So....if you're trying to write a crime story and the criminals are collecting money from their various illegal endeavours, HOW much money, approximately can each type of crime bring in?
Is there any resource that answers this question? It doesn't have to be 100% accurate or realistic but it does have to be plausible. Google is giving me such ridiculous sums that it doesn't track at all. Like there are drug kingpins or mafia godfathers that are making like $100 million a year.....
(A YEAR?!?!?!?!?)
I know crime does pay (as long as you don't get caught) but the sums I am seeing are mind-boggling.
So, is there some general guideline on how much money one can make selling drugs? Extorting businesses? Robbing banks? Running prostitution rings? Gambling rackets?
I know there can be multiple ways to make money on one crime - like the snakeheads that smuggle people out of China into the USA (or the coyotes from Mexico to the USA) make money on the smuggling fee, then when the illegal immigrant gets into the USA, they can be put to work in "massage parlours" or sweatshops owned by the initial criminal organization or sold off as slaves to bad people.
I also realize the "worse" the crime, the more profit. "Worse" is relative. I've seen "FBI: Most Wanted" where organs were illegally harvested at $1 million. I've seen "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" and "Law & Order: Organized Crime" where murder for hire was like $20,000 to $50,000. I've also seen a few flicks where some criminals killed people for $50. It seems all over the place.
I'm willing to do the research, but it would be tremendously helpful if someone could point me in the right direction, so I don't wade through hundreds of pages of Google results that are irrelevant.
And...bonus question. Assuming you're a successful criminal that's making oodles and oodles of money...how do you explain the fact you own 12 Porches and 3 mansions when you don't work??? Sure, maybe you inherited money or you won the lottery but that explanation can't work for all criminals. Do they all have Limited Liability Corporations (LLC) and get a weekly dividend check as a shareholder?
If it helps, I envision my character starting off as a human trafficker, selling a toddler they rescued from a car wreck to a family that can't have children. This is initially a crime of opportunity and it made money, so my MC is doing it again and again, plus as they have this whole system for smuggling children around, why not make a deal with a cartel for protection and human resources to provide security in exchange for access to their smuggling routes and knowledge. They'd go from "rescuing" children and selling them on the black market to kidnapping children (or buying them) and selling them, plus using their connections to move drugs and guns as well.
Thanks to any/all that can help! Back to the Google rabbit hole.....
EDIT: This is one of the results from my Google exploring....
EDIT 2: This is the best answer I've seen, especially from Carlos Esteban Velasquez
www.quora.com
Is there any resource that answers this question? It doesn't have to be 100% accurate or realistic but it does have to be plausible. Google is giving me such ridiculous sums that it doesn't track at all. Like there are drug kingpins or mafia godfathers that are making like $100 million a year.....
(A YEAR?!?!?!?!?)
I know crime does pay (as long as you don't get caught) but the sums I am seeing are mind-boggling.
So, is there some general guideline on how much money one can make selling drugs? Extorting businesses? Robbing banks? Running prostitution rings? Gambling rackets?
I know there can be multiple ways to make money on one crime - like the snakeheads that smuggle people out of China into the USA (or the coyotes from Mexico to the USA) make money on the smuggling fee, then when the illegal immigrant gets into the USA, they can be put to work in "massage parlours" or sweatshops owned by the initial criminal organization or sold off as slaves to bad people.
I also realize the "worse" the crime, the more profit. "Worse" is relative. I've seen "FBI: Most Wanted" where organs were illegally harvested at $1 million. I've seen "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" and "Law & Order: Organized Crime" where murder for hire was like $20,000 to $50,000. I've also seen a few flicks where some criminals killed people for $50. It seems all over the place.
I'm willing to do the research, but it would be tremendously helpful if someone could point me in the right direction, so I don't wade through hundreds of pages of Google results that are irrelevant.
And...bonus question. Assuming you're a successful criminal that's making oodles and oodles of money...how do you explain the fact you own 12 Porches and 3 mansions when you don't work??? Sure, maybe you inherited money or you won the lottery but that explanation can't work for all criminals. Do they all have Limited Liability Corporations (LLC) and get a weekly dividend check as a shareholder?
If it helps, I envision my character starting off as a human trafficker, selling a toddler they rescued from a car wreck to a family that can't have children. This is initially a crime of opportunity and it made money, so my MC is doing it again and again, plus as they have this whole system for smuggling children around, why not make a deal with a cartel for protection and human resources to provide security in exchange for access to their smuggling routes and knowledge. They'd go from "rescuing" children and selling them on the black market to kidnapping children (or buying them) and selling them, plus using their connections to move drugs and guns as well.
Thanks to any/all that can help! Back to the Google rabbit hole.....
EDIT: This is one of the results from my Google exploring....
EDIT 2: This is the best answer I've seen, especially from Carlos Esteban Velasquez

How much do criminals make in their respective criminal fields?
Answer (1 of 3): They usually do not file income tax returns with their illegal income, so we do not have accurate data by 'respective criminal fields. To the best of my knowledge, there isn't a even a NAICS Identification Tools (NAICS code) for them to report earnings from 'small business'. IRS...
Last edited: