When evaluating how to proceed against a corporate investigative target, law enforcement authorities often ignore the target’s governance arrangements, while subsequently negotiating or imposing governance requirements, especially in deferred prosecution agreements. Ignoring governance structures and processes amid investigation can be hazardous and implementing improvised reforms afterwards may have severe unintended consequences—particularly when prescribing standardized governance devices. Drawing, in part, on new lessons from three prominent cases—Arthur Andersen, AIG and Bristol-Myers Squibb—this Article criticizes prevailing discord and urges prosecutors to contemplate corporate governance at the outset and to articulate rationales fo...
The story of the Global Financial Crisis is well-known. The aim of this article is to analyse the di...
In response to the broad scope of the Enron-era frauds, the federal government has adopted novel str...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
When evaluating how to proceed against a corporate investigative target, law enforcement authorities...
When evaluating how to proceed against a corporate investigative target, law enforcement authorities...
Since 2008, the global economic downturn has significantly in-creased operating pressures on major c...
In recent years, U.S. federal prosecutors have shifted their stance from prosecuting and convicting ...
In the United States, prosecutors regularly resolve corporate criminal cases through the use of Defe...
A recent federal appellate court ruling of first impression permits the resolution of allegations of...
Nation-states face regulatory and enforcement dilemmas when dealing with corporations operating in i...
Corporate criminal enforcement has exploded in this country. Billion dollar fines are now routine ac...
Over the past few years the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) and Department of Justice (DOJ) hav...
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, deferred prosecution agreements are said to occupy an “...
Perhaps the least sympathetic party in a corporate criminal matter is a corporate entity that has en...
Under current federal law, a corporation, no matter how large or small, is criminally liable if a me...
The story of the Global Financial Crisis is well-known. The aim of this article is to analyse the di...
In response to the broad scope of the Enron-era frauds, the federal government has adopted novel str...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
When evaluating how to proceed against a corporate investigative target, law enforcement authorities...
When evaluating how to proceed against a corporate investigative target, law enforcement authorities...
Since 2008, the global economic downturn has significantly in-creased operating pressures on major c...
In recent years, U.S. federal prosecutors have shifted their stance from prosecuting and convicting ...
In the United States, prosecutors regularly resolve corporate criminal cases through the use of Defe...
A recent federal appellate court ruling of first impression permits the resolution of allegations of...
Nation-states face regulatory and enforcement dilemmas when dealing with corporations operating in i...
Corporate criminal enforcement has exploded in this country. Billion dollar fines are now routine ac...
Over the past few years the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) and Department of Justice (DOJ) hav...
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, deferred prosecution agreements are said to occupy an “...
Perhaps the least sympathetic party in a corporate criminal matter is a corporate entity that has en...
Under current federal law, a corporation, no matter how large or small, is criminally liable if a me...
The story of the Global Financial Crisis is well-known. The aim of this article is to analyse the di...
In response to the broad scope of the Enron-era frauds, the federal government has adopted novel str...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...