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Corporate Crime
On July 9, 2002, President Bush called on Congress to
give the Administration new powers to enforce corporate
responsibility and to improve oversight of corporate
America, including:
- Tough new penalties for mail and wire fraud.
- Strengthened laws to crack down on obstruction of justice.
- New authority for SEC to freeze improper payments to corporate executives when a company is under investigation.
Congress responded to the President’s call by
passing the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the most far
reaching reform of American business practices in 60
years. The legislation gave prosecutors more power and
tools to enforce corporate responsibility and protect
America’s shareholders and workers. Among other
reforms, the legislation :
- Increased the accountability of officers and directors.
- Barred insiders from selling stock during blackout periods when workers were unable to change their 401K plans.
- Created a new securities fraud provision with a 25 years maximum term of imprisonment.
- Directed the Sentencing Commission to review sentencing white collar crime, obstruction of justice, securities, accounting, and pension fraud cases.
- Required CEO’s and CFO’s to personally certify that financial records submitted to the SEC fully comply with securities laws and fairly present the financial condition of the company.
- Made it a crime to willfully certify any such financial report knowing it was false or non-compliant, punishable up to maximum of 20 years in prison.
- Criminalized the alteration of falsification of any document with the intent to obstruct the investigation of any matter within the jurisdiction of a US department or agency.
- Criminalized retaliatory conduct directed at corporate whistleblowers and others.
- Required that audit papers be retained for five years and criminalized failure to maintain them for five years.
Justice Department prosecutors throughout the country, working with regulatory Task Force members and investigators from the FBI, IRS’s Criminal Investigation Division, and U.S. Postal Service responded aggressively to President Bush’s call to get tough on Corporate Crime. Since inception of the Task Force through May 31, 2004, prosecutors and investigators had:
- Obtained over 500 corporate fraud convictions or guilty pleas.
- Charged over 900 defendants and over 60 corporate CEO’s presidents with some sort of corporate fraud crime in connection with over 400 filed cases.
- Obtained charges against 31 Enron defendants, including 21 former executives, obtained convictions of 11 Enron defendants including its former CFO and treasurer, and seized over $161, 000,000 related to alleged frauds at Enron.
Among other important provisions, The Sarbanes-Oxley Act imposes new criminal penalties for securities fraud, attempts or conspiracies to commit fraud, certifying false financial statements, document destruction or tampering, and retaliating against corporate whistleblowers. The Act also contains enhanced penalties for mail and wire fraud and ERISA violations.
Section 802. Criminal Penalties for Altering Documents
Previous law: Prior to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, anyone who "corruptly persuades" others to destroy, alter or conceal evidence can be prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. § 1512. Section 1512 reaches destruction of evidence with intent to obstruct an official proceeding which may not yet have been commenced. However, Section 1512 does not reach the "individual shredder." While prosecution of obstruction under 18 U.S.C. § 1505 does not require "corrupt persuasion," it does require the existence of a pending proceeding. In addition, existing law does not explicitly address the retention of accounting work papers for a fixed period of time.
Amendment: Section 802 adds two new criminal provisions, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1519 and 1520. Section 1519 expands existing law to cover the alteration, destruction or falsification of records, documents or tangible objects, by any person, with intent to impede, obstruct or influence, the investigation or proper administration of any "matters" within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States, or any bankruptcy proceeding, or in relation to or contemplation of any such matter or proceeding. This section explicitly reaches activities by an individual "in relation to or contemplation of" any matters. No corrupt persuasion is required. New Section 1519 should be read in conjunction with the amendment to 18 U.S.C. 1512 added by Section 1102 of this Act, discussed below, which similarly bars corrupt acts to destroy, alter, mutilate or conceal evidence, in contemplation of an "official proceeding."
Accountants who fail to retain the audit or review workpapers of a covered audit for a period of 5 years will violate Section 1520, which creates a new felony, with a maximum period of incarceration of ten years. Under rulemaking authority granted in Section 1520(b), the SEC will promulgate rules relating to the retention of workpapers and other audit or review documents.
New 18 U.S.C. § 1519 provides:
Whoever knowingly alters, destroys, mutilates, conceals, covers up, falsifies, or makes a false entry in any record, document, or tangible object with the intent to impede, obstruct, or influence the investigation or proper administration of any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States or any case filed under title 11, or in relation to or contemplation of any such matter or case, shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
New 18 U.S.C. § 1520 provides:
(a)(l) Any accountant who conducts an audit of an issuer of securities to which section l0A(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78j-l(a)) applies, shall maintain all audit or review workpapers for a period of 5 years from the end of the fiscal period in which the audit or review was concluded.
(2) The Securities and Exchange Commission shall promulgate, within 180 days, after adequate notice and an opportunity for comment, such rules and regulations, as are reasonably necessary, relating to the retention of relevant records such as workpapers, documents that form the basis of an audit or review, memoranda, correspondence, communications, other documents, and records (including electronic records) which are created, sent, or received in connection with an audit or review and contain conclusions, opinions, analyses, or financial data relating to such an audit or review, which is conducted by any accountant who conducts an audit of an issuer of securities to which section l0A(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of l934 (15 U.S.C. 78j-l(a)) applies....
(b) Whoever knowingly and willfully violates subsection (a)(l), or any rule or regulation promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission under subsection (a)(2), shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than l0 years, or both.
(c) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to diminish or relieve any person of any other duty or obligation imposed by Federal or State law or regulation to maintain, or refrain from destroying, any document.
Sec. 805. Review of Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Obstruction of Justice and Extensive Criminal Fraud
Previous Law: Questions have arisen whether the Sentencing Guidelines sufficiently address obstruction of justice crimes.
Amendment: This section directs the Sentencing Commission to undertake an expedited review of these issues, particularly in light of the two new obstruction of justice statutes, described above. It also directs the Sentencing Commission to consider a number of factors such as destruction of a large amount of evidence, participation of a large number of individuals, or destruction of particularly probative or essential evidence, which might be considered sufficiently aggravating as to warrant additional enhancements or inclusion as offense characteristics. The Attorney General has advised the Sentencing Commission of this provision and asked the Commission to implement it fully and expeditiously.
Sec. 807. Criminal Penalties for Defrauding Shareholders of Publicly Traded Companies
Previous Law: Title 18 does not have a specific crime directly prohibiting securities fraud schemes. Prosecutors have found it necessary to reach many securities fraud schemes through the mail and wire fraud statutes. Securities fraud has also been prosecuted as a violation of provisions of title 15.
Amendment: New 18 U.S.C. § 1348 creates a specific felony for securities fraud punishable by up to 25 years incarceration. This provision complements existing securities law. The statute requires a nexus to certain types of securities, no proof of the use of the mails or wires is required. The text of the new section provides:
Whoever knowingly executes, or attempts to execute, a scheme or artifice-
(1) to defraud any person in connection with any security of an issuer with a class of securities registered under section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 781) or that is required to file reports under section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 780(d)); or
(2) to obtain, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, any money or property in connection with the purchase or sale of any security of an issuer with a class of securities registered under section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 781) or that is required to file reports under section l5(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 780(d));
shall be fined under this title, or imprisoned not more than 25 years, or both.
Sec. 902. Attempts and Conspiracies to Commit Criminal Fraud Offenses
Previous Law: Under Chapter 63 (Mail Fraud) of Title 18, conspiracies to violate the mail fraud statute (§ 1341), the wire fraud statute (§ 1343), the bank fraud statute (§ 1344) and the health care fraud statute (§ 1347) are punishable by a maximum 5 year sentence. The wire fraud offense did not explicitly reach "attempts" to commit the substantive offense. However, this was not an impediment in practice, because proof of a scheme to defraud did not necessarily require proof that the scheme was successful.
Amendment: New 18 U.S.C. § 1349 provides that attempts and conspiracies to commit the substantive Federal fraud offenses listed above, as well as the new securities fraud offense, will have the same maximum punishment as the substantive crime. This section also effectively adds an "attempt" to commit the wire fraud offense as a federal crime. The remainder of the fraud statutes listed above already include "attempts."
New 18 U.S.C. § 1349 provides:
Any person who attempts or conspires to commit any offense under this chapter shall be subject to the same penalties as those prescribed for the offense, the commission of which was the object of the attempt or conspiracy.
Sec. 903. Criminal Penalties for Mail and Wire Fraud
Previous Law: The maximum term of imprisonment for violations of the mail and wire fraud statutes (18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343) is 5 years, with the exception of fraud affecting a financial institution, which has a maximum term of incarceration of up to 30 years.
Amendment: This section amends 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343 by increasing the maximum 5 year penalty for mail or wire fraud to 20 years. The maximum term of incarceration for fraud affecting a financial institution remains at a maximum of 30 years.
Sec. 904. Criminal Penalties for Violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
Previous Law: Under 29 U.S.C. § 1131, any person who willfully violates the reporting and disclosure requirements concerning employee benefit plans as set forth in 29 U.S.C. §§ 1021-1031, or any regulation or order issued thereunder, is punishable by a fine, and/or a term of imprisonment not to exceed 1 year.
Amendment: This amendment increases the fines in Section 1131 to $100,000 (for an individual person), $500,000 (for persons other than an individual). Section 1131 also increases the maximum term of imprisonment from 1 year (a misdemeanor) to a maximum term of imprisonment of 10 years. The increase in the fine for individuals will have no limiting effect insofar as individuals convicted of violating Section 1131 will now be subject to the alternative fine provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 3571 for felony convictions. In the absence of restrictive language in Section 904 of the Act, individuals will be subject to the maximum fine of $250,000, or fine based on the defendant's gain or the victims loss, under § 3571. While the amendment also increases the fine in § 1131 to $500,000 for persons other than an individual, this change has merely increased the fine to the level of the maximum fine for an organization already set forth in § 3571.
Section 905. Amendment to the Sentencing Guidelines Relating to Certain White Collar Offenses
Previous Law: Questions have arisen whether the Sentencing Guidelines sufficiently address white collar offenses.
Amendment: This Section reaches beyond Section 803 of this Act, which addresses sentencing guidelines solely for obstruction of justice, to require that the Sentencing Commission study the existing guidelines and consider expedited issuance of amended guidelines within 180 days after enactment of this Act, which would address all the new criminal provisions and increased criminal penalties in this Act. This section also requires the Sentencing Commission to consider the broader issues of whether the white collar crime guidelines provide for sufficient deterrence and punishment, and assure reasonable consistency with other relevant directives and guidelines. The Attorney General has advised the Sentencing Commission of this provision and asked the Commission to implement it fully and expeditiously.
Section 906. Corporate Responsibility for Financial Reports
Previous Law: There are no statutory requirements that the chief executive officer or the chief financial officer certify certain periodic corporate financial statements. By instructions issued by the SEC for periodic and other filings, there was a general requirement that the forms had to be signed by officers, and in the case of annual reports, by a majority of the directors as well. These signing requirements did not include any type of certification or other attestation regarding the accuracy or completeness of the report. On June 20, 2002, the SEC published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, contemplating a requirement that a company's chief executive officer and chief financial officer certify that the information contained in its financial reports is complete and true in all important respects. See 67 Fed. Reg. 41877 (2002). More recently, the SEC issued an order requiring that the principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the largest 947 companies whose securities are registered with the SEC certify the completeness, truth and accuracy of the most recent annual report, subsequent 10-Q and 8-K reports, and proxy materials filed with the Commission.
Amendment: This section enacts new 18 U.S.C. § 1350, which creates a requirement that the chief executive officer and the chief financial officer (or the equivalent thereof) of the "issuer" provide a statement which certifies that the periodic reports containing the financial statements, filed by an issuer with the SEC, fully comply with the requirements of Sections 13(a) and 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and that the information contained in the periodic reports fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer. Certifying a report, knowing that it does not comport with all of the requirements of § 1350, is punishable by a fine of not more than $ 1,000,000 and imprisonment of up to 10 years. A willful violation is punishable by a fine of not more than $5,000,000 and imprisonment of up to 20 years.
New Section 1350 provides:
(a) CERTIFICATION OF PERIODIC FINANCIAL REPORTS.- Each periodic report containing financial statements filed by an issuer with the Securities Exchange Commission pursuant to section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78m(a) or 78O(d)) shall be accompanied by a written statement by the chief executive officer and chief financial officer (or equivalent thereof) of the issuer.
(b) CONTENT.- The statement required under subsection (a) shall certify that the periodic report containing the financial statements fully complies with the requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act pf [sic] 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78m or 78o(d)) and that information contained in the periodic report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer.
(c) CRIMINAL PENALTIES.- Whoever
(1) certifies any statement as set forth in subsections (a) and (b) of this section knowing that the periodic report accompanying the statement does not comport with all the requirements set forth in this section shall be fined not more than $1,000,000 or imprisoned not more than 10 years, or both; or
(2) willfully certifies any statement as set forth in subsections (a) and (b) of this section knowing that the periodic report accompanying the statement does not comport with all the requirements set forth in this section shall be fined not more than $5,000,000, or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
Sec. 1102. Tampering with a Record or Otherwise Impeding an Official Proceeding.
Previous Law: Title 18 U.S.C. § 1512, in part, provides a 10 year maximum term of incarceration for an offender who corruptly persuades another person with the intent to, in part, destroy or alter evidence.
Amendment: The amendment adds new subsection (c) to Section 1512 and renumbers existing subsections (c) through (i) as (d) through (j). New subsection (c) imposes a fine and/or a term of imprisonment of up to 20 years on any person who corruptly alters, destroys, mutilates or conceals a record, document or other object with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding, or who corruptly otherwise obstructs, influences or impedes an official proceeding. Section 1512, as amended, should be read in conjunction with the new Section 1519, added by section 802 of this Act, which criminalizes certain acts intended to impede, obstruct or influence "any matter" within the jurisdiction of any Department or agency of the United States, or in relation to or contemplation of any such matter. The term "corruptly" shall be construed as requiring proof of a criminal state of mind on the part of the defendant.
New Section 1512 (c) provides:
(c) Whoever corruptly-
(1) alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object, or attempts to do so, with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding; or
(2) otherwise obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so,
shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
Section 1104. Amendment to the Federal Sentencing Guidelines
Previous Law: Questions have arisen whether the current Sentencing Guidelines sufficiently address securities, accounting, and pension fraud, and related offenses.
Amendment: This section requests the Sentencing Commission to study existing guidelines and consider expedited issuance of amended guidelines within 180 days after enactment of this Act, which address securities, accounting, and pension fraud, and related offenses. The Attorney General has advised the Sentencing Commission of this provision and asked the Commission to implement it fully and expeditiously.
Section 1106. Increased Penalties Under Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Previous Law: Section 78ff of Title 15, Sec. 32(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, provides for a criminal fine of $1,000,000 for individuals and/or imprisonment of up to 10 years, or a fine of $2,500,000 for anyone other than an individual.
Amendment: This amendment increases the fine amounts to $5,000,000 and $25,000,000 respectively, and raises the maximum term of imprisonment to 20 years.
Section 1107. Retaliation Against Informants
Previous Law: There is no explicit protection from retaliation for an individual who provides truthful information to a law enforcement officer concerning the commission or possible commission of a Federal offense.
Amendment: New subsection (e) of 18 U.S.C. § 1513 creates a felony offense for any person knowingly to take any action, with intent to retaliate, harmful to a person who provides such information concerning a federal offense.
New subsection (e) of § 1513 provides:
(e) Whoever knowingly, with the intent to retaliate, takes any action harmful to any person, including interference with the lawful employment or livelihood of any person, for providing to a law enforcement officer any truthful information relating to the commission or possible commission of any Federal offense, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 10 years, or both.
Retroactive Application of the New Provisions:
The Ex Post Facto Clause prohibits, inter alia, punishing as a crime an act previously committed that was innocent when done and increasing the punishment for a crime after its commission. See, e.g., Carmell v. Texas, 520 U.S. 513, 522 (2000); Collins v. Youngblood, 497 U.S. 37, 42 (1990). The Act adds several new criminal provisions: 18 U.S.C. 1519 and 1520 (added by Section 802); 18 U.S.C. 1350 (added by Section 906); 18 U.S.C. 1512(c) (added by Section 1102), and 18 U.S.C. 1513(e) (added by Section 1107). Those new criminal provisions will apply only to criminal conduct committed after the effective date of the Act. The Act also includes criminal provisions increasing the punishment for some existing criminal offenses: 29 U.S.C. 1131 (added by Section 904) and 15 U.S.C. 78ff (added by Section 1106). The increased penalties set forth in those provisions will apply only to criminal conduct committed after the effective date of the Act.
Section 807 adds a new criminal provision, 18 U.S.C. 1348, that creates a felony for securities fraud punishable by up to 25 years' imprisonment. Section 903 amends the existing mail and wire fraud statutes, 18 U.S.C. 1341 and 1343, to increase the maximum term of imprisonment for schemes to defraud not affecting financial institutions to 20 years' imprisonment. Those provisions will apply to any criminal conduct committed after the effective date of the Act. It is unclear, however, whether those provisions can be applied to schemes to defraud that straddle the effective date of the Act, i.e., schemes begun before the effective date of the Act but continuing after the effective date of the Act. Generally, mail and wire fraud offenses are complete upon the use of the mails or wires. See, e.g., United States v. Barger, 178 F.3d 844, 847 (7th Cir. 1999). Similarly, the new securities fraud offense will likely be considered complete upon the execution of the scheme. Cf. United States v. De La Mata, 266 F.3d 1275, 1287 (11th Cir. 2001) (bank fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. 1344), cert. denied, 122 S. Ct. 1543 (2002). The Ex Post Facto Clause likely bars applying the new provisions to schemes to defraud that extend beyond the effective date of the Act if the use of the mails or wire in a mail or wire fraud scheme occurred before the effective date of the Act or the execution of a securities fraud scheme occurred before the effective date of the Act. On the other hand, the Ex Post Facto Clause should pose no bar to applying the new provisions to schemes to defraud that began before the effective date of the Act if the use of the mails or wire in a mail or wire fraud scheme occurred after the effective date of the Act or the execution of a securities fraud scheme occurred after the effective date of the Act.
Finally, Section 902 adds a new criminal provision, 18 U.S.C. 1349, that punishes attempts and conspiracies to commit fraud offenses, including the new securities fraud offense. The Ex Post Facto Clause should pose no bar to applying that provision to a conspiracy that straddles the effective date of the Act because conspiracy is considered a continuing offense. See, e.g., United States v. Hersh, No. 00-14592, 2002 WL 1574990 (11th Cir. July 17, 2002).
To better understand where law enforcement is going
and how they plan to proceed, the following memorandum
regarding the Principles of Federal Prosecution of
Business Organizations is instructive.
MEMORANDUM
TO: Heads of Department Components
United States Attorneys
FROM: Larry D. Thompson
Deputy Attorney General
SUBJECT: Principles of Federal Prosecution of Business
Organizations
Federal Prosecution of Business Organizations1
I. Charging a Corporation: General
A. General Principle: Corporations should not be
treated leniently because of their artificial nature nor
should they be subject to harsher treatment. Vigorous
enforcement of the criminal laws against corporate
wrongdoers, where appropriate results in great benefits
for law enforcement and the public, particularly in the
area of white collar crime. Indicting corporations for
wrongdoing enables the government to address and be a
force for positive change of corporate culture, alter
corporate behavior, and prevent, discover, and punish
white collar crime.
B. Comment: In all cases involving corporate wrongdoing,
prosecutors should consider the factors discussed herein.
First and foremost, prosecutors should be aware of the
important public benefits that may flow from indicting a
corporation in appropriate cases. For instance,
corporations are likely to take immediate remedial steps
when one is indicted for criminal conduct that is
pervasive throughout a particular industry, and thus an
indictment often provides a unique opportunity for
deterrence on a massive scale. In addition, a corporate
indictment may result in specific deterrence by changing
the culture of the indicted corporation and the behavior
of its employees. Finally, certain crimes that carry with
them a substantial risk of great public harm, e.g.,
environmental crimes or financial frauds, are by their
nature most likely to be committed by businesses, and
there may, therefore, be a substantial federal interest
in indicting the corporation.
Charging a corporation, however, does not mean that
individual directors, officers, employees, or
shareholders should not also be charged. Prosecution of a
corporation is not a substitute for the prosecution of
criminally culpable individuals within or without the
corporation. Because a corporation can act only through
individuals, imposition of individual criminal liability
may provide the strongest deterrent against future
corporate wrongdoing. Only rarely should provable
individual culpability not be pursued, even in the face
of offers of corporate guilty pleas.
Corporations are "legal persons," capable of suing and
being sued, and capable of committing crimes. Under the
doctrine of respondeat superior, a corporation may be
held criminally liable for the illegal acts of its
directors, officers, employees, and agents. To hold a
corporation liable for these actions, the government must
establish that the corporate agent's actions (i) were
within the scope of his duties and (ii) were intended, at
least in part, to benefit the corporation. In all cases
involving wrongdoing by corporate agents, prosecutors
should consider the corporation, as well as the
responsible individuals, as potential criminal targets.
Agents, however, may act for mixed reasons -- both for
self-aggrandizement (both direct and indirect) and for
the benefit of the corporation, and a corporation may be
held liable as long as one motivation of its agent is to
benefit the corporation. In United States v. Automated
Medical Laboratories, 770 F.2d 399 (4th Cir. 1985), the
court affirmed the corporation's conviction for the
actions of a subsidiary's employee despite its claim that
the employee was acting for his own benefit, namely his
"ambitious nature and his desire to ascend the corporate
ladder." The court stated, "Partucci was clearly acting
in part to benefit AML since his advancement within the
corporation depended on AML's well-being and its lack of
difficulties with the FDA." Similarly, in United States
v. Cincotta, 689 F.2d 238, 241-42 (1st Cir. 1982), the
court held, "criminal liability may be imposed on the
corporation only where the agent is acting within the
scope of his employment. That, in turn, requires that the
agent be performing acts of the kind which he is
authorized to perform, and those acts must be motivated
-- at least in part -- by an intent to benefit the
corporation." Applying this test, the court upheld the
corporation's conviction, notwithstanding the substantial
personal benefit reaped by its miscreant agents, because
the fraudulent scheme required money to pass through the
corporation's treasury and the fraudulently obtained
goods were resold to the corporation's customers in the
corporation's name. As the court concluded, "Mystic--not
the individual defendants--was making money by selling
oil that it had not paid for."
Moreover, the corporation need not even necessarily
profit from its agent's actions for it to be held liable.
In Automated Medical Laboratories, the Fourth Circuit
stated:
[B]enefit is not a "touchstone of criminal corporate
liability; benefit at best is an evidential, not an
operative, fact." Thus, whether the agent's actions
ultimately redounded to the benefit of the corporation is
less significant than whether the agent acted with the
intent to benefit the corporation. The basic purpose of
requiring that an agent have acted with the intent to
benefit the corporation, however, is to insulate the
corporation from criminal liability for actions of its
agents which be inimical to the interests of the
corporation or which may have been undertaken solely to
advance the interests of that agent or of a party other
than the corporation.
770 F.2d at 407 (emphasis added; quoting Old Monastery
Co. v. United States, 147 F.2d 905, 908 (4th Cir.), cert.
denied, 326 U.S. 734 (1945)).
II. Charging a Corporation: Factors to Be
Considered
A. General Principle: Generally, prosecutors should
apply the same factors in determining whether to charge a
corporation as they do with respect to individuals. See
USAM § 9-27.220, et seq. Thus, the prosecutor should
weigh all of the factors normally considered in the sound
exercise of prosecutorial judgment: the sufficiency of
the evidence; the likelihood of success at trial,; the
probable deterrent, rehabilitative, and other
consequences of conviction; and the adequacy of
noncriminal approaches. See id. However, due to the
nature of the corporate "person," some additional factors
are present. In conducting an investigation, determining
whether to bring charges, and negotiating plea
agreements, prosecutors should consider the following
factors in reaching a decision as to the proper treatment
of a corporate target:
1. the nature and seriousness of the offense, including
the risk of harm to the public, and applicable policies
and priorities, if any, governing the prosecution of
corporations for particular categories of crime (see
section III, infra);
2. the pervasiveness of wrongdoing within the
corporation, including the complicity in, or condonation
of, the wrongdoing by corporate management (see section
IV, infra);
3. the corporation's history of similar conduct,
including prior criminal, civil, and regulatory
enforcement actions against it (see section V,
infra);
4. the corporation's timely and voluntary disclosure of
wrongdoing and its willingness to cooperate in the
investigation of its agents, including, if necessary, the
waiver of corporate attorney-client and work product
protection (see section VI, infra);
5. the existence and adequacy of the corporation's
compliance program (see section VII, infra);
6. the corporation's remedial actions, including any
efforts to implement an effective corporate compliance
program or to improve an existing one, to replace
responsible management, to discipline or terminate
wrongdoers, to pay restitution, and to cooperate with the
relevant government agencies (see section VIII, infra);
7. collateral consequences, including disproportionate
harm to shareholders, pension holders and employees not
proven personally culpable and impact on the public
arising from the prosecution (see section IX, infra);
and
8. the adequacy of the prosecution of individuals
responsible for the corporation's malfeasance;
9. the adequacy of remedies such as civil or regulatory
enforcement actions (see section X, infra).
B. Comment: As with the factors relevant to charging
natural persons, the foregoing factors are intended to
provide guidance rather than to mandate a particular
result. The factors listed in this section are intended
to be illustrative of those that should be considered and
not a complete or exhaustive list. Some or all of these
factors may or may not apply to specific cases, and in
some cases one factor may override all others. The nature
and seriousness of the offense may be such as to warrant
prosecution regardless of the other factors. Further,
national law enforcement policies in various enforcement
areas may require that more or less weight be given to
certain of these factors than to others.
In making a decision to charge a corporation, the
prosecutor generally has wide latitude in determining
when, whom, how, and even whether to prosecute for
violations of Federal criminal law. In exercising that
discretion, prosecutors should consider the following
general statements of principles that summarize
appropriate considerations to be weighed and desirable
practices to be followed in discharging their
prosecutorial responsibilities. In doing so, prosecutors
should ensure that the general purposes of the criminal
law -- assurance of warranted punishment, deterrence of
further criminal conduct, protection of the public from
dangerous and fraudulent conduct, rehabilitation of
offenders, and restitution for victims and affected
communities -- are adequately met, taking into account
the special nature of the corporate "person."
III. Charging a Corporation: Special Policy
Concerns
A. General Principle: The nature and seriousness of
the crime, including the risk of harm to the public from
the criminal conduct, are obviously primary factors in
determining whether to charge a corporation. In addition,
corporate conduct, particularly that of national and
multi-national corporations, necessarily intersects with
federal economic, taxation, and criminal law enforcement
policies. In applying these principles, prosecutors must
consider the practices and policies of the appropriate
Division of the Department, and must comply with those
policies to the extent required.
B. Comment: In determining whether to charge a
corporation, prosecutors should take into account federal
law enforcement priorities as discussed above. See USAM
§ 9-27-230. In addition, however, prosecutors must
be aware of the specific policy goals and incentive
programs established by the respective Divisions and
regulatory agencies. Thus, whereas natural persons may be
given incremental degrees of credit (ranging from
immunity to lesser charges to sentencing considerations)
for turning themselves in, making statements against
their penal interest, and cooperating in the government's
investigation of their own and others' wrongdoing, the
same approach may not be appropriate in all circumstances
with respect to corporations. As an example, it is
entirely proper in many investigations for a prosecutor
to consider the corporation's pre-indictment conduct,
e.g.,voluntary disclosure, cooperation, remediation or
restitution, in determining whether to seek an
indictment. However, this would not necessarily be
appropriate in an antitrust investigation, in which
antitrust violations, by definition, go to the heart of
the corporation's business and for which the Antitrust
Division has therefore established a firm policy,
understood in the business community, that credit should
not be given at the charging stage for a compliance
program and that amnesty is available only to the first
corporation to make full disclosure to the government. As
another example, the Tax Division has a strong preference
for prosecuting responsible individuals, rather than
entities, for corporate tax offenses. Thus, in
determining whether or not to charge a corporation,
prosecutors should consult with the Criminal, Antitrust,
Tax, and Environmental and Natural Resources Divisions,
if appropriate or required.
IV. Charging a Corporation: Pervasiveness of
Wrongdoing Within the Corporation
A. General Principle: A corporation can only act
through natural persons, and it is therefore held
responsible for the acts of such persons fairly
attributable to it. Charging a corporation for even minor
misconduct may be appropriate where the wrongdoing was
pervasive and was undertaken by a large number of
employees or by all the employees in a particular role
within the corporation, e.g., salesmen or procurement
officers, or was condoned by upper management. On the
other hand, in certain limited circumstances, it may not
be appropriate to impose liability upon a corporation,
particularly one with a compliance program in place,
under a strict respondeat superior theory for the single
isolated act of a rogue employee. There is, of course, a
wide spectrum between these two extremes, and a
prosecutor should exercise sound discretion in evaluating
the pervasiveness of wrongdoing within a
corporation.
B. Comment: Of these factors, the most important is the
role of management. Although acts of even low-level
employees may result in criminal liability, a corporation
is directed by its management and management is
responsible for a corporate culture in which criminal
conduct is either discouraged or tacitly encouraged. As
stated in commentary to the Sentencing Guidelines:
Pervasiveness [is] case specific and [will] depend on
the number, and degree of responsibility, of individuals
[with] substantial authority ... who participated in,
condoned, or were willfully ignorant of the offense.
Fewer individuals need to be involved for a finding of
pervasiveness if those individuals exercised a relatively
high degree of authority. Pervasiveness can occur either
within an organization as a whole or within a unit of an
organization. USSG §8C2.5, comment. (n. 4).
V. Charging a Corporation: The Corporation's Past
History
A. General Principle: Prosecutors may consider a
corporation's history of similar conduct, including prior
criminal, civil, and regulatory enforcement actions
against it, in determining whether to bring criminal
charges.
B. Comment: A corporation, like a natural person, is
expected to learn from its mistakes. A history of similar
conduct may be probative of a corporate culture that
encouraged, or at least condoned, such conduct,
regardless of any compliance programs. Criminal
prosecution of a corporation may be particularly
appropriate where the corporation previously had been
subject to non-criminal guidance, warnings, or sanctions,
or previous criminal charges, and yet it either had not
taken adequate action to prevent future unlawful conduct
or had continued to engage in the conduct in spite of the
warnings or enforcement actions taken against it. In
making this determination, the corporate structure
itself, e.g., subsidiaries or operating divisions, should
be ignored, and enforcement actions taken against the
corporation or any of its divisions, subsidiaries, and
affiliates should be considered. See USSG § 8C2.5(c)
& comment. (n. 6).
VI. Charging a Corporation: Cooperation and Voluntary
Disclosure
A. General Principle: In determining whether to
charge a corporation, that corporation's timely and
voluntary disclosure of wrongdoing and its willingness to
cooperate with the government's investigation may be
relevant factors. In gauging the extent of the
corporation's cooperation, the prosecutor may consider
the corporation's willingness to identify the culprits
within the corporation, including senior executives; to
make witnesses available; to disclose the complete
results of its internal investigation; and to waive
attorney-client and work product protection.
B. Comment: In investigating wrongdoing by or within a
corporation, a prosecutor is likely to encounter several
obstacles resulting from the nature of the corporation
itself. It will often be difficult to determine which
individual took which action on behalf of the
corporation. Lines of authority and responsibility may be
shared among operating divisions or departments, and
records and personnel may be spread throughout the United
States or even among several countries. Where the
criminal conduct continued over an extended period of
time, the culpable or knowledgeable personnel may have
been promoted, transferred, or fired, or they may have
quit or retired. Accordingly, a corporation's cooperation
may be critical in identifying the culprits and locating
relevant evidence.
In some circumstances, therefore, granting a corporation
immunity or amnesty or pretrial diversion may be
considered in the course of the government's
investigation. In such circumstances, prosecutors should
refer to the principles governing non-prosecution
agreements generally. See USAM § 9-27.600-650. These
principles permit a non prosecution agreement in exchange
for cooperation when a corporation's "timely cooperation
appears to be necessary to the public interest and other
means of obtaining the desired cooperation are
unavailable or would not be effective." Prosecutors
should note that in the case of national or
multi-national corporations, multi-district or global
agreements may be necessary. Such agreements may only be
entered into with the approval of each affected district
or the appropriate Department official. See USAM
§9-27.641.
In addition, the Department, in conjunction with
regulatory agencies and other executive branch
departments, encourages corporations, as part of their
compliance programs, to conduct internal investigations
and to disclose their findings to the appropriate
authorities. Some agencies, such as the SEC and the EPA,
as well as the Department's Environmental and Natural
Resources Division, have formal voluntary disclosure
programs in which self-reporting, coupled with
remediation and additional criteria, may qualify the
corporation for amnesty or reduced sanctions.2 Even in
the absence of a formal program, prosecutors may consider
a corporation's timely and voluntary disclosure in
evaluating the adequacy of the corporation's compliance
program and its management's commitment to the compliance
program. However, prosecution and economic policies
specific to the industry or statute may require
prosecution notwithstanding a corporation's willingness
to cooperate. For example, the Antitrust Division offers
amnesty only to the first corporation to agree to
cooperate. This creates a strong incentive for
corporations participating in anti-competitive conduct to
be the first to cooperate. In addition, amnesty,
immunity, or reduced sanctions may not be appropriate
where the corporation's business is permeated with fraud
or other crimes.
One factor the prosecutor may weigh in assessing the
adequacy of a corporation's cooperation is the
completeness of its disclosure including, if necessary, a
waiver of the attorney-client and work product
protections, both with respect to its internal
investigation and with respect to communications between
specific officers, directors and employees and counsel.
Such waivers permit the government to obtain statements
of possible witnesses, subjects, and targets, without
having to negotiate individual cooperation or immunity
agreements. In addition, they are often critical in
enabling the government to evaluate the completeness of a
corporation's voluntary disclosure and cooperation.
Prosecutors may, therefore, request a waiver in
appropriate circumstances.3 The Department does not,
however, consider waiver of a corporation's
attorney-client and work product protection an absolute
requirement, and prosecutors should consider the
willingness of a corporation to waive such protection
when necessary to provide timely and complete information
as one factor in evaluating the corporation's
cooperation. Another factor to be weighed by the
prosecutor is whether the corporation appears to be
protecting its culpable employees and agents. Thus, while
cases will differ depending on the circumstances, a
corporation's promise of support to culpable employees
and agents, either through the advancing of attorneys
fees,4 through retaining the employees without sanction
for their misconduct, or through providing information to
the employees about the government's investigation
pursuant to a joint defense agreement, may be considered
by the prosecutor in weighing the extent and value of a
corporation's cooperation. By the same token, the
prosecutor should be wary of attempts to shield corporate
officers and employees from liability by a willingness of
the corporation to plead guilty.
Another factor to be weighed by the prosecutor is
whether the corporation, while purporting to cooperate,
has engaged in conduct that impedes the investigation
(whether or not rising to the level of criminal
obstruction). Examples of such conduct include: overly
broad assertions of corporate representation of employees
or former employees; inappropriate directions to
employees or their counsel, such as directions not to
cooperate openly and fully with the investigation
including, for example, the direction to decline to be
interviewed; making presentations or submissions that
contain misleading assertions or omissions; incomplete or
delayed production of records; and failure to promptly
disclose illegal conduct known to the corporation.
Finally, a corporation's offer of cooperation does not
automatically entitle it to immunity from prosecution. A
corporation should not be able to escape liability merely
by offering up its directors, officers, employees, or
agents as in lieu of its own prosecution. Thus, a
corporation's willingness to cooperate is merely one
relevant factor, that needs to be considered in
conjunction with the other factors, particularly those
relating to the corporation's past history and the role
of management in the wrongdoing.
VII. Charging a Corporation: Corporate Compliance
Programs
A. General Principle: Compliance programs are
established by corporate management to prevent and to
detect misconduct and to ensure that corporate activities
are conducted in accordance with all applicable criminal
and civil laws, regulations, and rules. The Department
encourages such corporate self-policing, including
voluntary disclosures to the government of any problems
that a corporation discovers on its own. However, the
existence of a compliance program is not sufficient, in
and of itself, to justify not charging a corporation for
criminal conduct undertaken by its officers, directors,
employees, or agents. Indeed, the commission of such
crimes in the face of a compliance program may suggest
that the corporate management is not adequately enforcing
its program. In addition, the nature of some crimes,
e.g., antitrust violations, may be such that national law
enforcement policies mandate prosecutions of corporations
notwithstanding the existence of a compliance
program.
B. Comment: A corporate compliance program, even one
specifically prohibiting the very conduct in question,
does not absolve the corporation from criminal liability
under the doctrine of respondeat superior. See United
States v. Basic Construction Co., 711 F.2d 570 (4th Cir.
1983) ("a corporation may be held criminally responsible
for antitrust violations committed by its employees if
they were acting within the scope of their authority, or
apparent authority, and for the benefit of the
corporation, even if... such acts were against corporate
policy or express instructions."). In United States v.
Hilton Hotels Corp., 467 F.2d 1000 (9th Cir. 1972), cert.
denied, 409 U.S. 1125 (1973), the Ninth Circuit affirmed
antitrust liability based upon a purchasing agent for a
single hotel threatening a single supplier with a boycott
unless it paid dues to a local marketing association,
even though the agent's actions were contrary to
corporate policy and directly against express
instructions from his superiors. The court reasoned that
Congress, in enacting the Sherman Antitrust Act,
"intended to impose liability upon business entities for
the acts of those to whom they choose to delegate the
conduct of their affairs, thus stimulating a maximum
effort by owners and managers to assure adherence by such
agents to the requirements of the Act."5 It concluded
that "general policy statements" and even direct
instructions from the agent's superiors were not
sufficient; "Appellant could not gain exculpation by
issuing general instructions without undertaking to
enforce those instructions by means commensurate with the
obvious risks." See also United States v. Beusch, 596
F.2d 871, 878 (9th Cir. 1979) ("[A] corporation may be
liable for the acts of its employees done contrary to
express instructions and policies, but ... the existence
of such instructions and policies may be considered in
determining whether the employee in fact acted to benefit
the corporation."); United States v. American Radiator
& Standard Sanitary Corp., 433 F.2d 174 (3rd Cir.
1970) (affirming conviction of corporation based upon its
officer's participation in price-fixing scheme, despite
corporation's defense that officer's conduct violated its
"rigid anti-fraternization policy" against any
socialization (and exchange of price information) with
its competitors; "When the act of the agent is within the
scope of his employment or his apparent authority, the
corporation is held legally responsible for it, although
what he did may be contrary to his actual instructions
and may be unlawful."). While the Department recognizes
that no compliance program can ever prevent all criminal
activity by a corporation's employees, the critical
factors in evaluating any program are whether the program
is adequately designed for maximum effectiveness in
preventing and detecting wrongdoing by employees and
whether corporate management is enforcing the program or
is tacitly encouraging or pressuring employees to engage
in misconduct to achieve business objectives. The
Department has no formal guidelines for corporate
compliance programs. The fundamental questions any
prosecutor should ask are: "Is the corporation's
compliance program well designed?" and "Does the
corporation's compliance program work?" In answering
these questions, the prosecutor should consider the
comprehensiveness of the compliance program; the extent
and pervasiveness of the criminal conduct; the number and
level of the corporate employees involved; the
seriousness, duration, and frequency of the misconduct;
and any remedial actions taken by the corporation,
including restitution, disciplinary action, and revisions
to corporate compliance programs.6 Prosecutors should
also consider the promptness of any disclosure of
wrongdoing to the government and the corporation's
cooperation in the government's investigation. In
evaluating compliance programs, prosecutors may consider
whether the corporation has established corporate
governance mechanisms that can effectively detect and
prevent misconduct. For example, do the corporation's
directors exercise independent review over proposed
corporate actions rather than unquestioningly ratifying
officers' recommendations; are the directors provided
with information sufficient to enable the exercise of
independent judgment, are internal audit functions
conducted at a level sufficient to ensure their
independence and accuracy and have the directors
established an information and reporting system in the
organization reasonable designed to provide management
and the board of directors with timely and accurate
information sufficient to allow them to reach an informed
decision regarding the organization's compliance with the
law. In re: Caremark, 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ct. Chan.
1996).
Prosecutors should therefore attempt to determine
whether a corporation's compliance program is merely a
"paper program" or whether it was designed and
implemented in an effective manner. In addition,
prosecutors should determine whether the corporation has
provided for a staff sufficient to audit, document,
analyze, and utilize the results of the corporation's
compliance efforts. In addition, prosecutors should
determine whether the corporation's employees are
adequately informed about the compliance program and are
convinced of the corporation's commitment to it. This
will enable the prosecutor to make an informed decision
as to whether the corporation has adopted and implemented
a truly effective compliance program that, when
consistent with other federal law enforcement policies,
may result in a decision to charge only the corporation's
employees and agents.
Compliance programs should be designed to detect the
particular types of misconduct most likely to occur in a
particular corporation's line of business. Many
corporations operate in complex regulatory environments
outside the normal experience of criminal prosecutors.
Accordingly, prosecutors should consult with relevant
federal and state agencies with the expertise to evaluate
the adequacy of a program's design and implementation.
For instance, state and federal banking, insurance, and
medical boards, the Department of Defense, the Department
of Health and Human Services, the Environmental
Protection Agency, and the Securities and Exchange
Commission have considerable experience with compliance
programs and can be very helpful to a prosecutor in
evaluating such programs. In addition, the Fraud Section
of the Criminal Division, the Commercial Litigation
Branch of the Civil Division, and the Environmental
Crimes Section of the Environment and Natural Resources
Division can assist U.S. Attorneys' Offices in finding
the appropriate agency office and in providing copies of
compliance programs that were developed in previous
cases.
VIII. Charging a Corporation: Restitution and
Remediation
A. General Principle: Although neither a corporation
nor an individual target may avoid prosecution merely by
paying a sum of money, a prosecutor may consider the
corporation's willingness to make restitution and steps
already taken to do so. A prosecutor may also consider
other remedial actions, such as implementing an effective
corporate compliance program, improving an existing
compliance program, and disciplining wrongdoers, in
determining whether to charge the corporation. B.
Comment: In determining whether or not a corporation
should be prosecuted, a prosecutor may consider whether
meaningful remedial measures have been taken, including
employee discipline and full restitution.7 A
corporation's response to misconduct says much about its
willingness to ensure that such misconduct does not
recur. Thus, corporations that fully recognize the
seriousness of their misconduct and accept responsibility
for it should be taking steps to implement the personnel,
operational, and organizational changes necessary to
establish an awareness among employees that criminal
conduct will not be tolerated. Among the factors
prosecutors should consider and weigh are whether the
corporation appropriately disciplined the wrongdoers and
disclosed information concerning their illegal conduct to
the government.
Employee discipline is a difficult task for many
corporations because of the human element involved and
sometimes because of the seniority of the employees
concerned. While corporations need to be fair to their
employees, they must also be unequivocally committed, at
all levels of the corporation, to the highest standards
of legal and ethical behavior. Effective internal
discipline can be a powerful deterrent against improper
behavior by a corporation's employees. In evaluating a
corporation's response to wrongdoing, prosecutors may
evaluate the willingness of the corporation to discipline
culpable employees of all ranks and the adequacy of the
discipline imposed. The prosecutor should be satisfied
that the corporation's focus is on the integrity and
credibility of its remedial and disciplinary measures
rather than on the protection of the wrongdoers.
In addition to employee discipline, two other factors
used in evaluating a corporation's remedial efforts are
restitution and reform. As with natural persons, the
decision whether or not to prosecute should not depend
upon the target's ability to pay restitution. A
corporation's efforts to pay restitution even in advance
of any court order is, however, evidence of its
"acceptance of responsibility" and, consistent with the
practices and policies of the appropriate Division of the
Department entrusted with enforcing specific criminal
laws, may be considered in determining whether to bring
criminal charges. Similarly, although the inadequacy of a
corporate compliance program is a factor to consider when
deciding whether to charge a corporation, that
corporation's quick recognition of the flaws in the
program and its efforts to improve the program are also
factors to consider.
IX. Charging a Corporation: Collateral
Consequences
A. General Principle: Prosecutors may consider the
collateral consequences of a corporate criminal
conviction in determining whether to charge the
corporation with a criminal offense.
B. Comment: One of the factors in determining whether to
charge a natural person or a corporation is whether the
likely punishment is appropriate given the nature and
seriousness of the crime. In the corporate context,
prosecutors may take into account the possibly
substantial consequences to a corporation's officers,
directors, employees, and shareholders, many of whom may,
depending on the size and nature (e.g., publicly vs.
closely held) of the corporation and their role in its
operations, have played no role in the criminal conduct,
have been completely unaware of it, or have been wholly
unable to prevent it. Prosecutors should also be aware of
non-penal sanctions that may accompany a criminal charge,
such as potential suspension or debarment from
eligibility for government contracts or federal funded
programs such as health care. Whether or not such
non-penal sanctions are appropriate or required in a
particular case is the responsibility of the relevant
agency, a decision that will be made based on the
applicable statutes, regulations, and policies. Virtually
every conviction of a corporation, like virtually every
conviction of an individual, will have an impact on
innocent third parties, and the mere existence of such an
effect is not sufficient to preclude prosecution of the
corporation. Therefore, in evaluating the severity of
collateral consequences, various factors already
discussed, such as the pervasiveness of the criminal
conduct and the adequacy of the corporation's compliance
programs, should be considered in determining the weight
to be given to this factor. For instance, the balance may
tip in favor of prosecuting corporations in situations
where the scope of the misconduct in a case is widespread
and sustained within a corporate division (or spread
throughout pockets of the corporate organization). In
such cases, the possible unfairness of visiting
punishment for the corporation's crimes upon shareholders
may be of much less concern where those shareholders have
substantially profited, even unknowingly, from widespread
or pervasive criminal activity. Similarly, where the top
layers of the corporation's management or the
shareholders of a closely-held corporation were engaged
in or aware of the wrongdoing and the conduct at issue
was accepted as a way of doing business for an extended
period, debarment may be deemed not collateral, but a
direct and entirely appropriate consequence of the
corporation's wrongdoing. The appropriateness of
considering such collateral consequences and the weight
to be given them may depend on the special policy
concerns discussed in section III, supra.
X. Charging a Corporation: Non-Criminal
Alternatives
A. General Principle: Although non-criminal
alternatives to prosecution often exist, prosecutors may
consider whether such sanctions would adequately deter,
punish, and rehabilitate a corporation that has engaged
in wrongful conduct. In evaluating the adequacy of
non-criminal alternatives to prosecution, e.g., civil or
regulatory enforcement actions, the prosecutor may
consider all relevant factors, including:
1. the sanctions available under the alternative means
of disposition;
2. the likelihood that an effective sanction will be
imposed; and
3. the effect of non-criminal disposition on Federal law
enforcement interests.
B. Comment: The primary goals of criminal law are
deterrence, punishment, and rehabilitation. Non-criminal
sanctions may not be an appropriate response to an
egregious violation, a pattern of wrongdoing, or a
history of non-criminal sanctions without proper
remediation. In other cases, however, these goals may be
satisfied without the necessity of instituting criminal
proceedings. In determining whether federal criminal
charges are appropriate, the prosecutor should consider
the same factors (modified appropriately for the
regulatory context) considered when determining whether
to leave prosecution of a natural person to another
jurisdiction or to seek non-criminal alternatives to
prosecution. These factors include: the strength of the
regulatory authority's interest; the regulatory
authority's ability and willingness to take effective
enforcement action; the probable sanction if the
regulatory authority's enforcement action is upheld; and
the effect of a non-criminal disposition on Federal law
enforcement interests. See USAM §§ 9-27.240,
9-27.250.
XI. Charging a Corporation: Selecting Charges
A. General Principle: Once a prosecutor has decided
to charge a corporation, the prosecutor should charge, or
should recommend that the grand jury charge, the most
serious offense that is consistent with the nature of the
defendant's conduct and that is likely to result in a
sustainable conviction.
B. Comment: Once the decision to charge is made, the
same rules as govern charging natural persons apply.
These rules require "a faithful and honest application of
the Sentencing Guidelines" and an "individualized
assessment of the extent to which particular charges fit
the specific circumstances of the case, are consistent
with the purposes of the Federal criminal code, and
maximize the impact of Federal resources on crime." See
USAM § 9-27.300. In making this determination, "it
is appropriate that the attorney for the government
consider, inter alia, such factors as the sentencing
guideline range yielded by the charge, whether the
penalty yielded by such sentencing range ... is
proportional to the seriousness of the defendant's
conduct, and whether the charge achieves such purposes of
the criminal law as punishment, protection of the public,
specific and general deterrence, and rehabilitation." See
Attorney General's Memorandum, dated October 12,
1993.
XII. Plea Agreements with Corporations
A. General Principle: In negotiating plea agreements
with corporations, prosecutors should seek a plea to the
most serious, readily provable offense charged. In
addition, the terms of the plea agreement should contain
appropriate provisions to ensure punishment, deterrence,
rehabilitation, and compliance with the plea agreement in
the corporate context. Although special circumstances may
mandate a different conclusion, prosecutors generally
should not agree to accept a corporate guilty plea in
exchange for non-prosecution or dismissal of charges
against individual officers and employees.
B. Comment: Prosecutors may enter into plea agreements
with corporations for the same reasons and under the same
constraints as apply to plea agreements with natural
persons. See USAM §§ 9-27.400-500. This means,
inter alia, that the corporation should be required to
plead guilty to the most serious, readily provable
offense charged. As is the case with individuals, the
attorney making this determination should do so "on the
basis of an individualized assessment of the extent to
which particular charges fit the specific circumstances
of the case, are consistent with the purposes of the
federal criminal code, and maximize the impact of federal
resources on crime. In making this determination, the
attorney for the government considers, inter alia, such
factors as the sentencing guideline range yielded by the
charge, whether the penalty yielded by such sentencing
range ... is proportional to the seriousness of the
defendant's conduct, and whether the charge achieves such
purposes of the criminal law as punishment, protection of
the public, specific and general deterrence, and
rehabilitation." See Attorney General's Memorandum, dated
October 12, 1993. In addition, any negotiated departures
from the Sentencing Guidelines must be justifiable under
the Guidelines and must be disclosed to the sentencing
court. A corporation should be made to realize that
pleading guilty to criminal charges constitutes an
admission of guilt and not merely a resolution of an
inconvenient distraction from its business. As with
natural persons, pleas should be structured so that the
corporation may not later "proclaim lack of culpability
or even complete innocence." See USAM §§
9-27.420(b)(4), 9-27.440, 9-27.500. Thus, for instance,
there should be placed upon the record a sufficient
factual basis for the plea to prevent later corporate
assertions of innocence.
A corporate plea agreement should also contain
provisions that recognize the nature of the corporate
"person" and ensure that the principles of punishment,
deterrence, and rehabilitation are met. In the corporate
context, punishment and deterrence are generally
accomplished by substantial fines, mandatory restitution,
and institution of appropriate compliance measures,
including, if necessary, continued judicial oversight or
the use of special masters. See USSG §§ 8B1.1,
8C2.1, et seq. In addition, where the corporation is a
government contractor, permanent or temporary debarment
may be appropriate. Where the corporation was engaged in
government contracting fraud, a prosecutor may not
negotiate away an agency's right to debar or to list the
corporate defendant.
In negotiating a plea agreement, prosecutors should also
consider the deterrent value of prosecutions of
individuals within the corporation. Therefore, one factor
that a prosecutor may consider in determining whether to
enter into a plea agreement is whether the corporation is
seeking immunity for its employees and officers or
whether the corporation is willing to cooperate in the
investigation of culpable individuals. Prosecutors should
rarely negotiate away individual criminal liability in a
corporate plea.
Rehabilitation, of course, requires that the corporation
undertake to be law-abiding in the future. It is,
therefore, appropriate to require the corporation, as a
condition of probation, to implement a compliance program
or to reform an existing one. As discussed above,
prosecutors may consult with the appropriate state and
federal agencies and components of the Justice Department
to ensure that a proposed compliance program is adequate
and meets industry standards and best practices. See
section VII, supra.
In plea agreements in which the corporation agrees to
cooperate, the prosecutor should ensure that the
cooperation is complete and truthful. To do so, the
prosecutor may request that the corporation waive
attorney-client and work product protection, make
employees and agents available for debriefing, disclose
the results of its internal investigation, file
appropriate certified financial statements, agree to
governmental or third-party audits, and take whatever
other steps are necessary to ensure that the full scope
of the corporate wrongdoing is disclosed and that the
responsible culprits are identified and, if appropriate,
prosecuted. See generally section VIII, supra.
Footnotes:
1. While these guidelines refer to corporations,
they apply to the consideration of the prosecution of all
types of business organizations, including partnerships,
sole proprietorships, government entities, and
unincorporated associations.
2. In addition, the Sentencing Guidelines reward
voluntary disclosure and cooperation with a reduction in
the corporation's offense level. See USSG §8C2.5)g).
3. This waiver should ordinarily be limited to the
factual internal investigation and any contemporaneous
advice given to the corporation concerning the conduct at
issue. Except in unusual circumstances, prosecutors
should not seek a waiver with respect to communications
and work product related to advice concerning the
government's criminal investigation.
4. Some states require corporations to pay the legal
fees of officers under investigation prior to a formal
determination of their guilt. Obviously, a corporation's
compliance with governing law should not be considered a
failure to cooperate.
5. Although this case and Basic Construction are both
antitrust cases, their reasoning applies to other
criminal violations. In the Hilton case, for instance,
the Ninth Circuit noted that Sherman Act violations are
commercial offenses "usually motivated by a desire to
enhance profits," thus, bringing the case within the
normal rule that a "purpose to benefit the corporation is
necessary to bring the agent's acts within the scope of
his employment." 467 F.2d at 1006 & n4. In addition,
in United States v. Automated Medical Laboratories, 770
F.2d 399, 406 n.5 (4th Cir. 1985), the Fourth Circuit
stated "that Basic Construction states a generally
applicable rule on corporate criminal liability despite
the fact that it addresses violations of the antitrust
laws."
6. For a detailed review of these and other factors
concerning corporate compliance programs, see United
States Sentencing Commission, GUIDELINES MANUAL,
§8A1.2, comment. (n.3(k)) (Nov. 1997). See also USSG
§8C2.5(f)
7. For example, the Antitrust Division's amnesty policy
requires that "[w]here possible, the corporation [make]
restitution to injured parties...."


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