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Date: November 22, 2024 Fri

Time: 12:16 pm

Results for outlaw motorcycle gangs

3 results found

Author: Steyee, Jimmy

Title: Montana Gang Threat Assessment 2011

Summary: Little empirical research has been done on gangs in rural areas. This research identified certain street gangs and outlaw motorcycle gangs in Montana. It is also found that these gangs are typically involved in street level drugs sales, property crime, and assault to a lesser extent. This research also lends limited support to the multiple marginality framework when examined at the macro level based on a limited number of county level variables. Areas for future research and policy recommendations are also discussed.

Details: Helena, MT: Montana Board of Crime Control, 2011. 36p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed May 18, 2011 at: http://www.mbcc.mt.gov/data/SAC/Gang/Final_MGTA.pdf

Year: 2011

Country: United States

URL: http://www.mbcc.mt.gov/data/SAC/Gang/Final_MGTA.pdf

Shelf Number: 121741

Keywords:
Gangs (Montana)
Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs
Rural Areas

Author: Queensland. Taskforce on Organised Crime Legislation

Title: Taskforce on Organised Crime Legislation: Report

Summary: The purpose and the work of the Taskforce was contained in Terms of Reference signed by the Attorney-General and Minister for Justice and Minister for Training and Skills, the Honorable Yvette D'Ath, on 7 June 2015. Those Terms of Reference are Attachment 1. They initially called for the Taskforce to report on 15 December 2015. Later, when its chair was asked to simultaneously review earlier anti-OMCG, anti-organised crime legislation - the Criminal Organisations Act 2009 (Qld) (COA) - that date was extended to 31 March 2016. A primary purpose of the Taskforce under the Terms was to review and make recommendations about legislation introduced and passed in the Queensland Legislative Assembly in 2013. Those laws (the 2013 suite) were represented to target organised crime but were principally directed at outlaw motorcycle gangs (OMCGs) and their members. The Terms required the Taskforce to consider the repeal and replacement of the 2013 suite (whether by substantial amendment or new legislation) but also, in doing so, to consider whether the provisions of the 2013 suite were effectively facilitating the successful detection, investigation, prevention and deterrence of organised crime. They also asked it to develop a new 'serious organised crime' offence, with mandatory penalties. The Taskforce took this to mean that it was neither compelled nor constrained in its consideration of the 2013 legislation (ie, if the Taskforce considered that the 2013 suite did not require amendment then the Terms of Reference did not prevent such a recommendation being made). The Taskforce also took the Terms to mean that, in light of the range and depth of expertise amongst its members, it was charged with considering the 2013 suite in the overall context of anti-organised crime legislation and, if possible, advising on the form that legislation should take. Members accepted that responsibility and developed a new legislative package which it called the Organised Crime Framework.

Details: Brisbane: Department of Justice and Attorney-General, 2016. 471p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed May 3, 2016 at: http://www.justice.qld.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0017/463022/report-of-the-taskforce-on-organised-crime-legislation.pdf

Year: 2016

Country: Australia

URL: http://www.justice.qld.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0017/463022/report-of-the-taskforce-on-organised-crime-legislation.pdf

Shelf Number: 138899

Keywords:
Organized Crime
Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs

Author: Benelux Secretariat General

Title: Tackling Crime Together: The Benelux and North Rhine-Westphalia Initiative on the Administrative Approach to Crime Related to Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs in the Euregion Meuse-Rhine. Program Report

Summary: In September 2015, Belgium presented a proposal to the Standing Committee on Operational Cooperation on Internal Security (COSI) within the EU, in order to put the administrative approach, in particular with regard to the issue of outlaw motorcycle gangs (OMCG), on the agenda of the Network of Contact Points on the Administrative Approach to Prevent and Fight Organised Crime. At present, the Dutch EU Council Presidency 2016 is working towards the further development of an integrated approach to organised crime, focusing on the introduction of administrative measures and information exchange between administrative authorities and law enforcement agencies both at Member States and EU level. In the ISEC funded study (published in 2015) 'Administrative measures to prevent and tackle crime' the following definition of the administrative approach was used: "an administrative approach to serious and organized crime involves preventing the facilitation of illegal activities by denying criminal' the use of the legal administrative infrastructure as well as coordinated interventions 'working apart together' to disrupt and repress serious and organized crime and public order problems". The fight against organised crime is not only a major concern for police forces and judicial authorities; local and supra-local administrations and tax and inspection agencies also have an important role to play in detecting, undermining and repressing a wide range of organised crime phenomena, like corruption, money laundering, fraud, human trafficking and forced labor. Although classic methods used by investigation services within police services and judicial authorities remain essential, Member States in the European Union should introduce a more intensive monitoring and screening, a more restrictive permit policy and more repressive administrative operations, in order to maintain a fair financial, economic and social system in European cities and municipalities. Administrative actions against organised crime do not replace police operations or criminal trials, but they act as complementary, and they strengthen the law enforcement system. We also want to underline that an administrative approach to organised crime unequivocally implies a repressive as well as a preventive component. Pressure points to be considered for the expansion of an administrative approach to organised crime, in EU Member States as well as at the EU level, are for instance privacy intrusion concerns, professional confidentiality and competence restrictions.

Details: Brussels: General Secretariat of the Benelux Union, 2016. 32p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed February 11, 2017 at: http://www.benelux.int/files/7014/5856/5150/487-Crime-Uk-web.pdf

Year: 2016

Country: Europe

URL: http://www.benelux.int/files/7014/5856/5150/487-Crime-Uk-web.pdf

Shelf Number: 144827

Keywords:
Motorcycle Gangs
Organized Crime
Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs