This Article explains how the federal organizational sentencing guidelines work and how they have created incentives for businesses to set up compliance programs. It then considers the paucity of evidence that compliance programs actually prevent the occurrence of corporate crime. It also questions whether investments in compliance programs make sense even for companies caught in a federal criminal investigation. There is little evidence that compliance programs have any significant effect on the likelihood that federal prosecutors will file criminal charges in the first instance. Even more surprisingly, examination of U.S. Sentencing Commission statistics reveals that the compliance program movement seems to have had almost no effect on th...
Canadians today are very much concerned about corporate crime and about corporations that do not com...
Because this Article\u27s arguments are interwoven, a preliminary roadmap seems advisable. First, Se...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...
This Article traces the Sentencing Commission\u27s path in completing that task32 and considers what...
For many years, law and economics scholars, as well as politicians and regulators, have debated whet...
This article compares the criminal punishment of corporations in the twenty-first century with two a...
In this article, Professor O\u27Sullivan, who served as the reporter for the U.S. Sentencing Commiss...
A response to Dorothy Lund & Natasha Sarin: Corporate Crime and Punishment: An Empirical Stud
For many years, law and economics scholars, as well as politicians and regulators, have debated whet...
Corporate criminal enforcement has exploded in this country. Billion dollar fines are now routine ac...
This thesis assesses the effects of the accounting scandals of the early 2000s and the Public Compan...
Established principles governing corporate criminal liability apply indiscriminately to all corporat...
This Article presents a legislative history of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the subsequent amendments ...
Journal ArticlePerhaps the most violently debated issue in the law of antitrust remedies is whether ...
On December 2, 2001, the Enron Corporation filed the largest bankruptcy petition in U.S. history. Lo...
Canadians today are very much concerned about corporate crime and about corporations that do not com...
Because this Article\u27s arguments are interwoven, a preliminary roadmap seems advisable. First, Se...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...
This Article traces the Sentencing Commission\u27s path in completing that task32 and considers what...
For many years, law and economics scholars, as well as politicians and regulators, have debated whet...
This article compares the criminal punishment of corporations in the twenty-first century with two a...
In this article, Professor O\u27Sullivan, who served as the reporter for the U.S. Sentencing Commiss...
A response to Dorothy Lund & Natasha Sarin: Corporate Crime and Punishment: An Empirical Stud
For many years, law and economics scholars, as well as politicians and regulators, have debated whet...
Corporate criminal enforcement has exploded in this country. Billion dollar fines are now routine ac...
This thesis assesses the effects of the accounting scandals of the early 2000s and the Public Compan...
Established principles governing corporate criminal liability apply indiscriminately to all corporat...
This Article presents a legislative history of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the subsequent amendments ...
Journal ArticlePerhaps the most violently debated issue in the law of antitrust remedies is whether ...
On December 2, 2001, the Enron Corporation filed the largest bankruptcy petition in U.S. history. Lo...
Canadians today are very much concerned about corporate crime and about corporations that do not com...
Because this Article\u27s arguments are interwoven, a preliminary roadmap seems advisable. First, Se...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...