This Note uses examples such as Titan Corp. to support the argument that there are reasons to question the United States\u27 increasing reliance on disgorgement to enforce the FCPA. Despite obvious deterrence benefits, the SEC\u27s quest for disgorgement of ill-gotten gains raises significant questions regarding extraterritoriality, proportionality, and evidentiary uncertainty. This Note looks to the history of the FCPA and both international anti-bribery agreements and foreign statutes implementing those agreements in arguing that U.S. and foreign regulators need to create a more certain, predictable enforcement climate as the number of foreign bribery enforcement actions continue to explode
The taking of a bribe or gratuity, should be punished with as severe penalties as the defrauding of ...
Bribery discriminates against honest companies by creating a barrier to entry in the form of a compe...
Recent initiatives by the Securities Exchange Commission, acting under the Foreign Corrupt Practices...
This Note uses examples such as Titan Corp. to support the argument that there are reasons to questi...
Prohibitions against transnational bribery suffer from a paradoxical problem of simultaneous over- a...
In the last twenty years, the United States government has put substantial resources behind the figh...
This Article is the third installment in a long-term research project that examines the effects of t...
Congress advocates the position that foreign bribery in a commercial context contributes to foreign ...
Although the purpose of international anti-bribery legislation, particularly the U.S. Foreign Corrup...
The article presents information on nature and frequency of bribe solicitation and extortion. It dis...
Focusing primarily on the pragmatic and moral perils of cultural imperialism, I also alluded very br...
The United States has been at the forefront of international efforts to combat corruption in the glo...
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (“FCPA”), which bans corporations from offering bribes to foreign ...
In an attempt to halt bribery of foreign officials by American businesses, the Foreign Corrupt Pract...
Mateo de la Torre’s research had an international focus in examining the cross-cultural implications...
The taking of a bribe or gratuity, should be punished with as severe penalties as the defrauding of ...
Bribery discriminates against honest companies by creating a barrier to entry in the form of a compe...
Recent initiatives by the Securities Exchange Commission, acting under the Foreign Corrupt Practices...
This Note uses examples such as Titan Corp. to support the argument that there are reasons to questi...
Prohibitions against transnational bribery suffer from a paradoxical problem of simultaneous over- a...
In the last twenty years, the United States government has put substantial resources behind the figh...
This Article is the third installment in a long-term research project that examines the effects of t...
Congress advocates the position that foreign bribery in a commercial context contributes to foreign ...
Although the purpose of international anti-bribery legislation, particularly the U.S. Foreign Corrup...
The article presents information on nature and frequency of bribe solicitation and extortion. It dis...
Focusing primarily on the pragmatic and moral perils of cultural imperialism, I also alluded very br...
The United States has been at the forefront of international efforts to combat corruption in the glo...
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (“FCPA”), which bans corporations from offering bribes to foreign ...
In an attempt to halt bribery of foreign officials by American businesses, the Foreign Corrupt Pract...
Mateo de la Torre’s research had an international focus in examining the cross-cultural implications...
The taking of a bribe or gratuity, should be punished with as severe penalties as the defrauding of ...
Bribery discriminates against honest companies by creating a barrier to entry in the form of a compe...
Recent initiatives by the Securities Exchange Commission, acting under the Foreign Corrupt Practices...