and fundamental human rights, including free speech
and a free press.
8. Systemic corruption often leads to ........ crime and corruption activities, which then
becomes a problem for the world community.
9. The transnational crime and corruption center (TraCCC) and United Research
Centers (URC) provide an international, multi-disciplinary forum in which to address
and attack the complex ........ relating to organized crime and corruption .
10. Each mutually-supporting activity of the Centers also promotes international
cooperation, economic ........, good governance, the rule of law and a vibrant civil
society.
A. “Where western governments worry about the insidious power of criminal gangs,
some countries with less developed democracies have governments which practise a
form of super-organized crime – looting the national wealth for the benefit of family and
friends. The line between gangsters and dictators may be hard to distinguish. And even
western politicians can sometimes get trapped in the organised crime net. The temptation
to turn a blind eye in return for massive financial reward is a human weakness not
restricted to poor undemocratic countries.
B. One of the striking features of modern organised crime is that some gangs continue to
operate effectively even when their leaders are killed or put in jail. This is an indication
of very sophisticated organisational structures. However, the notion of global crime
groups with formally constituted management “pyramids” is probably misguided.
C. Clearly, however, the loss of gang leaders may cause great disruption of activities,
especially if rival contenders begin killing each other for the top positions.
D. Organised crime offers such vast profits that new gangs appear as soon as old ones are
put away. The anomalies of the global marketplace - rich alongside poor; wide variations
in national laws and regulations and the price of goods (such as petrol, cigarettes and
alcohol); legal bans on goods or services in wide demand (such as drugs, gambling or
prostitution); and the wide availability of arms in the post-Cold War environment – offer
numerous opportunities to organised crime.
E. According to the UN, the drugs trade alone is reckoned to generate revenue of $ 400
billion a year. Such huge sums make it possible for the traffickers to bribe almost anyone
in their path. The nature of operations has changed too, with numerous gangs operating
across borders and using advanced technology (such as encrypted computers) to pursue
and conceal their activities. The weaponry available to some of these groups is of
paramilitary grade. No form of potential market is ignored, nothing is taboo.
F. “The scale of the profits from drug trafficking and other activities of organised crime
is such that it requires complex international banking arrangements. The proceeds of
most crime come in cash, whereas most commercial transactions are conducted by paper
(cheques, bank drafts etc.) or plastic card. Turning “dirty money” into clean money
(laundering) has thus become a major industry of its own.
H. The Internet has made the distribution of pornographic material a global industry,
offering the most bizarre sexual entertainment at the push of a few keys. Much of the
trade is linked to organised crime, which has a long history of peddling sex through
prostitution and pornography. Whereas the traditional sex industry operated with cash
and anonymity, Internet sales rely on credit cards and e-mails- thus giving sophisticated
gangs a pathway into new forms of exploitation through credit card extortion and
blackmail.
Many brothels are controlled by organised crime, especially in large cities. One of the
ugliest aspects of this business is the increasing number of young women who are forced
through poverty, drug addiction or physical intimidation to embark upon a life of
prostitution against their will.
I. The common theme of most criminal activities is the fulfilment of a strong market
demand which cannot be met by legitimate business – because it is unethical, illegal, or
too costly. Organised crime also searches for weaknesses in government or business
systems so that cash payments can be diverted. East European gangs, long stifled by
communism, have turned out to be especially good at this. For example, Russian
emigrants living in the USA devised lucrative scams in gasoline taxes and health care
payments – more sophisticated forms of organised crime than the traditional activities of
extortion, loan-sharking gambling and prostitution.
J. Society is much kinder to white-collar criminals who steal millions in financial fraud
than to bank robbers who threaten the cashier and run off with a few thousand. Physical
violence upsets the citizenry far more than corporate theft. A petty crook is scorned,
while a millionaire fraudster may consort with princes. These oddities of human ethics
have enabled some very big crooks to move in the corridors of power. As long as the
“dirty business” is kept out of sight, all is well.
Why do these aims have a business, social and political angle as well as a law-
enforcement one?
How much do you think business investment depends on social and political stability?
Now complete the text about SECI with an appropriate adjective or past-participle
selected from the box. The first letter(s) have been given to make it a bit easier!
Activity 4 Read the text and translate the underlined items into English
Justitia din Timis a dovedit ieri, inca o data, (1) faptul ca legea nu reprezinta altceva
decat un lucru de care se poate face abstractie atunci cand interesele o cer. Ieri,
Tribunalul Timis (2) a dat sentinta in cazul cunoscut in presa sub numele de cod "Tabla
de sah". Va reamintim ca, in 6 iunie a.c., (3) o ampla operatiune a ofiterilor din cadrul
Centrului Zonal de Combatere a Crimei Organizate si Antidrog Timisoara s-a soldat cu
cea mai mare captura de cocaina din Romania inregistrata in acest an - 2,03 kg,
echivalentul a aproximativ 20.000 de doze, (4) a caror valoare de piata este de 6 miliarde
de lei. Patru traficanti au fost arestati, iar (5) al cincilea a fost dat in urmarire
internationala, fiind disparut fara urma. Dosarul a ajuns la Tribunalul Timis, cauza fiind
judecata de vicepresedintele acestei institutii, Ioan Jivan. (6) La finalul audierilor,
judecatorul a amanat de mai multe ori pronuntarea sentintei. Ieri, aceasta a fost facuta
publica. Gage Olimpiu, Bot Walter, Mladenovici Dumitru si Bachici Miodrag au fost
condamnati la 14 ani de inchisoare pentru trafic cu droguri de mare risc. Cu toate
acestea, in mod suspect, (7) judecatorul l-a achitat pe cel dovedit a fi capul retelei, Alexa
Claudiu, de 24 de ani, cetatean roman cu domiciliul in Canada. In timpul anchetei, unul
dintre cei arestati, Bot, a recunoscut, inclusiv in fata instantei, ca drogurile pe care
trebuia sa le vanda le-a primit de la Alexa. De asemenea, listingurile telefonice au
dovedit faptul ca, inainte de momentul tranzactiei celor doua kilograme de cocaina,
Alexa a tinut in permanenta legatura pe telefonul mobil cu Gage. (8) Alexa a fost retinut
de politistii antidrog in comuna Giroc, acolo unde s-a realizat tranzactia. Imediat dupa
retinerea lui Alexa, oamenii sai de incredere au oferit nu mai putin de 100.000 de
dolari pentru ca barbatul sa fie scos din dosar. Prin sentinta de ieri, Alexa a fost pus in
libertate, (9) avand posibilitatea sa se faca nevazut. Afacerile cu droguri in familia Alexa
nu sunt o noutate, fratele acestuia fiind condamnat in anii '80 in Germania, pentru trafic
cu heroina alba. Practic, sentinta de ieri a judecatorului Jivan (10) anuleaza toata munca
depusa de procurori si politisti timp de cateva luni de zile. Vicepresedintele Tribunalului
Timis nu este la prima sentinta cel putin dubioasa. In urma cu cateva luni, cotidianul
Adevarul a dezvaluit faptul ca judecatorul Ioan Jivan a dispus punerea in libertate a lui
Cornel Urcan, fostul director al hotelului "Continental" din Timisoara, arestat intr-un
dosar cu prejudicii de miliarde de lei. Ulterior punerii in libertate, (11) Urcan a fost
reincarcerat in urma deciziei Curtii de Apel, Timisoara. Sentinta de ieri a Tribunalului
Timis, continua seria achitarilor dubioase in cazul traficantilor de droguri. In urma cu
cativa ani, Albu Elena, coordonatoarea unei retele internationale de heroina, a fost pusa
in libertate, disparand fara urma. Cand a fost condamnata la ani grei de inchisoare,
femeia era departe. Surse din lumea interlopa sustin ca traficantii de droguri vor repurta o
noua victorie (12) impotriva celor care incearca sa stopeze flagelul mortii albe la Sibiu.
Acolo se pregateste achitarea membrilor unei alte retele de traficanti de cocaina, condusa
de Dan Emil.
Dragos BOTA
“Adevarul” 07 November 2002
Exercise 8 National Criminal Intelligence Service helps jail five men on £2.5
million drugs seizure in Lincolnshire and Leeds
Listen to the report from October 2002 and complete the information
Total of defendants
From which towns?
Drugs involved
Police forces/agencies
involved
Pleas at trial
Verdicts
Range of sentences From to years
Charges Possession and ________________ to ___________
Hiding place for drugs
Exercise 9
Complete the list based on vocabulary items from the listening text. Use a dictionary if
you are unsure.
VERB NOUN
1. to supply a _____________ of heroin
2. __________________ surveillance
3. to plead _____________
4. __________________ a package (of information)
5. to seize a ______________ of drugs
6. to originate ______________
7. to target the main ______________ is drug dealers
8. __________________ with intent to / (with the intention to)
9. to disrupt _______________
10. to fuel _______________
Exercise 10 Put in the best form of the passive to complete the text below.
National Crime Squad and NCIS uncover multi-million pound drugs factory
on East Sussex Farm
National Crime Squad detectives today (18 July 2002) discovered one of the UK's
biggest ever illicit amphetamine factories at an isolated farm in East Sussex. National
Criminal Intelligence Service experts from the Synthetic Drugs Unit are now debriefing
the site*, and believe it gives new intelligence on current techniques in amphetamine
production.
It (1) (believe) _____________that in the factory, which was in production at the time of
the raid, up to 20kg. of heroin (2) (produce) _______________ drug each week for some
time, with a potential street value profit of up to £1 million a week.
Three people (two men in their forties and a woman in her thirties) all British, (3) (arrest)
____________________at 1.30 p.m. today. The men (4) (arrest) ___________ in
Streatham, South London - one in a car in Grayswood Road, the other at a house in the
same street. The woman was arrested simultaneously in the factory in a specially
converted building on a farm property at Hurst Green, East Sussex, which was actually
producing amphetamine as detectives entered.
The building (5) (make) __________________ safe. Due to the isolated location, there
had never been any actual danger to local residents or passers-by over the past months.
Noxious fumes, waste deposits (A) in and immediately outside the building, and the
ever-present danger of explosion, made it a hazardous place for anyone working there or
entering.
A spokesman for the NCIS Synthetic Drugs Unit said: "This is a significant discovery for
NCIS, and will tell us much more about production methods in the UK, which is still the
highest consumer of amphetamines in Europe. (B) NCIS was aware of the individuals
involved and are delighted that they (6) (catch) ____________________.
"There is much to learn from the factory site about illicit laboratories, the way that
manufacturing equipment (7) (use) _____________ and the methods utilised by the
chemists (C) behind this sort of major drugs conspiracy."
Experts from the Forensic Science Service (FSS) who helped examine the building,
described it as one of the most sophisticated and productive (D) such plants they have
seen.
The operation (8) (carry out) ____________________ by detectives from the Slough
Branch office of the National Crime Squad with assistance from NCIS, the FSS, the
Metropolitan Police and Sussex Police. The three people arrested (9) (interview)
___________________by National Crime Squad officers at police stations in South
London and Sussex.
• debriefing the site (!) Usually “to debrief” has persons as direct object.
e.g. The officer debriefed his men after the incident.
B) What do you notice about the verb agreement (i.e. use of singular/plural)?
Is it incorrect to say or write sentences like this…?
The government has announced its programme of reforms for the police service.
They will present the main proposals to the House of Commons next week.
1. (B) The American DEA, Drug Enforcement Agency, (has/have) had a lot of success
in (its/their) fight against heroin production in Afghanistan.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
X
_______________________________________________________________
Many substances used in illicit drug production are also used in the chemical industry.
Categories 2 and 3 contain chemicals which are in much more common use, such as
quantities and controls are correspondingly lighter. Full details of the chemicals and
Activity 8
Read the text that you heard earlier
National Criminal Intelligence Service intelligence today (3 October) helped jail four
Lincolnshire men and a Leeds man for a total of 55.5 years for their part in the supply of
£2.5 million worth of heroin and cannabis which was seized in a joint operation between
the National Crime Squad and Lincolnshire Police.The men were sentenced at Lincoln
Crown Court after three had pleaded guilty and two were found guilty after trial. The
arrests followed a protracted surveillance operation which originated in March 2001 in
work carried out by NCIS in their North East and South East regions. The package was
then passed to the National Crime Squad for action. On 19 May 2001 the men were
arrested when two articulated lorries were stopped in Spalding and Leeds. Searches
revealed 18 kilos of heroin in the lorry in Spalding and 110 kilos of cannabis in one in
Leeds - the total estimated street value of the drugs was £2.5 million. Three men were
arrested on the A52
at the Roman Café near Grantham, and the other two were arrested in Leeds. Both
vehicles had recently arrived in the UK from mainland Europe. The operation to seize
the drugs and make the arrests was carried out by the National Crime Squad's Calder
branch and Lincolnshire Police, with assistance from NCIS. Armed National Crime
Squad officers were present when the lorry was stopped in Spalding, but no shots were
fired.
Details of the defendants are as follows:
Nicholas HOWARTH, aged 34, of Queens Road, Spalding, Lincs. - Possession with
Intent to Supply Heroin - pleaded guilty - sentenced to 19 years.
Martin WILKINSON, aged 35, also of Queens Road, Spalding - Possession with Intent
to Supply Heroin - was found guilty - sentenced to 8 years.
Richard THORNLEY, aged 29, of Main Road, Wigtoft, Lincs - Possession with Intent to
Supply Heroin - was found guilty - sentenced to 18 years.
Simon FAGG, aged 34, of Amberton Crescent, Gipton, Leeds - Possession with Intent to
Supply Cannabis - pleaded guilty - sentenced to 6 years.
William LAMBERT, aged 30, of Neville Avenue, Spalding, - Possession with intent to
Supply Heroin - pleaded guilty part way through the trial - sentenced to 4 years.
Exercise 10
Match the word with its definition
1. to fuel A. to focus on/ aim at
2. to the tune of … B. collaboration; cooperation
3. to peddle C. to make something worse by providing more
4. partnership D. to the quantity (amount/sum) of …
5. to target E. to sell (usually illegally)
Activity 9
Drug slang
This area of criminal sub-culture has produced a lot of slang expressions, some dating
back to the early years of the 20th Century.
Unscramble the letters to get the right answers
You may know songs which warn of the danger of drugs – a well-known “old” song is
“ Needle of Death” by Bert Jansch or a song “Sam Stone” about an American Vietnam
veteran who became addicted during the war. Other songs may seem to “glorify” the use
of drugs and most people say that, for example, “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” by
the Beatles is a song about the “pleasant” side of L.S.D. Other songs came from the
“hippy” period, such as “Eight Miles High” by the Byrds or “Mr Tambourine Man” by
Bob Dylan, but more modern groups like Alice Cooper, Nirvana or Marilyn Manson
have allusions to drug use. Perhaps it would be interesting to look at the words of
some songs to identify the references.
CRACK COCAINE