Justice
Talks Tough on Prosecuting Crime in the Suites
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
According
to an internal memo written by Deputy Attorney
General Sally Q. Yates and leaked to the New York Times, the department will now be pressing companies
under investigation to identify the individuals involved in the misconduct, no
matter how high they are in the firm’s organizational chart, and hand over
evidence that may aid in the prosecution of those individuals.
Rejecting
the all-too-frequent practice of treating business misconduct as an
abstraction, Yates told The Times:
“Corporations can only commit crimes through flesh-and-blood people.”
While
it is likely, as The Times points
out, that the memo is to some extent “an exercise in public messaging,” Yates
does lay out some rigorous guidelines. For example, the provision of
information on individuals is made a prerequisite for any company seeking
“cooperation credit,” a kind of plea bargaining in which the firm gets lighter
penalties for voluntarily disclosing relevant facts to prosecutors.
Yates
also orders criminal and civil attorneys at Justice to “focus on individuals
from the inception of the investigation.” She rightly acknowledges the
connection between the investigation of the company and the investigation of
its executives.
Focusing on individuals from the start, she writes, “will
maximize the chances that the final resolution of an investigation uncovering
the misconduct will include civil or criminal charges against not just the
corporation but against culpable individuals as well.”
To
prevent corporations from shielding their executives, the memo states that
Department attorneys should preserve the ability to pursue individuals in those
instances when it first reaches a resolution of charges against the company.
Prosecutors may agree to immunity for executives in “extraordinary
circumstances,” but these cases have to be approved by the relevant Assistant
Attorney General or United States Attorney. It remains to be seen whether this
provision gets abused.
It’s
interesting that the Yates memo came to light right after United Airlines CEO
Jeff Smisek was forced to resign amid a federal investigation of the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey that turned up evidence suggesting that
United had maintained a money-losing flight from Newark Airport to Columbia,
South Carolina to curry favor with then-Port Authority Chairman David Samson,
who had a vacation home in the Palmetto State.
The
circumstances in that case, which stemmed from Chris Christie’s George
Washington Bridge scandal, may be unusual, but it was a pleasing change of pace
to see the guy at the top being held responsible. Let’s hope that the Yates
memo leads to more of the same amid heightened prosecution of both rogue
corporations and the executives who run them.