“…With regard to white-collar crime and corresponding punishments in particular, the little research that exists has generally found that perceptions of the seriousness of white-collar crime vary by gender, race, socioeconomic status, occupation, and various other factors (see Grabosky et al, 1987;Hauber et al, 1988). Using a mock jury-type scenario, Gordon, Bindrim, McNicholas, and Walden (1988) examined perceptions of crime types and found racial differences in the seriousness and severity of punishment offered by jurors. White jurors reported that embezzlement was more serious than burglary, whereas the opposite was true of Black, jurors.…”