“…This conceptualization is advantageous because it is widely accepted within criminology (see Benson & Simpson, 2009;Geis, 2007;Holtfreter, 2005); it distinguishes occupational from conventional property crime (i.e., crimes such as burglary or robbery and various kinds of common-law thefts and frauds such as shoplifting, check fraud, and low-level cons and swindles); and because the occupational/non-occupational distinction corresponds closely with the way the term "white-collar" crime is used in the writings debating the types of offenses/offenders that are represented in the UCR categories (see review below). Also, as applied here, "occupational" offending includes both upper-level occupational or high status financial or property crime (Sutherland, 1940) and any workplace financial or property crime regardless of the status or occupational position of the offender (Clinard & Quinney, 1973). Whereas some scholars assume most of those arrested for LFFE offenses committed upper-level occupational or serious forms of white-collar crime (e.g., Adler, 1976;Albanese, 1993;Dodge, 2009Dodge, , 2015Hirschi & Gottfredson, 1989;Simon & Landis, 2005), others leave it open-ended as to whether the offenders occupied low-or high-level occupational positions (Barnett, 2002;Miethe, McCorkle, & Listwan, 2005).…”