《反海外腐败法》的制裁:太大了?

Drury D. Stevenson, N. J. Wagoner
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引用次数: 26

摘要

《反海外腐败法》(FCPA)将贿赂外国政府官员定为刑事犯罪;在过去几年中,根据《反海外腐败法》对公司征收的执法行动的频率和罚款的严重性显著增加。然而,对违反《反海外腐败法》的制裁存在一个持续存在的问题:执法机构(司法部和美国证券交易委员会)和合同官员仅限于罚款、民事处罚,偶尔对个别违规者进行监禁。禁止与联邦政府签订未来的合同,即使是暂时的,是对违反《反海外腐败法》的未使用的制裁,尽管国会已通过法规规定了这种惩罚。制裁的威慑力比罚款和处罚强得多,因为与美国做生意的跨国承包商不太可能将制裁仅仅视为做生意的成本。如果消除海外市场的腐败确实是美国的首要任务,那么联邦机构继续将利润丰厚、价值数十亿美元的合同授予最近因欺诈获得海外合同而被起诉的公司,似乎既不公平,也不明智。执法官员不愿取缔违反《反海外腐败法》的实体,原因是机构无法与其最喜欢的承包商进行业务交易,在潜在投标人数量减少时无法要求承包商提供有利的报价,这在短期内会带来不便,从而导致失业,而且可能会过度威慑那些可能在新兴市场寻求有利可图机会的公司。这就是“太大而不能禁止”的问题——联邦政府过于依赖于一组特定的大型私营企业提供设备和服务。除了这些公司在违反《反海外腐败法》时几乎不受法律制裁之外,参与海外腐败行为的罚款只占与美国和外国签订利润丰厚的合同所产生的潜在收入的一小部分。如果考虑到被发现的可能性很低,这些制裁远远不足以阻止非法活动。惩罚可以震慑潜在的违法者,并使实际违法者丧失行为能力。这种威慑力将促使更多的公司遵守法律,这将使“太大而不能禁止”的问题随着时间的推移而减少。为了帮助阐明这些问题并为本文提供支持,本文将研究迄今为止第三大与fcpa相关的执法行动:BAE系统公司案。2010年3月1日,BAE系统公司为其海外腐败行为支付了大约4亿美元的罚款。然而,在接下来的一年里,联邦政府授予BAE超过60亿美元的合同。由于潜在的“附带后果”,美国拒绝禁止BAE,这为通过暂停和禁止来阻止外国腐败的利弊提供了一个案例研究。本文的结论是,美国必须开始使其联邦承包商的组合多样化,以便检察官可以利用暂停和取消资格的合法威胁来更有效地阻止外国腐败。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
FCPA Sanctions: Too Big to Debar?
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) criminalizes bribery of foreign government officials; the frequency of enforcement actions and severity of fines levied against corporations under the FCPA have significantly increased in the last few years. There is an ongoing problem, however, with the sanctions for FCPA violations: enforcement authorities (DOJ and SEC) and contracting officials have limited themselves to fines, civil penalties, and occasional imprisonment of individual violators. Debarment from future federal government contracts, even temporarily, is an unused sanction for FCPA violations, even though Congress provided for this punishment by statute. Debarment offers a far more potent deterrent than fines and penalties, as multinational contractors that conduct business with the U.S. are much less likely to view the sanction as merely a cost of doing business. If ridding foreign markets of corruption truly is a top priority of the U.S., it seems both unfair and imprudent for federal agencies to continue awarding lucrative, multibillion-dollar contracts to firms recently prosecuted for fraudulently obtaining such contracts overseas. Enforcement officials shy away from debarring entities that violate the FCPA due to the short-term inconvenience of an agency’s inability to transact business with its favorite contractor, its inability to demand favorable bids from contractors when the field of potential bidders has thinned, the resulting job loss, and the risk of overdeterring companies that might otherwise pursue lucrative opportunities in emerging markets. This is the "too big to debar" problem – the federal government is too dependent on a particular set of large, private-sector corporations for equipment and services. In addition to the virtual immunity from debarment enjoyed by these firms when they violate the FCPA, the fines imposed for engaging in foreign corrupt practices comprise a tiny fraction of the potential revenue generated by lucrative contracts with the U.S. and foreign states. When discounted by the low probability of detection, these sanctions are far too low to deter unlawful activity. Debarment would deter potential wrongdoers and incapacitate actual offenders. The deterrent would induce more firms to comply with the law, which would allow the “too big to debar” problem to diminish over time. To help illuminate these concerns and lend support to the thesis, this Article will examine the third largest FCPA-related enforcement action to date: the BAE Systems case. On March 1, 2010, BAE Systems paid approximately $400 million in fines for its corrupt practices abroad. In the year that followed however, the federal government awarded BAE contracts in excess of $6 billion dollars. The U.S.’s refusal to debar BAE because of the potential “collateral consequences” provides a case study on the benefits and drawbacks of deterring foreign corruption through suspension and debarment. This Article concludes that the U.S. must begin to diversify its portfolio of federal contractors so that prosecutors may leverage the legitimate threat of suspension and debarment to more effectively deter foreign corruption.
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