NCJ Number
              234972
          Journal
  Journal of Crime and Justice Volume: 34 Issue: 1 Dated: March 2011 Pages: 62-79
Date Published
  March 2011
Length
              18 pages
          Annotation
              This study explored how previous criminal experiences are used by car thieves to assess the costs and benefits of crime.
          Abstract
              In the past two decades criminologists have devoted considerable attention to modeling the decisionmaking process of offenders. This literature suggests that while there is a general pattern to these decisions, experience with crime likely affects the way offenders assess the costs and benefits of crime. Using interviews with 42 auto thieves the authors examine how experience shapes auto thieves' perceptions of the risks of stealing cars. The authors found that experience influences the ways offenders perceive the fears associated with auto theft. Specifically, experienced offenders were most concerned with being confronted (and possibly injured) by owners, while novice offenders were most concerned with being sanctioned by family members.  (Published Abstract)
          