We study a simple law-enforcement model where the organizational structure of a criminal group is endogenous and determined jointly with the amnesty granted to whistleblowers. We allow criminals to choose between a horizontal (partnership) and a vertical (hierarchical) organization structure, and we study how this choice affects the optimal leniency granted by a benevolent Legislator whose aim is to minimize crime. We show that the optimal amnesty with an endogenous organizational choice is less lenient than that granted when the policy targets vertical organizations only. In the equilibrium, partnerships coexist with vertical organizations
Criminal Code stipulates release from criminal liability in the situation when a person actively coo...
In this paper, we modelize a criminal organization as an agency where the Principal and the Agent ha...
This paper explores law enforcement in a federal system to address the reality that the level of det...
Leniency programs reduce sanctions for law violators that self-report. We focus on their ability to ...
Our paper addresses the question of the deterrent effect of a monetary sanction associated to a coll...
This article develops a simple but general criminal decision framework in which individual crime and...
When ‘low-rank’ criminals are offered to cooperate with justice in exchange of judicial leniency, th...
This paper studies the design of optimal enforcement policies with ordered leniency to detect and de...
We study an enforcement model in which, as soon as a Legislator grants an amnesty to low-rank crimin...
We study an enforcement model in which, as soon as a Legislator grants an amnesty to low-rank crimin...
In criminal organizations, diffusing information widely throughout the organization might lead to gr...
We review current methods for calculating fines against cartels in the US and EU, and simulate their...
textabstractWe consider a stylized model of crime and punishment in which the prosecution policy is ...
We develop a simple framework for analyzing the optimal design of leniency programs, which allow car...
In this paper, we take an organizational view of organized crime. In particular, we study the organ...
Criminal Code stipulates release from criminal liability in the situation when a person actively coo...
In this paper, we modelize a criminal organization as an agency where the Principal and the Agent ha...
This paper explores law enforcement in a federal system to address the reality that the level of det...
Leniency programs reduce sanctions for law violators that self-report. We focus on their ability to ...
Our paper addresses the question of the deterrent effect of a monetary sanction associated to a coll...
This article develops a simple but general criminal decision framework in which individual crime and...
When ‘low-rank’ criminals are offered to cooperate with justice in exchange of judicial leniency, th...
This paper studies the design of optimal enforcement policies with ordered leniency to detect and de...
We study an enforcement model in which, as soon as a Legislator grants an amnesty to low-rank crimin...
We study an enforcement model in which, as soon as a Legislator grants an amnesty to low-rank crimin...
In criminal organizations, diffusing information widely throughout the organization might lead to gr...
We review current methods for calculating fines against cartels in the US and EU, and simulate their...
textabstractWe consider a stylized model of crime and punishment in which the prosecution policy is ...
We develop a simple framework for analyzing the optimal design of leniency programs, which allow car...
In this paper, we take an organizational view of organized crime. In particular, we study the organ...
Criminal Code stipulates release from criminal liability in the situation when a person actively coo...
In this paper, we modelize a criminal organization as an agency where the Principal and the Agent ha...
This paper explores law enforcement in a federal system to address the reality that the level of det...