DOJ Announces a Pilot Program to Encourage Companies to Self-Report FCPA Violations

Similar documents
DOJ Issues New FCPA Corporate Enforcement Policy

SEC FCPA Action Against Bristol-Myers Squibb Highlights Importance of Addressing Red Flags and Compliance Gaps

DOJ's New FCPA Pilot Program Will Have Only Marginal Impact

DOJ s New Policy Incentivizes Voluntary Self- Disclosure of Criminal Export Controls and Sanctions Violations.

This Webcast Will Begin Shortly

In an environment of heightened federal enforcement

Alert WHITE COLLAR AND GOVERNMENT LITIGATION PRACTICE

The Second Circuit Rejects FCPA Liability for Foreign Persons under Accessory Liability Theories

WHITE PAPER. New DOJ Investigative Measures Target Individuals for Corporate Misconduct

Mark Bartlett Davis Wright Tremaine LLP

Contractors in the Crosshairs: Investigations Passing Government Scrutiny

FAST BREAK: GOVERNMENT ENFORCEMENT OF INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNTABILITY. Katie McDermott Jacob Harper February 28, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP

FCPA Due Diligence in M&A Amid Increased Enforcement

The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: Government Expectations for Corporate Compliance and Cooperation

White Collar Crime / Criminal Defense

President Signs Dodd-Frank Reform Legislation

Case 1:16-cr RJD Document 15 Filed 04/11/17 Page 1 of 7 PageID #: 135. F. #2016R00709 Brooklyn, New York 11201

CHALLENGES POSED BY THE YATES MEMO AND DOJ S NEW THRESHOLD FOR CORPORATE COOPERATION November 15, 2016

FCPA Compliance and Enforcement Trends Annual Guide: April 2016

NEW CORPORATE SENTENCING GUIDELINES PROVIDE GUIDANCE REGARDING WHAT CONSTITUTES AN EFFECTIVE CORPORATE COMPLIANCE PROGRAM

Anatomy of a Voluntary Disclosure

U.S. District Court Applies Supervisory Authority Over Criminal Proceedings to Review of Deferred Prosecution Agreement

Compliance & Ethics. a publication of the society of corporate compliance and ethics JUNE 2018

Back to the Basics An End of the Year Review of the FCPA

Former Prosecutor Nat Edmonds Discusses the Implications of the Recent Changes to the U.S. Attorneys Manual (Part One of Two)

FCPA Compliance and Enforcement Trends Annual Guide: January 2018

How to Conduct an Internal Investigation

U.S. Bancorp Enters into Deferred Prosecution Agreement and Related Resolutions and Agrees to Pay $613 million for BSA/AML Failures

Federal Banking Agencies Issue Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Enhanced Cybersecurity Standards

COMPLIANCE AND MANDATORY DISCLOSURE OBLIGATIONS FOR GOVERNMENT CONTRACTORS

The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: Effective Compliance Strategies ACC In-House Counsel Forum April 28, 2011

Date: September 8, 2016 Time: 2:15 PM to 3:30 PM

Impact on FCPA Compliance Enhancing Internal Reporting Procedures and Meeting New Investigation and Disclosure Challenges

CONDUCTING INTERNAL INVESTIGATIONS GATHERING EVIDENCE AND PROTECTING YOUR COMPANY

Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Panel

R E P R I N T JAN-MAR Inside this issue: The evolving role of the chief risk officer Managing your company s regulatory exposure

Protecting Your Company and Executives from FCPA Liability in Jonathan T. Cain Aaron M. Tidman

SEC Proposes Rules To Implement Dodd-Frank Whistleblower Provisions

Internal and Government Investigations: A Deep Dive

Establishing an Anti-Corruption Compliance Program in Canada

High Risk Markets & FCPA

2017 Year-End Review: Anti-Corruption Trends and Other Corporate Enforcement Issues

Articles. SEC Proposes New Whistleblower Rules Under the Dodd-Frank Act of Eric R. Markus December 2, 2010

PART B - REMEDYING HARM FROM CRIMINAL CONDUCT, AND EFFECTIVE COMPLIANCE AND ETHICS PROGRAM

DO S AND DON TS ALL IN-HOUSE COUNSEL SHOULD KNOW ABOUT GOVERNMENT INVESTIGATIONS

CARIBBEAN DEVELOPMENT BANK STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK FOR INTEGRITY, COMPLIANCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY PILLARS I AND II INTEGRITY AND ETHICS POLICY

Ralph Lauren vs. Total: A Tale of Two FCPA Violators

Case 1:08-cr RJL Document 23 Filed 12/18/12 Page 1 of 5 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

SEC Adopts Final Rules on the Dodd-Frank Whistleblower Program But Is This a Game Changer?

I nsurance brokers and investment banks have at

CARIBBEAN DEVELOPMENT BANK STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK FOR INTEGRITY, COMPLIANCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY PILLARS I, II AND III WHISTLEBLOWER POLICY

This Webcast Will Begin Shortly

Keynote by Deputy Assistant Attorney General Sung-Hee Suh at the ABA-CJS Global White Collar Crime Institute 2015

AMENDMENTS TO THE FEDERAL SENTENCING GUIDELINES IMPOSE NEW STANDARDS FOR COMPLIANCE AND ETHICS PROGRAMS

Beyond Borders: Corruption Risk in Today s s Global Marketplace. Dallas-Fort Worth Joint IIA Chapter Meeting May 14, 2009

Completing the Journey through the World of Compliance. Session # COM6, March 5, 2018 Gabriel L. Imperato, Managing Partner Broad and Cassel

Bribery and Corruption

FCPA. Due Diligence. The REPORT. The Importance of Pre-Merger Due Diligence

The Practice and Pitfalls of Internal Investigations:

SOMERVILLE HOUSING AUTHORITY ANTI- FRAUD POLICY. April 3, 2013

Personal Liability. 24 th Annual WCAML Forum May Stephanie Yonekura Partner- Hogan Lovells US LLP

HOSPITAL COMPLIANCE POTENTIAL IMPLICATION OF FRAUD AND ABUSE LAWS AND REGULATIONS FOR HOSPITALS

Long-Awaited FCPA Guidance is Reportedly Imminent

A CFTC Enforcement Refresher and Overview of Cooperation Credit. By: James G. Lundy and Mary P. Hansen Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP

F. EFFECTIVE DATE AND

Issues In Internal Investigations for Company Counsel in the Post-Enron Era September 13, 2006

Corruption and Compliance Programs: Comparison of French and U.S. Approaches

center/terrorist-illicit-finance/documents/national%20money%20laundering%20risk%20assessment%20%e2%80%93% pdf.

Recent FCPA Enforcement Action

World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Anticorruption Working Group on Voluntary Self-Disclosure

Institute of Internal Auditors 2018 IIA CHICAGO CHAPTER JOIN NTAC:4UC-11

It s Here: The Final 60 Day Overpayment Rule

Whistleblower Rules Time for an Ombudsman?

Disclaimer. The materials and views expressed in this presentation are the views of the presenters and not necessarily the views of Northwell Health

Employee Misconduct: A Practical Approach to Conducting Internal Investigations with Criminal and Regulatory Aspects

23-December-2017 Keppel Offshore & Marine Reaches Global Resolution with Authorities in the U.S., Brazil and Singapore

Strategies for Conducting Internal Investigations

I. YATES MEMORANDUM STRICTER ENFORCEMENT POLICY

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Before the SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 AND THE IMPACT ON PUBLIC EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT SYSTEMS

Whistle-Blowing Policy

Potential Exposure Under The FCPA

The Perils Of Pharma: The Pharmaceutical Industry And The FCPA

Prevention of Corporate Liability

Anti-Corruption. Will increased international cooperation stem corruption?

WHISTLEBLOWERS. Labor and Employment Briefing May 19, 2016 Robert E. Hauberg, Jr.

Anti Corruption Compliance Policy

This Webcast Will Begin Shortly

MENTAL HEALTH MENTAL RETARDATION OF TARRANT COUNTY. Board Policy. Number A.3 July 31, 2001 COMPLIANCE PLAN

From the Office Suite to Cell Block C: Potential Criminal and Regulatory Implications of Pharma/Biotech/Device Products Liability Lawsuits

Whistle-Blowing Policy

Santa Monica Transparency Project Complaints Against Former City Manager Rod Gould for Violation of the Oaks Initiative

The U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA):

SEC Provides Guidance for Disclosure and Accounting Implications of Tax Cuts and Jobs Act

THEMATIC COMPILATION OF RELEVANT INFORMATION SUBMITTED BY UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ARTICLE 12 UNCAC PRIVATE SECTOR AND PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS

FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT: TWO RECENT CASES SET NEW RECORDS FOR PENALTIES, TEACH OLD LESSONS

IN THE MATTER OF THE SECURITIES ACT, R.S.N.S. 1989, CHAPTER 418, AS AMENDED, (the Act ) - AND - IN THE MATTER OF

ADVISORY Dodd-Frank Act

DON T COVER UP, FESS UP! How to avoid huge fines for an FCPA transgression

Presentation follows

Transcription:

April 6, 2016 DOJ Announces a Pilot Program to Encourage Companies to Self-Report FCPA Violations On April 5, 2016, the U.S. Department of Justice ( DOJ ) released an FCPA Enforcement Plan and Guidance memorandum announcing a one-year pilot program that is designed to motivate[e] companies to voluntarily self-disclose FCPA-related misconduct, fully cooperate with the Fraud Section, and, where appropriate, remediate flaws in their controls and compliance programs. 1 The pilot program, which applies to business organizations only, provides new guidance concerning mitigation credit offered in relation to FCPA prosecutions that is separate from, and in addition to, any mitigation credit available under the Sentencing Guidelines. The pilot program reflects an effort by DOJ to increase transparency regarding charging decisions in corporate prosecutions, which was described in recent statements by Assistant Attorney General Leslie Caldwell as one of DOJ s top priorities. 2 The program also is designed to increase the Fraud Section s ability to prosecute individual wrongdoers whose conduct might otherwise have gone undiscovered by making full disclosure of individual wrongdoing a condition of full cooperation by business organizations. 3 In order to qualify for full mitigation credit under the pilot program, a company must (1) voluntarily selfdisclose; (2) fully cooperate with a DOJ investigation; and (3) remediate, as appropriate, internal controls and compliance programs. A. Self-Disclosure A central aim of the pilot program is to encourage companies to self-disclose FCPA-related misconduct. The program guidelines establish voluntary self-reporting as an essential requirement for receiving 1 U.S. Dep t of Justice, The Fraud Section s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Enforcement Plan and Guidance 2 (the Memorandum ) (Apr. 5, 2016), https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/838386/download. In addition to the pilot program, the memorandum also announces other enhancements to DOJ s FCPA enforcement framework, including an increase in DOJ and FBI staff dedicated to FCPA prosecutions and enhanced collaboration efforts with foreign authorities. 2 Leslie Caldwell, Assistant Attorney General, Dep t of Justice, Remarks at American Conference Institute s 32nd Annual International Conference on FCPA (Nov. 17, 2015), http://www.justice.gov/opa/speech/assistant-attorney-general-leslie-rcaldwell-delivers-remarks-american-conference. 3 Memorandum 2. 2016 Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP. In some jurisdictions, this publication may be considered attorney advertising. Past representations are no guarantee of future outcomes.

maximum mitigation credit. While companies may still receive partial credit for full cooperation, even if they do not voluntarily self-report, DOJ s announcement makes clear that voluntary disclosure will make a critical and meaningful difference in terms of the magnitude of the mitigation credit for which a company is eligible. The memorandum also represents DOJ s first formal definition of what voluntary means in the context of FCPA self-reporting. For disclosure to be considered voluntary, it must not be required by law, agreement, or contract and must occur prior to an imminent threat of disclosure or government investigation. 4 Additionally, the company must show disclosure was made reasonably promptly and incorporated all known relevant facts, including those specific to the individuals involved. B. Cooperation In order to qualify for full mitigation credit, companies must fully cooperate with DOJ s investigation. The memorandum notes that [c]ooperation comes in many forms, and that a company is expected only to engage in an appropriately tailored investigation, which is what typically should be required to receive full cooperation credit. 5 In case of doubt, companies are encouraged to consult with Fraud Section attorneys concerning the scope of the investigation. The pilot program s guidelines on cooperation are consistent with DOJ s recent emphasis on holding individuals as well as companies accountable for FCPA violations. The guidelines include the explicit requirement that companies provide all known facts concerning individual misconduct. The memorandum also makes clear that attribution of factual reporting to specific sources (within the bounds of the attorney-client privilege) is required for cooperation credit, suggesting at least the possibility that companies may need to be prepared to provide DOJ with summaries of individual witness interviews conducted during an investigation. While assessment of cooperation is case-specific, in order to qualify for cooperation credit, a company must meet the following requirements: Timely disclosure of all relevant facts, including those relating to the individuals involved; Proactive, not reactive, cooperation, including identifying opportunities for the government to obtain relevant evidence not in the company s possession and not otherwise known to the government; Preservation, collection, and disclosure of relevant documents; Timely updates on the company s internal investigation; 4 Id. at 4. 5 Id. at 6.

If requested, de-confliction of the company s investigation with the government investigation; Disclosure of all facts relevant to potential criminal conduct by all third-parties; If requested, making relevant officers and employees available for interviews, including former employees and those located overseas (subject to those persons Fifth Amendment rights); Disclosure of all relevant facts gathered during the company s investigation with attribution to specific sources (if not subject to the attorney-client privilege), not a general narrative of the facts; Disclosure of overseas documents, the location where those documents were found, and who found them (except where impossible due to foreign law); 6 Facilitation of third-party document and witness production from foreign jurisdictions, unless legally prohibited; and Where requested and appropriate, provision of translations of documents. As noted above, companies can receive partial credit for cooperation even if they do not initially choose to cooperate or fail to meet all of the guidelines, so long as they report all relevant facts pertaining to individual misconduct. C. Remediation The program also offers mitigation credit for efforts to remediate flaws in a company s internal controls or anti-corruption compliance program. While the memorandum states that remediation can be difficult to ascertain and highly case specific, it also provides guidelines regarding what remediation efforts will merit credit. 7 These guidelines heavily focus on the compliance function and personnel, and include several specific prescriptions. As an initial matter, under the pilot program, companies must be eligible for cooperation credit in order to be eligible for any remediation credit. If a company has earned cooperation credit, then the additional requirements for remediation credit are: Implementing an effective compliance and ethics program, the criteria for which will be periodically updated and may vary based on the size and resources of the organization. Current criteria include: (a) establishing a culture of compliance, including awareness among employees that criminal conduct will not be tolerated; (b) dedicating sufficient resources to the compliance function; (c) employing qualified and experienced compliance personnel; (d) ensuring the independence of the compliance function; (e) performing an effective compliance risk assessment and tailoring the compliance program to it; (f) appropriately compensating and promoting 6 If the company asserts that foreign law prohibits the disclosure of overseas documents, it has the burden of showing such a prohibition applies and no alternative basis for disclosure exists. 7 Id at 7.

compliance personnel relative to other employees; (g) effectively auditing the compliance program; and (h) establishing an effective reporting structure of compliance personnel within the country; Appropriate discipline of employees, and a system that provides for disciplining individuals with oversight of those responsible for misconduct and considers how compensation is affected both by disciplinary infractions and failure to supervise adequately; and Any additional steps that demonstrate recognition of the seriousness of the misconduct, acceptance of responsibility, and the implementation of measures to reduce the risk of repetition (including measures to identify future risks). D. Credit for Business Organizations under the Pilot Program Finally, the memorandum also discusses the specific amount of credit a company can earn by participating in the program. Regardless of a company s self-reporting, cooperation, or remediation efforts, the memorandum indicates that disgorgement of profits related to an FCPA violation is a baseline expectation for mitigation credit. A company that meets all three requirements of the pilot program voluntary self-disclosure, cooperation, and remediation and also disgorges profits can receive up to a 50% reduction off the bottom end of the Sentencing Guidelines fine range. Additionally, if the company has implemented an effective compliance program at the time of resolution, DOJ typically will not require the appointment of a monitor. In some circumstances, full compliance with the pilot program can even result in declination to prosecute, and the memorandum suggests that declination is more likely if a company takes part in the program. The memorandum also makes clear, however, that a declination to prosecute will be unlikely if senior management takes part in misconduct, if the company makes a relatively significant profit from the misconduct, or if there has been a prior resolution between the company and DOJ within the past five years. As noted above, companies that do not self-report can still be eligible for partial credit if they fully cooperate and remediate, but the memorandum makes explicit that any credit awarded will be markedly less than that offered to companies that self-disclose, thus granting voluntary self-disclosure 8 a novel significance in FCPA enforcement. At most, companies that do not self-disclose can receive a 25% reduction from the bottom of the Sentencing Guidelines fine range. At the conclusion of a year, the DOJ intends to assess the effectiveness of the pilot program and make a determination as to whether to continue it in its present or some other form. 8 Id.

* * * This memorandum is not intended to provide legal advice, and no legal or business decision should be based on its content. Questions concerning issues addressed in this memorandum should be directed to: James L. Brochin 212-373-3582 jbrochin@paulweiss.com Mark F. Mendelsohn 202-223-7377 mmendelsohn@paulweiss.com David W. Brown 212-373-3504 dbrown@paulweiss.com Alex Young K. Oh 202-223-7334 aoh@paulweiss.com Michael E. Gertzman 212-373-3281 mgertzman@paulweiss.com Farrah R. Berse 212-373-3008 fberse@paulweiss.com Associate Anders W. Pauley and law clerk Alessandra Baniel-Stark contributed to this client alert.