Immediately after the terrorist attacks of 9/11 a common expression was that "everything is different now." In fundamental ways, many things are different in relation to counterterrorism strategies and the enforcement and administration of criminal justice both at home and abroad.
For example, the local police are now engaged in the "war on terror" in addition to fighting crime, and the FBI - originally devoted to domestic law enforcement - has international field offices today in places like Afghanistan, Indonesia and Uzbekistan. Indeed, large portions of the criminal justice system, the military and the intelligence and security institutions have been reorganized, largely through the Department of Homeland Security, to fight a war on terror that has neither a time frame nor a reliable means of measuring the extent of success or failure in this war.
More importantly, what has fallen below the radar are the connections between these changing legal crime-fighting operations and their effects on the missing war on white-collar and state-corporate crime.
It is these "omissions" in controlling many financial practices from Wall Street to Main Street that may be linked to this country's current economic crisis.
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