Abstract:
This final report is part of the Falcone project entitled ‘The Identification and
Prevention of Opportunities that Facilitate Organised Crime’. Four participating
countries, namely Finland, Hungary, Italy and the Netherlands, have each drawn
up a report in which 15 cases of organised crime are described and analysed.
These descriptions are based on data from police files. The goal of this analysis is
to reveal the interfaces between the legitimate and illegitimate environments and
to generate possibilities for preventive action. These indications for possible
preventive interventions are called ‘red flags’. This final report comprises these
‘red flags’ from the four national reports and examines four selected topics in
more depth: the role of public administration and local businesses, the legal
professions, official and informal financial services, and forged official
documents.
The preventive approach is not primarily aimed at the perpetrators of organised
crime, but rather at the facilitating circumstances of organised crime. It addresses
governments, civilians and enterprises and is an attempt to make them feel
responsible for the prevention of organised crime. The message is actually quite
simple: if criminal organisations are able to easily acquire or access resources,
then the number of these resources have to be reduced, or made more difficult to
acquire or access.