Corporate Governance Regulation Through Non-Prosecution

Jennifer H. Arlen, Marcel Kahan
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

Over the last decade, federal corporate criminal enforcement policy has undergone a significant transformation. Firms that commit crimes are no longer simply required to pay fines. Instead, prosecutors and firms enter into pretrial diversion agreements (PDAs). Prosecutors regularly use PDAs to impose mandates on firms creating new duties that alter firms’ internal operations or governance structures. This Article evaluates PDA mandates to determine whether and when prosecutors can appropriately use them to deter corporate crime. We find that mandates can be justified. But, contrary to DOJ policy favoring mandates for any firm with a deficient compliance program at the time of the crime, we find that mandates should be imposed more selectively. Specifically, mandates are only appropriate if a firm is plagued by “policing agency costs” — in that the firm’s managers did not act to deter or report wrongdoing because they benefitted personally from tolerating wrongdoing or from deficient corporate policing. We show that this policing agency cost justification provides guidance on how to reform federal policy to make appropriate use of mandates, guidance which reveals that many mandates are inappropriate.
通过不起诉进行公司管治监管
在过去十年中,联邦公司刑事执法政策发生了重大转变。犯罪企业不再仅仅被要求支付罚款。相反,检察官和公司签订审前转移协议(PDAs)。检察官经常使用pda对公司施加命令,创造新的职责,改变公司的内部运作或治理结构。本文评估PDA授权,以确定检察官是否以及何时可以适当地使用它们来阻止公司犯罪。我们发现授权是有道理的。但是,与司法部的政策相反,司法部倾向于对任何在犯罪发生时合规计划有缺陷的公司进行强制执行,我们发现强制执行应该更有选择性。具体来说,只有当一家公司受到“监管机构成本”的困扰时,授权才合适——因为公司的经理们没有采取行动阻止或报告不当行为,因为他们个人从容忍不当行为或公司监管不力中受益。我们表明,这种警务机构成本论证为如何改革联邦政策以适当利用授权提供了指导,指导揭示了许多授权是不适当的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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