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protection$64753$ - vertaling naar grieks

EXTORTION SCHEME
Protection money; Protection payment; Protection payments; Krysha; Protection racketeering; Protection fees; Protection rackets

protection      
n. προστασία, περιφρούρηση, προάσπιση
civil defense         
  • The international distinctive sign of civil defense, defined by the rules of [[international humanitarian law]] and to be used as a [[protective sign]]
  • Thunderbolt 1003]] siren.
  • Israel Home Front Command mobile application screen, alerting Tel Aviv citizens a minute before a Hamas missile attack on 2021, May 13 afternoon.
  • British [[First World War]] poster, bringing attention to the threat posed by aerial bombardment from German [[Zeppelin]]s.
  • Jewish Civil Defense group in [[Jerusalem]] in 1942. The group served as ARP Fire Wardens, equipped with water hoses and buckets, some wearing FW (Fire Watcher) [[Brodie helmet]]s. Men are in uniform while women wear plain clothes. Composer [[Josef Tal]] stands next to the woman with a black sweater.
  • Air Raid Warden]] testing his equipment in Brisbane in October 1942.
  • Civil Defense literature such as [[Survival Under Atomic Attack]] was common during the Cold War Era.
  • fr}} Daniele Mariani, [http://www.swissinfo.ch/fre/a-chacun-son-bunker/7485678 "À chacun son bunker"], [[Swissinfo]], 23 October 2009 (page visited on 5 August 2015).</ref>
  • siren]] control box in [[Kansas]], US.
  • [[Anderson shelter]]s were widely distributed in the United Kingdom by civil defense authorities, in preparation for aerial bombardment.
  • date=2015-01-12 }}"</ref>
  • The old [[United States civil defense]] logo. The triangle emphasized the 3-step Civil Defense philosophy used before the foundation of FEMA and [[Comprehensive Emergency Management]].
PROTECTION OF THE CITIZENS OF A STATE (GENERALLY NON-COMBATANTS) FROM MILITARY ATTACK
Civil Defense; Civil protection; Civil Defence; Civil defence; Civil Contingencies; Civil Protection; Civil contingency; Defense of State; Armed civil defence; Armed civil defense
πολιτική άμυνα
one and the same         
2009 TELEVISION FILM DIRECTED BY ALLISON LIDDI-BROWN
One and the Same; One And The Same; Princess protection program; One and the Same (song); One And The Same (Song); Princess Protection Programme; Carter masion; Costa luna
ίδιος ακριβώς

Definitie

consumer protection laws
n. almost all states and the federal government have enacted laws and set up agencies to protect the consumer (the retail purchasers of goods and services) from inferior, adulterated, hazardous or deceptively advertised products, and deceptive or fraudulent sales practices. Federal statutes and regulations govern mail fraud, wholesome poultry and meat, misbranding and adulteration of food and cosmetics, truth in lending, false advertising, the soundness of banks, securities sales, standards of housing materials, flammable fabrics, and various business practices. The Magnuson-Moss Act (1973) sets minimum standards for product warranties, makes a company that financed the sale responsible for product defects, and creates liability (financial responsibility) for "implied" warranties (when the circumstances show that a warranty of lack of defects was intended) as well as express (specific) warranties. Mail fraud may include fake contests, "low-ball" price traps (bait and switch), supposed credit for referrals of your friends, phoney home improvement loans with huge final payments, and swamp land sales. Some states' laws regulate and give some protection against high-pressure door-to-door sales, false labeling, unsolicited merchandise, abusive collection practices, misleading advertising and referral and promotional sales. Almost all states have agencies set up to actively protect the consumer. See also: bait and switch fraud implied warranty product liability securities

Wikipedia

Protection racket

A protection racket is a type of racket and a scheme of organized crime perpetrated by a potentially hazardous organized crime group that generally guarantees protection outside the sanction of the law to another entity or individual from violence, robbery, ransacking, arson, vandalism, and other such threats, in exchange for payments at regular intervals. Each payment is called "protection money" or a "protection fee". Depending on strictness of the protection racket's policy, each payment is either due: once a day, once a week, or once every two weeks. An organized crime group determines an affordable or reasonable fee by negotiating with each of its payers, to ensure that each payer can pay the fee on a regular basis and on time. Protections rackets can vary in terms of their levels of sophistication or organization; it is not uncommon for their operations to emulate the structures or methods used by tax authorities within legitimate governments to collect taxes from taxpayers.

The perpetrators of a protection racket may protect vulnerable targets from other dangerous individuals and groups or may simply offer to refrain from themselves carrying out attacks on the targets, and usually both of these forms of protection are implied in the racket. Due to the frequent implication that the racketeers may contribute to harming the target upon failure to pay, the protection racket is generally considered a form of extortion. In some instances, the main potential threat to the target may be caused by the same group that offers to solve it in return for payment, but that fact may sometimes be concealed in order to ensure continual patronage and funding of the crime syndicate by the coerced party.

The protection racket sells physical security. Through the credible threat of violence, the racketeers deter both third-party criminals and people in their own criminal organization from swindling, robbing, injuring, sabotaging, or otherwise harming their clients. The racket often occurs in situations and places where criminal threats to certain businesses, entities, or individuals are not effectively prevented or addressed by the prevailing system of law and order or governance, or in cases of inadequate protection by the law for certain ethnic or socioeconomic groups. Protection rackets tend to form in markets in which the law enforcement cannot be counted on to provide legal protection, because of incompetence (as in weak, corrupt, or failed states), illegality (when the targeted entity is involved in black markets), and/or because forms of government distrust exist among the entities involved. Hence, protection rackets are common in places or territories, where criminal organizations resemble de facto authorities, or parallel governments. Sicily, Italy is a great example of this phenomenon, where the Cosa Nostra collects protection money locally and resembles a de facto authority, or a parallel government.

Protection rackets are often indistinguishable in practice from extortion rackets, and generally distinguishable from social service and private security by the degree of implied threat; the racketeers themselves may threaten and attack businesses, technological infrastructure, and citizens if the payments are not made. A distinction is possible between a "pure" extortion protection racket, in which the racketeers might agree only not to attack a business or entity, and a broader protection racket offering some real private security in addition to such extortion. In either case, the racketeers generally agree to defend a business or individual from any attack by either themselves or third parties (other criminal gangs). In reality, the distinction between the two types of protection rackets is dubious, because in either case extortion racketeers may have to defend their clients against rival gangs to maintain their profits. By corollary, criminal gangs may have to maintain control of territories (turfs), as local businesses may collapse if forced to pay for protection from too many rackets, which then hurts all parties involved.

Certain scholars, such as Diego Gambetta, classify criminal organizations engaged in protection racketeering as "mafia", as the racket is popular with both the Sicilian Mafia and Italian-American Mafia.