e, search offices and homes without a warrant, and inspect the finances of suspects. Uncorroborated testimony is now permissible in court, and witnesses that decline to testify can be punished (Fifty-two Percent 11). Yet, these measures seem to have done little to stop organized crime’s growth. Unfortunately, Russian organized crime has prospered in the new economic system, and has migrated well beyond the Russian boundaries. Much of the private business activity lies in a gray region somewhere between legality and illegality. The law has yet to fully catch up with privatization. Academia, the United States Press, and the Russian press all paint a devastatingly bleak picture of the Russian economy; yet, there is hope for change. Many small companies do not have the luxury of making drastic changes; yet, efforts are being made to stop the mafia or at least cease the growth of it on the side of the government and larger businesses. Enterprise are creating their own company security and stopping protection payments. Things will not change overnight, but Russia can and slowly is moving toward normalcy. Bibliography Works Cited “Biz in Russia.” Puget Sound Business Journal. 7 March 1995: 18. “Comrade Godfather; In Russia, the Mafia Seizes the Commanding Heights of the Economy.” The Washington Post 12 Feb. 1995: C2. “Crime in Russia.” Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press 15 Feb. 1995: 14. “Fifty-two Percent Believe Mafia is Running the Country.” Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press 8 Oct. 1997: 11 Goldman, Minton. Russia, The Eurasian Republics, and Central/Eastern Europe. Connecticut: McGraw-Hill, 1999. 58-60. Gustatfson, Thane, and Daniel Yergin. Russia 2010: And What It Means For the World. New York: Random House, 1993. 105-106. Holmes, Charles. “In Russia, Repression Gives Way to Corruption.” The Atlanta Journal and Constitution 7 Sept. 1997: B1. Lloyd, John. “T...