Why
Do Rich White People Get Away with Crime?
by C.A. Matthews
Editor's note: The pronoun "they" is being used occasionally in this article to keep the gender of the "rich white person" anonymous.
Why
do rich white people get away with crime? Why do they only get a tiny
slap on the wrist whenever they get caught in the act of committing a
crime? Anyone else—especially the poor and people of color (or
POC)--would get the book thrown at them for the same offense. It
ruins POC's lives and livelihoods, but rich white people (RWP for
short) are able to commit crimes and go back to business as usual. It
makes no sense. It keeps me awake at night.
I've
had the unfortunate experience to encounter just such a crime. I
won't name names or give too many specifics here because I realize
that I'm not a rich white person. (I'm far from rich, and I'm
partially non-white.) RWP could use the current justice system
against me for calling out their despicable behavior. So, instead
I will give a general outline of the crime and how it has affected me
and others. Then, I will give a call to action so we can all take
steps to stop this sort of thing from ever happening again.
One
day a certain rich white person
was given the authority to disburse money from
several different state Medicaid grant funds in a public institution of
higher learning in which they worked. At some point, this person
decided to give some of the
grant money to a relative's private non-profit without going through
proper channels or disclosing their conflict of interest.
Now, this
non-secular non-profit, among other things, runs some social programs to help
feed the area poor and help school kids, particularly students of
color. One could argue this was a good place to use the grant money
for the benefit
of the community. There's no disputing that the non-profit's
programming was worthy of financial support. However, apparently
giving grant money to this non-profit was never okayed by the school.
Possibly the grant money wasn't designated for these types of
programs, or this decision was not one that should have been made
solely by the rich white person.
You
might think this is a "slap on the wrist" type of
infraction at first, but it gets worse. This "misuse of funds"
didn't happen once
or in small amounts. The rich white person
continued to take more and more money from the institution's Medicaid
grant funds and to give it to their relative's non-profit over and
over again over a period of several years. It added up—big time.
The
institution eventually caught on to
what
was
happening
and
the state ran an audit. The amount of missing money is… Well, it's
more than many of us could ever dream of making in over a decade
working full-time at minimum wage or even at $15/hour. And not all of the stolen money
went to the relative's non-profit programs—some of it went toward
purchasing personal items, such as expensive fashion accessories.
The rich white person
was eventually fired from their lofty position at the school and
charged with several
felony counts of misappropriation of funds/theft in office. According
to state law, each count could have landed this person
in jail for many years and restitution more than likely would have
been ordered.
To
make a long story short, the rich white person
went to court but did not go to jail. It's unclear at this time
whether any of the grant money taken will be paid back/has been paid
back or not. To add icing to the cake of white privilege, the rich white person
did not lose their license to practice their esteemed profession in
the state where these felonies were committed.
The
judge did the defendant a further favor by making it so they won’t even have a
criminal record if they promise they won't commit a similar crime
again. It's a type of adjudication that's usually reserved for young adults who commit a serious crime but seem to have a promising
future. Judges can use their discretion and apply this "diversion
program" to help kids out so they can grow up without a
permanent black mark on their record. (Suffice it to say, this rich white person
is much older than eighteen, and it is
rare for this program to be implemented for anyone other than
young adults.)
I
dare you now to go back and substitute "poor person of color"
for "rich white person"
in this story and tell me how you think the story would end. You and
I both know it would end very
differently! A poor person of color would be sentenced to jail time
and definitely would have been forced to pay back all the money
they'd stolen plus interest. Their criminal record would be made
public, not expunged, and it would destroy their chances of finding
decent employment ever again.
What
really drives a stake into my heart is that this money was not
stolen from an obscenely wealthy capitalist. It wasn't stolen from a
corporation that treats its workers with contempt by not providing
health insurance. No, this money came from We the People, the
taxpayers, and it was stolen from a public institution that had been
given it through a state Medicaid program. It was the public's
money—not a private corporation's or individual's money. There were
no "Robin Hood" antics going on here.
I
worked as a Medicaid caseworker, so I know how much Medicaid programs
can help struggling families, especially poor families of color. The rich white person
decided to steal from us, the taxpayers, via a grant funded by a
government program that helps the poor. Stealing from a government program that
helps the poor to "help" other poor people doesn't make
sense, unless you think of how giving large sums of money to a
private non-profit might make it appear "successful" in the
eyes of others. A successful non-profit usually has an easier time
raising more money from donors than a
not-quite-as-successful-looking one.
It seems clear to me: The rich white person
who took this grant money wasn't motivated to help poor people
in particular. They were more interested in helping their relative's
non-profit look successful. They might have even done it to elevate their own status in the larger community, by being seen as "savior" of sorts through their "generous donations."
Now that the grant money gravy train is gone, will the lack of regular infusions of stolen money cause the non-profit to eventually close its doors?
What will happen to the social programs that the stolen money funded?
Will donors who thought the non-profit was successful in
its own right quit
donating to it? Will these programs disappear? What happens to the
people—the poor people, the people of color—who were helped out
by those programs? Who knows?
Will
the public institution
lose all access to federal and state grant monies in the future
because an employee easily helped themselves to it? Will they be
penalized by the government because of the theft? Will a lack of
government grant monies in the future hurt funding programs to help
students at this school? It's possible.
The rich white person
had a great lawyer and got off easy. They got to go back to their
existence pretty much as it was before they decided to commit these
felonies. Their future looks relatively rosy compared to the poor
people who benefited from the non-profit's social programs. The rich white person
won't be missing any meals or going without food tonight.
Why do RWP get away with crime? Because they can and they do.
I'm
telling this story because I want you to know that this is not an isolated incident. RWP
get off easy more often than not in court if and when they're even
caught and charged with a crime in the first place. This wasn't a "victimless
white-collar crime." Real
social programs that helped real people are now at risk and a public higher learning institution has had its reputation tarnished--all because a
person of means enjoyed playing around with the public's purse.
The American justice system doesn't need to be reformed--it needs to be totally obliterated. It's corrupt to
its core. It's run by RWP for RWP who don't give a shit about the
rest of us struggling to survive. It should be completely reworked until it's actually about delivering justice and not
about letting rich white people have their way at the expense of
others.
You
might think I'm being unfair to this particular rich white person,
that this person might have some sort of mental illness or an
addiction that caused them to steal the grant money. I'm not unkind.
I know there are many people who need mental health care and either
cannot afford it or are too prideful to seek help. I've worked
in drug rehab/psych wards and have encountered these individuals many
times before.
But
I also know that the law holds addicts and mentally ill persons
accountable for their criminal actions—especially poor mentally ill people and
addicts of color. If a poor drunk runs over and kills a person, that
drunk goes to prison for vehicular manslaughter. The legal definition
of sanity only considers if the person was able to
understand what they did was wrong according to the law. I truly
believe in this case this rich white person
knew that taking the grant money was stealing, and that stealing is
wrong, but they decided to do it anyway.
This
is why we need to tear down and reconstruct our justice system from the ground up.
We need to make it clear that no one gets a free "get out of
jail card" simply because they belong to a privileged group. Your
RWP connections do not grant you special privileges when it comes to
crime sentencing, either. You are to be judged for your crimes the same as the poor
and POC.
If
anything, reparations should be made to the local POC community.
For too long, RWP have enjoyed abusing the privileges of their
high-status positions. They should pay double the restitution for all
the monies and properties they've appropriated for their own use from
the powerless. The rich white person
in this story should pay double what they stole—once to the school
they took the grant money from, and then again to the non-profit
(under new management?) so that it can continue helping the poor uninterrupted and without the taint of stolen money.
I'm
not the only American tired of rich white people getting away with
crimes—just look at the huge outcry and numerous protests in the
last year since George Floyd and other African-Americans have been
brutally murdered. It's time arrogant rich assholes are forced to
pay back what they took from the rest of us. It's time RWP tasted
justice the same as the rest of us.
I
will be hitting the law books hard this coming term, learning what I
can do to help bring justice to asylum-seekers denied due process.
Each of us has to get out of our comfort zone and do our part. We
need to fight together to defeat the scourge of RWP justice once
and for all. RWP justice must die so true justice can be reborn. Only then will freedom ring for all, not just a few.
***
I am overjoyed - this week, four families will be reunited years
after they were ripped apart by the Trump administration’s cruel and
sadistic child separation policy, including a toddler who was just three
years old when he was taken away.
This is a historic milestone to unwinding the cruelty, hate and chaos the previous administration left behind, and to
know that these parents will be able to hold their kids in their arms
again after years of agonizing separation means everything.
These families should NEVER have been separated in the first place.
It is our moral obligation to re-unite them, but the political reality
is that these reunifications are the result of the tireless work of
Immigrant Defenders, Las Americas, Al Otro Lado, CLINIC, and so many
other fearless advocates, attorneys, and activists that makeup the
Families Belong Together coalition.
The four families reuniting this week is and must only be the
beginning. Hundreds of children remain separated. So much work remains
to be done, not just for these families, but for the millions of
families who live in fear of being separated by our broken immigration
system.
Reunification is just the first step, the truth is that healing from
this trauma will be a long journey. That's why we're calling on Congress
to pass the Families Belong Together Act to make sure these
families have the resources they need to heal.
Will you take two minutes to contact your Members of Congress and ask them to co-sponsor the Families Belong Together Act?
Our movement has fought so hard to get here, but we won't stop until
every child is reunited. We'll continue our work with the Biden
administration's Family Reunification Task Force, will keep supporting
our partners, and will keep you posted on what I hope will be many more joyous reunifications to come.
With joy, determination and gratitude,
Paola Luisi, Director
Families Belong Together
***
From Roots Action:
The
Israeli government is threatening mass evictions of non-Jews and
brutalizing protesters in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East
Jersusalem.
At least three U.S. senators have
spoken out. All 100 U.S. senators should do so immediately.
Click here to quickly email your senators.
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Aryeh King, a settler leader and deputy mayor of Jerusalem, said, as reported by the New York Times, that the policy of evicting people from their homes of many years "is the way to secure the future of Jerusalem as a Jewish capital for the Jewish people."
Videos of people losing their homes
are fueling protests, and the Israeli militarized police are attacking
protesters. On Friday, according to Haaretz, 205 Palestinians and
17 police officers were injured. On Saturday, the Palestinian Red
Crescent said, 64 Palestinians, including five childen and one infant,
were wounded, many by sponge-tipped bullets and stun grenades. They
added that Israeli police prevented ambulances from reaching the site.
Senators Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Chris Murphy have
called on the Israeli government to cease eviction efforts.
"The forced removal of long-time
Palestinian residents in Sheikh Jarrah is abhorrent and unacceptable,"
Warren tweeted, saying that the Biden administration must make clear to
Israel that these evictions are illegal.
"The United States must speak out
strongly against the violence by government-allied Israeli extremists in
East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and make clear that the evictions of
Palestinian families must not go forward," Sanders said.
Click here to urge more senators to speak out.
A memo by the National Lawyers Guild this week urged the Biden
administration to take steps including:
- Relocate the U.S. Embassy from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv;
- Reverse the Trump
administration's repudiation of a 1978 State Department legal opinion
declaring Israel's settler colonies in the occupied West Bank to be
illegal;
- Rescind the previous
administration's rule requiring "Made in Israel" labeling on goods
produced in the unlawful settlements, as well as former President Donald
Trump's formal recognition of Israel's illegal annexation of Syria's
Golan Heights;
- Reinstate aid to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency;
- Call for an immediate end to Israel's 15-year closure and blockade of Gaza;
- Refrain from further interference in International Criminal Court proceedings and consider ratifying the Rome Statute;
- Reverse Trump's order falsely conflating criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism; and
- Affirm that boycotts for
human rights such as the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS)
movement "are a form of highly protected speech under the U.S.
Constitution."
Senator Warren has proposed
putting at least some conditions on the billions of dollars the U.S.
Congress gives to the Israeli government for weapons every year.
Click here to take action.
After signing the petition, please use the tools on the next webpage to share it with your friends.
This work is only possible with your financial support. Please chip in $3 now.
-- The RootsAction.org Team
Background:
>> Haaretz: "Democrats Urge U.S. to Act Against Israel's 'Abhorrent' East Jerusalem Evictions"
>> Common Dreams: "National Lawyers Guild Urges Biden to Align US Israel-Palestine Policy With International Law"
>> Al Jazeera: "What Can Stop Palestinians Being Evicted from Sheikh Jarrah?"
>> New York Times: "Evictions in Jerusalem Become Focus of Israeli-Palestinian Conflict"
>> The Intercept: "Elizabeth Warren Suggests U.S. Explore Conditional Aid to Israel" |