41. The Red Collar Crime League White-collar crime is financially motivated and almost always non-violent. Nobody gets hurt. At least not physically. However, sometimes white-collar criminals like Alex Murdaugh, Nancy Siegel, and Christopher Porco resort to violence to prevent someone from discovering their fraud. So what started as fraud…becomes murder. And that’s when it becomes a red-collar crime. In episode 41, I speak with Frank Perri.
Frank Perri coined the term “Red Collar Crime” and has spent 20 years studying fraud offenders who resort to violence. He worked for 30 years as a criminal trial attorney and is also a Certified Public Accountant and Certified Fraud Examiner. He travels nationally, lecturing on red-collar offenders and predatory fraud offenders. Frank taught graduate courses in forensic accounting at DePaul University in Chicago. He received a law degree from the University of Illinois, an MBA from Case Western Reserve University, and a bachelor’s from Union College. His books and articles include:
THIS EPISODE CONTAINS SUBJECT MATTER THAT MAY BE INAPPROPRIATE FOR SOME AUDIENCES. LISTENER DISCRETION IS ADVISED.
NOTES: The episode transcript is here. All links are at astudyincrime.com. Take our listener survey.
LISTEN: Apple | Spotify Please give us a 5-star rating and review on Apple and Spotify
FOLLOW: @StudyinCrimePod Facebook | X | Instagram | YouTube | LinkedIn
SUPPORT: Buy the book Confessions of a Private Eye on Amazon, Buy me a Dr Pepper at https://buymeacoffee.com/studyincrimepod, or consider giving a one-time or monthly Donation. Your generous donations help produce and grow the show.
A Study in Crime is written and produced by Scott Fulmer, author of the true-crime memoir Confessions of a Private Eye. A veteran private investigator, Scott has spent the last 30 years conducting complex investigations throughout the US. He’s a decorated combat veteran of the Gulf War and lives in the Texas Hill Country near San Antonio.