The US Department of Justice recently announced several new compliance policies. We examine the changes, how they relate to UK compliance and what they mean for businesses.
Lisa Monaco, Deputy Attorney General at the US Department of Justice (DOJ), recently introduced new corporate crime policies which will shake up the DOJ's approach to corporate crime.
A 2020 survey of US corporations by the law firm Miller & Chevalier suggested the USA's then-market maturity "reflected a trend of companies expanding their compliance programmes beyond 'basic policies' and making meaningful investments to erect robust, sustainable programmes."
This conclusion follows years of work carried out by the United States DOJ and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). As the two principal enforcement agencies with jurisdiction over financial and other white-collar crimes, the organisations teamed up in 2012 to issue 'A Resource Guide to the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act'.
The Resource Guide gathered years of 'unofficial' compliance guidance and introduced several now well-established principles designed to help companies create and implement effective compliance programmes.
The DOJ and SEC's guide covered ten principal hallmarks, including among others, 'oversight, autonomy and resources', 'incentives and disciplinary measures', and 'confidential reporting and internal investigation'.
While the guidelines are not legally binding, they set out the US government's expectations and the standards the DOJ and SEC use when considering business' compliance programmes during criminal, civil and regulatory enforcement actions.
However, despite the aim of the Biden presidency to tackle corporate crime more aggressively, DAG Monaco acknowledged that the DOJ's current enforcement record falls short of expectations.
In fact, the figures are alarming. According to stats gathered by career experts, Zippia, white-collar prosecutions make up just 3% of federal prosecutions and are down by over 50% compared to 2011. Estimates also suggest that 90% of white-collar crimes go unreported.
Unsurprisingly, when set against this backdrop, Monaco's September speech highlighted the DOJ's intent to no longer accept "business as usual" when investigating corporations and corporate officials.
Calling the policies "a combination of carrots and sticks," the DOJ's changes are designed to give organisations' Compliance Officers the tools to do the right thing regarding responsible corporate behaviour and empowers prosecutors to hold non-compliant businesses accountable.
Given this tougher stance, it's more critical than ever that US organisations thoroughly review their compliance procedures to ensure they don't fall foul of the DOJ's new priorities. The five key takeaways businesses need to be fully aware of are:
Announced as their number one priority, the DOJ aims to act fast and do more to prosecute individuals who commit corporate crime, regardless of position, status, or seniority.
Currently, US businesses can receive cooperation credit – intended as an incentive to disclose misconduct and cooperate with investigations voluntarily. This may include a reduction of damages, civil penalties or other benefits.
To combat any reluctance to reveal wrongdoing, companies can now potentially maximise credit by quickly and transparently self-disclosing individual misconduct.
On the flip side, any unwarranted or intentional delays will result in cooperation credit being reduced or denied – particularly regarding individual accountability. This reflects the DOJ's changed focus on charging individuals at the same time they resolve matters with the company.
Individual accountability in the UK can be difficult to nail down. The UK's 'identification principle' requires prosecutors to find the business' 'directing mind or will' behind the criminal act.
However, the size of some companies and their diverse decision-making enables culpable people to often hide behind ambiguity and the defence of knowing nothing.
Previously, the DOJ considered a company's entire criminal history when deciding if and how to prosecute. Following a backlash, 'dated conduct' (10 years old for criminal resolutions and five for civil and regulatory resolutions) will now carry less weight than recent conduct.
Prosecutors must also focus on whether the current misconduct stems from the same root cause or individual employee as before. However, if the previous offence occurred in a more heavily-regulated industry – such as financial – the DOJ will take it into consideration.
Prosecutors will take any previous relevant convictions or whether the business is subject to previous relevant civil or regulatory enforcement action into account as part of a 'harm figure'. The overall 'harm figure' could mean up to a 4x increase in the severity of the financial punishment.
Any DOJ department that prosecutes corporate criminal behaviour must now create a formal, written policy that incentivises businesses to voluntarily self-disclose. Each policy must also clarify that the company can avoid a guilty plea and a potentially expensive compliance monitor if they cooperate with the investigation, rectify the misconduct and have an effective compliance programme in place.
Self-disclosure in the UK and cooperation with the authorities may help to mitigate prosecution or reduce a fine. However, the UK's Serious Fraud Office warns that a self-report must form part of a "genuinely proactive approach' by the company once alerted to the offence, but is no guarantee that a prosecution won't follow.
The DOJ is empowered to appoint an independent compliance monitor if appropriate. However, the recent speech added ten factors to consider before doing so. In addition to the above, these factors boil down to firms identifying if they need an independent compliance monitor, how to choose one, and how to oversee them.
This aims to ensure that monitoring is explicitly tailored to the misconduct and the effectiveness (or not) of the company's compliance programme and response.
Though not as prevalent as in the US, using independent compliance monitors following a criminal or regulatory breach is gaining ground in the UK. However, they are typically used in a more targeted way.
While the DOJ has always taken a company's compliance programme into account when deciding on charges, evaluations must now assess the compliance programme in place at the time of the offence and when it is resolved.
Prosecutors will also examine the organisation's compensation culture to determine if it discourages disclosure via contact clauses or severance agreements or instead includes appropriate deterrents and encourages pro-compliance. Companies that reward employees for reporting misconduct will also receive increased cooperation credit.
Prosecutors must assess the effectiveness of an organisation's compliance programme at the time of the offence, its current state, and how it might change. All these factors can be taken into account.
Whistleblowers may receive uncapped financial compensation for damage to their career, loss of job, or mental ill-health after raising their concerns. However, rewarding whistleblowing is currently uncommon in the UK, and only South Korea and the US have advanced rewards systems in place.
With the DOJ looking to clamp down on criminal behaviour and a greater emphasis on prosecuting both companies and individuals, US businesses must ensure they have robust compliance programmes in place aligned with a culture of honesty, integrity and transparency.
In DAG Monaco's words: "Companies should feel empowered to do the right thing—to invest in compliance and culture, and to step up and own up when misconduct occurs. Companies that do will welcome the announcements. For those who don't, our prosecutors will also be empowered – to hold accountable those who don't follow the law."
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