Crime

    By CNNMoney

    | 3:20PM 4/30/2012
    Just because you're dead doesn't mean you can't be robbed. Identity thieves steal the personal information of about 2.4 million deceased Americans each year to apply for credit cards, cell phones and anything else requiring a credit check.

    By Catherine Baab-Muguira, The Motley Fool

    | 4:15PM 4/23/2012
    Meet 73-year-old Darlene Mayes, a grandmother from Vinita, Okla., whose late-life career was a doozy: She's accused of running a major marijuana ring across four states. What a way to finance your retirement!

    By Bruce Watson

    | 1:00AM 4/23/2012
    On Tuesday morning, my wife and I discovered our Chase Bank account had been hacked. By that afternoon, I realized we were part of something much bigger. But even a data breach that affected up to 1.5 million accounts is only the tip of the bank fraud iceberg.

    By M. Joy Hayes, Ph.D., The Motley Fool

    | 5:00AM 4/19/2012
    Congressmen, lobbyists, and car salesmen have some of the worst reputations for honesty and ethics, as do business execs, stock brokers and real estate agents. And there's a reason why: The rules of their games are stacked against good behavior.

    By Rich Smith, The Motley Fool

    | 10:05AM 4/16/2012
    When businesspeople make bad bets in America, they're apt to lose money. Make a wrong bet in China, and you may lose more than just cash -- you may lose your life. Meet Chinese entrepreneur Wu Ying.

    By 24/7 Wall St.

    | 9:20AM 4/13/2012
    When times are hard, fraud often gets worse. Americans are under great financial pressure, and there is no shortage of criminals waiting to take advantage of it. 24/7 Wall St. examined the 10 states that had the most per-capita fraud complaints.

    By Eamon Murphy

    | 3:35PM 3/26/2012
    From insider trading to getting ready for life "on the inside" -- The Wall Street Journal reports that convicted white-collar criminals are increasingly paying for prison prep from former inmates.