Read the three articles posted on Blackboard about the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). Assume that you are working for a Washington, D.C. policy thinktank. You have been tasked with preparing a report on whether the FCPA should be repealed. Prepare a report covering the following topics:
? An overview of the FCPA.
? A description of the ethical issues involved with either repealing orsustaining the FCPA.
? A comparison of the conclusion that your personal ethical beliefs wouldreach with the conclusions that were reached by your selected ethicaltheories. Six reasons why corporations like (and want)
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act even if they
won’t admit it
Conniel Malek, Director of True Costs Initiative
There are several reasons why multinationals not only have an interest in preserving the FCPA, but see its infrastructure as a
benefit to business – even if they won’t say it.
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) gives US companies an invaluable tool to fight corruption abroad. It has also
been an effective tool for foreign countries to reduce bribery, and it has led to billions of dollars in fines. President Trump
has labeled the FCPA a “horrible law” and insisted that it stifles American businesses conducting business abroad. “It puts
us at a huge disadvantage,” he told CNBC in May 2012. The jury is still out on whether the Trump administration will take
concrete steps to weaken the FCPA and it is possible that perception is not reality when it comes to President Trump and the
Act.
It is not however, inconsequential that using the Congressional Review Act, the Trump administration killed a rule to crack
down on foreign bribery by US energy companies. That action does not augur well for the administration’s commitment to
the FCPA and related anti-corruption regulations. Foreign civil society advocates and US supporters of this Act who have
seen the benefits reaped from increased anti-bribery enforcement and intergovernmental cooperation, are understandably
concerned about what the administration might do next. But as they wait for the proverbial shoe to drop, civil society
advocates may find unlikely allies within corporations. There are several reasons why multinationals not only have an
interest in preserving the FCPA, but see its infrastructure as a benefit to business – even if they won’t say it.
1. Corporations love predictability. Reverting to a world without the stricture of the FCPA is unappealing for
several reasons. The non-FCPA world is an expensive and risky one. Corporations want certainty in their contracts,
costs, investments and the framework within which their foreign business operations take place. If bribes and
corruption are rampant, their logistics planning, the efficiency of their business operations and ultimately their return on
investment are all potentially at risk because they can’t predict the expensive and unpredictable demands of corrupt
government officials and intermediaries.
2. The FCPA is good for US businesses. Corporations thrive when they can maintain their competitive advantage.
In a business environment where corruption is rare, corporations distinguish themselves based on the superiority of
their product, efficiency of their logistics, business models etc. This is where US corporations have an advantage. In a
world in which corruption is rampant, foreign companies which typically could not compete with US corporations,
because of poor product for example, are often able to out-compete US business because they engage in bribery and
other corrupt practices. US companies actually stand to gain when businesses around the world are operating on
relatively the same regulatory plane.
Reverting to a world without the stricture of the FCPA is unappealing for several reasons. The non-FCPA
world is an expensive and risky one.
3. Large multinational corporations have already built the compliance infrastructure to support FCPA
requirements and they have seen the secondary benefits of these increased internal controls for their core
businesses. Corporations have invested tremendous resources in building legal and compliance infrastructure to
support the management of FCPA and other compliance risk within their business units and supply chains. This
compliance infrastructure positions companies to achieve concrete business benefits such as improved quality control,
stronger internal controls and general efficiency. Also, within large corporations, the FCPA has essentially become
everybody’s business. Corporations have an incentive to maintain that and are unlikely to pull the Jenga-block on what
has become an integrated and important building block to their corporate business and governance structure.
4. Corporations are risk averse. As much as corporations espouse the importance of “disruptive technologies”,
“embracing risk” and using creative strategies to “maximize their competitive advantage”, corporations at their core are
actually quite risk averse. This risk aversion is evident in the increasing use of risk analysis firms, pre-acquisition
FCPA and other due diligence. They want to take managed risks that will pay off but won’t get them on the front page
of The New York Times. They want to protect their reputational exposure at all costs, and a sure-fire way to assail that
reputation is an FCPA investigation or lawsuit. Corporations are motivated to keep this infrastructure in place because it
also helps them manage outsized risk and protect their reputations.
The FCPA has become everybody’s business. Corporations have an incentive to maintain that and are unlikely
to pull the Jenga-block on what has become an integrated and important building block to their corporate
business and governance structure.
5. Astute CEOs know that FCPA regulations do not have a significantly adverse effect on business profits. The
FCPA has not signaled the death knell of American businesses abroad as some opponents claim. In fact, the majority of
the largest FCPA enforcement actions in 2016 and the FCPA enforcement actions in history were against foreign
companies.
6. Large corporations increasingly recognise the strong connection between corruption and business & human
rights abuses. And (the smart ones) want to avoid both. Comprehensive independent investigations have revealed
the connection between corruption, slavery and human rights abuses in big industries. In Thailand, the world’s third
largest seafood exporter, trawlers use Thai and migrant slaves to catch fish sold in the US, UK and elsewhere in Europe.
While the situation in Thailand reveals a variety of problems– weak government enforcement, lack of worker and
migrant rights, extensive violence and unsustainable fishing practices – many acknowledge and accept that blatant
corruption tied to corporate business operations is a consistent theme running throughout. In fact, several seafood
companies signed a memorandum of understanding pledging to eliminate associated products from their supply chains.
Increasing shareholder activism and human rights campaigns will help make the connection between human rights
abuses and corruption even more clear. CEOs will continue to recognise that this connection is devastatingly real and
that corruption is rarely a solo artist.
Supporters of corporate accountability should keep each of these in mind as they develop their strategies for defending the
FCPA and strengthening its application in the business & human right field: 1) They should be sure not to ignore some,
admittedly unlikely, but useful allies – especially those large corporations which have implemented extensive and more than
face-value FCPA compliance programs. 2) They should identify opportunities to engage these corporations as part of their
strategies to fight corruption especially in the Global South. They may find some compliance departments are quite
receptive to their ideas, input and in some cases their direction. 3) Finally, they should ramp up their efforts to
communicate more clearly to the wider public, to Corporate Social Responsibility offices and CEO’s the inextricable link
between corruption and human rights and environmental abuse.
So, even if we haven’t yet seen dramatic attempts by the current administration to dismantle the FCPA, when the other shoe
does drop (and even if it doesn’t drop), it is important that civil society advocates of the FCPA seek corporate allies. Not to
do so would be to miss an important opportunity for an intersection of interests to preserve an essential tool in the fight
against corruption.
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
A CASE ANALYSIS USING STUDY MATERIALS
Hamad Hasan | ACCT-8965 | May 1, 2021
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 was enacted to address bribery in
business American firms overseas. It was meant to prohibit bribes for obtaining or retaining
business for companies in America and foreign countries. It made it unlawful for foreign
officials to exchange any offers or payments to influence the actions taken towards or
against a business or company. FPCA also has the mandate to make companies provide
adequate accounting documents for these businesses to curb corruption. Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) are responsible for
enforcing the FCPA. Hence, it has been at the forefront to fight corruption around the
world with guidelines in place to enforce these regulations. Among them is voluntary
reporting for companies to acquire leniency and lower investigative cost from government
agencies.
However, FCPA enforcement appears to have dire implications to the business in
America as enforcement standards are too high, commonly known as the all-or-nothing
approach. Companies face risks of heavy penalties after undergoing many investigations,
and some could even shy away from international business opportunities to comply with
these agencies. Even genuine corporations are affected by these policies, and therefore, the
enforcement seems to cause economic instability while fighting corruption. Whether the
FCPA successfully creates a stable economic environment and ethical business practice in
America depends on the viewpoint. Thus, is the agenda to promote the rule of law or
improve the economic situation in America.?
Ethical theories
Social contract theory is about society, what rules and laws mean to them and why
they are needed. Without laws, people would live according to their will and without
PAGE 1
responsibility to their community, causing the strongest to survive and the weakest to be
destroyed. The theory explains that every society needs to have laws and rules and enforce
them to forbid and discourage immoral and unethical behaviors. The social contract is
unwritten, and it dictates people not to break laws or moral codes; therefore, they will reap
the benefits like security and equality. For law enforcement, social contract theory justifies
the power that the authorities have to administer certain consequences to the people who
break the laws. According to this theory, there is a power imbalance following the basic
understanding of why rules and laws are implemented. This law enforcement is the part of
the bargain to get the various benefits in return. However, sometimes the law enforcement
can exceed the justice expectations of society.
Virtue ethics theory states that if one is a good person, they will do good things.
That is to say that the good things people do are not based on an analysis of the result but
because they are of good character, and they automatically respond that way. There are
moral virtues, executive virtues, and intellectual virtues that come to the surface when
faced with various ethical dilemmas. These attributes are very useful for law enforcement
agencies as they make law enforcement possible and effective. They include honesty,
justice, effacement of self-interests, courage, responsibility, among others. Virtue ethics are
essential for law enforcement as one is only required to be good and act accordingly, which
is critical for law enforcement.
The purpose behind the FCPA is to promote ethics. That cannot be possible if the
companies and the foreign officials are getting away with vices like bribing and corruption.
There are ethical issues that the FCPA faces when enforcing the laws, that is, honesty and
integrity. The business environment has been growing continuously for decades, and with
PAGE 2
inevitable competition, companies are doing all they can to gain that competitive
advantage. The most common issues that FCPA has dealt with involves corporations
bribing government officials to gain an edge in the market or acquire contracts, tenders, and
business opportunities. The various stakeholders in these businesses have their eyes fixed
on the growth and profitability of these companies, although the management may have
short-cut ideas to achieve these goals. With the increasing competition, companies’
executives often opt to be corrupt to meet their needs beyond the lawful means. The
question then becomes whether the management values the business ethics like honesty and
integrity in their operations.
Other ethical issues are complacence and governance, where companies defy the
rules that are put in place, in this case, anti-bribery regulations. Also, accounting issues
characterized by false financial documents would put the company on the wrong side of the
law.
The critics of FCPA claim that the Act ought to be repealed as it is found to be
vague with no clear lines between lawful payments and improper bribes during business
transactions. It could be impossible to differentiate between the official receiving
compensations for services offered and those being bribes to influence decisions. FCPA is
also said to be yielding extraterritorial power that purports to punish the offenses of other
foreigners, yet they are not in the US or under the law of the country. It is also punitive in
terms of the penalties given to the offenders, yet the offenses are not threatening.
That said, it’s clear that FCPA has given US companies a tool to fight corruption in
foreign countries and to reduce bribery. The multinationals corporations that find this Act
effective in creating an ethical business environment are interested in preserving the FCPA.
PAGE 3
With efforts to burn corruption, businesses can maintain their competitive advantage of
quality goods and service providers without cases of incompetent foreign companies
getting ahead of them by corruption mean. Corporations can attain quality services and the
best models and logistics in an environment where corruption and bribery are not rampant.
This enables these businesses to rightfully get ahead and dominate the business world
without risks of undeserved competitions.
Also, the US corporations have compliance infrastructure in place as they respond
to and support FCPA requirements. With the indirect benefits of these increased internal
business controls, many corporations have invested in these legal and compliance
infrastructures to reap the benefits even more. Some of these benefits are quality
improvements and effectiveness in international business transactions. Moreover, these
corporations continue to realize that corruption has other attached vices and ethical issues
that need to be addressed. If the Act can effectively fight corruption, then other issues like
human rights abuse could be reduced.
More reasons and strategies are coming up to retain the FCPA and strengthen its
application in the business. Large and influential cooperation in the US that supports the
FCPA ought to be strategically at the forefront in the fight against corruption.
Society theory explains that without laws and regulations, the people result in
lawlessness and lack of order. If corruption and bribery are not controlled in business, then
the executives and managers will be free to do whatever they want without consequences.
Bribing foreign officials would be the order of the day, and this would disadvantage the
companies that are running business honestly, making the business environment chaotic
and prone to failure. With the understanding of why bribery must be fought, the business
PAGE 4
executives can comply with the law and be ready to face the consequences of breaking the
rules.
The integration of social responsibility within a corporation can be done by
enacting policies, having incentive systems and compliance programs to incorporate certain
social standards into the business operation. An example is self-reflection self-criticism
according to societal expectations.
Virtue theory applies in the fight against corruption in the US, both for the agencies
and the business people. The agency personnel who can exercise virtues like honesty can
be thorough and effective in scrutinizing the documents and bringing the culprits to books.
Also, the managers must be keen to run an honest business without bribery to avoid getting
into trouble with the authorities. The corporation’s cultures are formed and nurtured around
the characters and actions of the people involved.
A corporate culture that tolerates corrupt payments is also likely to accept financial
fraud, theft of company assets, and other actions that directly harm the stakeholders.
Managers and business executives must then be willing to promote ethical practice in the
business so that all the players within the company can be geared towards fighting
corruption and bribery.
In my opinion, corruption undermines the rule of law in no small way as it
undermines democracy and contributes to economic erosion. Bribery in business is one
major form of corruption in the US; the justice system seeks to curb this vice. Addressing
corruption in society must be linked to individual and social integrity, which is always
questioned during an ethical dilemma. Bribery threatens good governance, public trust, and
the development of proper economic conditions. This destructive vice in the economy must
PAGE 5
be addressed, and FCPA is there for that reason. Business executives and managers who
cannot depict virtues in business operations are left with the law enforcement actions to
ensure that they operate legally and in economically sound ways.
The weaknesses that FCPA has portrayed over time are better used as guidelines for
improving these policies and not repeal the Act. The US legislators and regulators can
make the necessary adjustments to FCPA to make the complacence possible and the Act
effective in fighting bribery.
PAGE 6
DOES THE FOREIGN CORRUPT
PRACTICES ACT WORK?
July 18, 2016
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) seems as American as apple pie. The law is
meant to prohibit bribery of foreign officials, promoting the kind of fair-play economy
that politicians of all stripes can get behind. Begun in the aftermath of the Watergate
scandal, during which numerous corporations admitted to maintaining slush funds to
bribe foreign officials, the FCPA was the first legislation in the world to address bribery
abroad [1].
By Jennifer Reich, JD’18
BACKGROUND
It has two primary components: 1) prohibiting bribes from American companies and companies that do business
in America, and 2) mandating adequate accounting provisions for corporations to prevent such bribes from taking
place [2]. Enforcement of the FCPA relies primarily on self-reporting by companies, who, in return for footing the
bill for investigations, get leniency from the prosecuting agency [3]. In fact, the investigations themselves can be
so costly that they act as a deterrent; companies are afraid of doing anything that might even trigger one [3].
The FCPA has become a key regulatory compliance tool in the fight against global corruption and for a more even
commercial playing field. After the 2008 financial crisis, the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC), the two government agencies tasked with enforcing the FCPA, dramatically
increased their efforts and drove a significant upswing both in the number of cases and in the dollar value of
settlements [4]. Settlements under the FCPA range from thousands of dollars into the billions [5]. For example, in
2008 Siemens agreed to pay $1.6 billion to American and German authorities as a result of systematic bribery of
officials to win international government contracts [5]. Many other countries have followed the United States’ lead,
and individual countries like Germany and France, as well as member countries of the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development, have instituted similar reforms addressing foreign corruption [6].
In May 2016, the DOJ Fraud Section’s FCPA Compliance Unit issued new FCPA guidelines and instituted a pilot
program to encourage voluntary reporting [7]. In addition to doubling the number of attorneys in the Fraud FCPA
unit, DOJ adjusted prosecution policies to require full cooperation by companies to qualify for leniency [8], [9].
Some law firms read the change as a signal that DOJ plans to increase enforcement actions under the FCPA [8].
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce protested the reform, arguing that the all-or-nothing policy would discourage
corporate cooperation because of the excessively high standards it requires [10]. Regardless, FCPA enforcement
appears to be an evolving field with increasing implications for American corporations.
CRITICISM OF THE FCPA
However, the FCPA is not without its critics. The high penalties are seen as a handicap, disadvantaging American
business through dramatic over-deterrence [11], [12]. The Institute for Legal Reform (ILR), an arm of the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, views the FCPA as overly vague, penalizing honest businesses, and generally an
enforcement overreach by the SEC and DOJ [13]. The ILR argues that honest businesses will conduct
unnecessary investigations, avoid business opportunities, or lose contracts to foreign competitors, based on their
unwillingness to engage in practices that are ambiguous under the FCPA, while their less scrupulous counterparts
and businesses from other countries will use such tactics to get ahead [13]. The ILR cites statistics claiming over
$1 billion could be lost annually in export trade due to the FCPA’s provisions [13].
In a 2010 report, the ILR set out a number of proposals to improve enforcement of the FCPA, including adding an
affirmative defense for compliance, limiting companies’ liability for other companies they acquire or for
subsidiaries, and offering more concrete definitions of relevant terms [13]. Although DOJ does regularly issue
clarifying guidance, the agency’s wide interpretation of the law leaves many questions still unanswered. As such,
none of the ILR’s proposals have been implemented in any significant way.
Cato Institute affiliate and Harvard professor Jeffrey Miron has argued for the repeal of the FCPA entirely [14]. He
argues that the FCPA is actually counterproductive, because in impoverished countries where corruption is
endemic, the impediments to economic growth created by American companies’ inability to do business there
retards those countries’ developments, rather than promoting more stable economies [14]. Miron points out that
even in other countries where FCPA-equivalents have been enacted, they are not enforced on nearly the same
scale, putting American companies at a disadvantage both against countries with no FCPA-equivalent and even
against those that have cooperated with similar measures [14].
Despite the protests of strong corporate interests, the FCPA is not going anywhere any time soon. The
controversy itself belies one significant point, raised in DOJ testimony to Congress: “If ‘companies aren’t paying
bribes, they have nothing to fear with respect to enforcement’” [11].
DOES IT WORK?
As with any regulation, the FCPA has had negative consequences, from increased overhead costs for companies
seeking to do business internationally to costly investigations of companies later determined to be in
compliance [14]. The arguable success of the FCPA depends on the measuring stick used to evaluate the law.
From the perspective of curbing corruption facilitated by businesses and generally promoting the rule of law, the
FCPA works. From the perspective of encouraging American business growth in foreign markets, it has been a
hindrance. Based on its role improving the economic situations of the people living under corrupt governments
and curbing the overall numbers of corrupt officials, the picture is less clear.
The FCPA is, in many ways, a law with long term goals. By throwing America’s global economic heft behind more
ethical business practices, the United States can push developing nations towards ultimately more stable, less
corrupt governance. As more countries adopt similar laws one can be optimistic about the future, but time will tell
whether the FCPA can live up to its promises.
REFERENCES
[1] L. Berman, “PART 1: Outlawing Foreign Bribery,” in Exploring the broader questions surrounding the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act, PBS Frontline, May 2009. Available:
http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/stories/bribe/2009/05/lowell-bergman.html. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[2] Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, An Overview, Fraud Section at the U.S. Department of Justice, Sept. 2015.
Available: https://www.justice.gov/criminal-fraud/foreign-corrupt-practices-act. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[3] D. Hilzenrath, “Justice Department, SEC investigations often rely on companies’ internal probes,” Washington
Post: Business, May 22, 2011. Available: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/justice-departmentsec-investigations-often-rely-on-companies-internal-probes/2011/04/26/AFO2HP9G_story.html?nav=emailpage.
[Accessed June 15, 2016].
[4] P. Urofsky et al., “Cases and Review Releases Relating to Bribes to Foreign Officials under the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act of 1977,” FCPA Digest, Shearman and Sterling LLP, Jan. 2016. Available:
http://shearman.symplicity.com/files/614/614f800363c953e3b00a5c61201a2124.pdf. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[5] E. Lichtblau and C. Dougherty, “Siemens to pay $1.34 billion in fines,” New York Times: World Business, Dec.
15, 2008. Available: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/16/business/worldbusiness/16siemens.html. [Accessed
June 15, 2016].
[6] P. Henning, “Be Careful What You Wish For: Thoughts on a Compliance Defense Under the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act,” Ohio State Law Journal, 73, 5, pp. 883-928, 2012. Available:
http://moritzlaw.osu.edu/students/groups/oslj/files/2013/02/73.5.Henning.pdf. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[7] A. Weissman, The Fraud Section’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Enforcement Plan and Guidance,
Department of Justice, Apr. 2016. Available: https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/838386/download. [Accessed June
15, 2016].
[8] J. Zucker et al., FCPA Enforcement: 2015 Highlights and Trends, Dechert LLP. Available:
http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/publications/criminaljustice/wccn_2016_zucker.authcheckdam.pdf.
[Accessed June 15, 2016].
[9] S. Yates, Individual Accountability for Corporate Wrongdoing, Office of the Deputy Attorney General at the
Department of Justice, Sept. 9, 2015. Available: https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/2393039/justicedept-memo-on-corporate-wrongdoing.pdf. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[10] M. Miner, DOJ’s New Threshold for “Cooperation”: Challenges Posed by the Yates Memo and USAM
Reforms, U.S. Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, May 2016. Available:
http://www.instituteforlegalreform.com/uploads/sites/1/YatesMemoPaper_Web.pdf. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[11] D. Hilzenrath, “U.S. firms say foreign-bribe law lacks clarity,” Washington Post: Business, July 23, 2011.
Available: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/us-firms-say-costly-foreign-bribe-law-lacksclarity/2011/07/05/gIQAB50jTI_story.html. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[12] The FCPA and Its Impact on International Business Transactions- Should Anything Be Done to Minimize the
Consequences of the U.S.’s Unique Position on Combating Offshore Corruption?, Committee on International
Business Transactions, New York City Bar, Dec. 2011. Available:
http://www2.nycbar.org/pdf/report/uploads/FCPAImpactonInternationalBusinessTransactions.pdf. [Accessed June
15, 2016].
[13] A. Weissman and A. Smith, Restoring Balance: Proposed Amendments to the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act, U.S. Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform, Oct. 2010. Available:
http://www.instituteforlegalreform.com/uploads/sites/1/restoringbalance_fcpa.pdf. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
[14] J. Miron, “Prosecute Wal-Mart, but get rid of anti-bribery law,” CNN, Apr. 26, 2012. Available:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/26/opinion/miron-wal-mart-bribery-law/. [Accessed June 15, 2016].
THE FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT: ‘Mo Money ‘Mo Problems
Bribery In General
In the U.S., the term bribery evokes imagery of smarmy, powerful individuals
taking advantage of their position and influence to gain even more power, influence, and
wealth. Americans view corruption as an evil that creates more societal cleavages.
Bribery, to Americans is a real threat to the basic founding philosophy of equality of
men. The view of bribery abroad, however, even in developed countries, does not match
the American viewpoint.
For example, Germans use the term Schmiergeld to describe the payment of a
bribe. Breaking down the term Schmiergeld, Geld is the German word for money.
Schmiere’s meaning is related to “greasing the palm.”1 Greasing the palm is far less
threatening than the term bribery. Germans, do not see bribery as a huge societal threat.
Rather, they see it plainly as a reality of the world. There is a German saying “Az men
schmeert nit, fort men nit.” (“If you don’t bribe, you don’t ride”, or, less literally,
“Without bribery, you get nowhere.”)2
The United States unilaterally created the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
(“FCPA”)3 to prohibit the bribery of foreign officials. The FCPA prohibits bribery
directly through its anti-bribery provisions, and indirectly through its accounting
requirements. Many critics of the FCPA view the U.S.’s attempt to eradicate all forms of
corporate bribery as another example of the U.S. acting as Don Quixote and tilting at
1
Leo Rosten, The Joys of Yiddish 129 (1968).
Id. at 353.
3
15 U.S.C. § 78dd-1
2
1
windmills.4 The law may not be taken seriously outside of the U.S., but significantly
restricts American multinational corporations. The FCPA remains “the world’s toughest
law against foreign bribes” arguably, because many countries do not have anit-bribery
statutes like the FCPA and those that do are generally not enforced.5
The philosophically different viewpoints of bribery between the U.S. and the rest
of the world, makes the FCPA largely ineffective and stunts U.S. multinationals’ profit
margins abroad.
Historical Background
The FCPA was passed in 1977 as a response to the corporate bribery that was
revealed during the Watergate Scandal. 6 The idea for the FCPA arose out of the
Congressional testimony at the tail end of the infamous Watergate hearings, where a
number of corporate officials testified about impermissible contributions made by their
corporations to President Nixon’s re-election campaign. At the time, Stanley Sporkin was
working with the Committee.7 The testimony Sporkin heard during the Watergate
hearings forced him to ask questions such as, “How did a publicly traded corporation
record such an illegal transaction? What, if any, information did the outside auditors
4
“Tilting at Windmills” is an English idiom, which means attacking imaginary enemies.
The phrase is used to describe confrontations where adversaries are incorrectly perceived,
or courses of action are based on misapplied heroic justifications.
5
Neil King, Jr., Momentum Builds for Corporate-Bribery Ban, Wall Street Journal, Sept.
23, 1997, at 16.
6
Stuart H. Deming, The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the New International Norms
1 (2005)
7
Stanley Sporkin is a former judge of the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia. He worked for the Securties and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) from 1961
until 1981, and was director of the Division of Enforcement from 1974 to 1981. See
(http://www.stanleysporkin.com/homepage/ ).
2
have?” 8 Mr. Sporkin posed these questions to officials at the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and found an answer. The political contributions, unearthed during the
Watergate Hearings, were disguised on the corporation’s books and records through
foreign subsidiaries. The foreign subsidiaries masked secret mislabeled accounts that held
funds used for bribing. Further investigations uncovered that the secret mislabeled
accounts were used for far more than illegal political contributions. These secret funds
were also used to make many other forms of illicit payments, including payments of
bribes to high-level officials of foreign governments. Mr. Sporkin’s inquiries soon lead to
a formal SEC investigation.
The SEC investigation discovered that, “over 400 U.S. companies admitted
making questionable or illegal payments in excess of $300 million to foreign government
officials, politicians and political parties.”9 These payments were made by 117 of the top
Fortune 500 corporations.10 The SEC’s caseload precipitously increased, and the SEC
became overwhelmed prosecuting some of the country’s most profitable companies for
failures to comply with the disclosure requirements of the Securities and Exchange Act of
1934.11 The solution developed was the FCPA.
8
Stanley Sporkin, The Worldwide Banning of Schmiergeld, Northwestern Journal of
International Law & Business (Winter 1997), at 271.
9
United States Department of Justice, Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Antibirbery
Provisions, in Levenson, Corporate Compliance and the FCPA (1997), note 8 at 131.
10
See H.R. Rep. 95-640, at 4 (1977)
11
15 U.S.C. § 78a. The Securities and Exchange Act Antifraud Provisions are considered
“catch-all” provisions. They have been used to prosecute a company’s failure to
communicate relevant information to investors.
3
Statutory Structure of the FCPA
The FCPA attacks international corruption in two ways: (1) the anti-bribery
provisions, and (2) the accounting provisions. 12The anti-bribery provisions prohibit
individuals and businesses from bribing foreign government officials in order to obtain or
retain business.13 The Accounting provisions impose record keeping and internal control
requirements on issuers, and prohibit individuals and companies from knowingly
falsifying an issuer’s books and records or circumventing or failing to implement an
issuer’s system of internal controls.14 Violations of either the anti-bribery, or the
accounting provisions can lead to civil and criminal penalties, sanctions, and remedies,
including fines, disgorgement, and imprisonment. 15
The anti-bribery statute of the FCPA states,
“It shall be unlawful for any issuer which has a class of securities registered
pursuant to section 78l of this title or which is required to file reports under
section 78o(d) of this title, or for any officer, director, employee, or agent of such
issuer or any stockholder thereof acting on behalf of such issuer, to make use of
the mails or any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce corruptly
infurtherance of an offer, payment, promise to pay, or authorization of the
payment of any money, or offer, gift, promise to give, or authorization of the
giving of anything of value to…”16
There are three parts to the FCPA anti-bribery statute: the who, the what, and the where.
The who are the actors, and include three categories of persons and entities: (1) “issuers”
and their officers, directors, employees, agents, and shareholders; (2) “domestic
concerns” and their officers, directors, employees, agents, and shareholders; and (3) other
12
15 U.S.C. § 78dd-1
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. DEP’T of Justice
Criminal Div. & U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n Enforceent Div., at 10.
14
Id.
15
Id.
16
§ 78dd-1 [Section 30A of the Securities & Exchange Act of 1934].
13
4
persons or entities acting while in the territory of the United States.17 The what is the kind
of action that is covered by the FCPA. The FCPA only applies to payments that are
intended to induce or influence a foreign official. 18The payment must be made, “in order
to assist…in obtaining or retaining business for or with, or directing business to, any
person.”19 Payment’s are “illicit” when they fall under the Business Purpose test and are
made for the purpose of gaining or maintaining business. The where of the FCPA is the
jurisdictional reach of the act, which is expansive. The open ended language describing
the “who” and “what” allow the FCPA to extend to actions inside and outside of the
United States.20 In fact, the FCPA even applies to payments that are merely wire
transferred through the U.S.21
Statutory Structure: Penalties, Sanctions, Remedies
The FCPA punishes non-compliance with both criminal and civil penalties for
companies and individuals.22 The FCPA provides guidance to both criminal and civil fine
and penalty amounts. 23 For each violation of the anti-bribery provisions, corporations
and other business entities are subject to a fine of up to $2 million.24 Officers, directors,
stockholders, and agents of corporations or business entities are subject to fines of up to
$250,000 and imprisonment for up to five years.25 Under the SEC accounting provisions,
17
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, Supra Note 13.
§ 78dd-1, Supra Note 16.
19
H.R.REP.No.95-831, at 12 (referring to “business purpose” test.)
20
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. DEP’T of Justice
Criminal Div. & U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n Enforceent Div., at 11.
21
Id.
22
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, Supra at 68.
23
15 U.S.C. § 78dd-1.
24
15 U.S.C. §§ 78dd-2(g)(1)(A), 78dd-3(e)(1)(A), 78ff(c)(1)(A).
25
Id.; 18 U.S.C. § 3571(b)(3), (e) (fine provision that supersedes FCPA-specific fine
provisions).
18
5
corporations and business entites are subject to a $25 million fine,26 and individuals are
subject to a $5 million dollar fine and up to 20 years imprisonment.27
However, under the Alternative Fines Act,28 an FCPA criminal violation can
result in a fine up to twice the benefit the payer sought to obtain through the improper
payment.29 The DOJ uses the advisory U.S. Sentencing Guidelines when calculating
penalty ranges.30 The DOJ clarifies that, “The Guidelines provide a very detailed and
predictable structure for calculating penalties for all federal crimes, including violations
of the FCPA. To determine the appropriate penalty, the
“ ‘[O]ffense level’ is first calculated by examining both the severity of the crime
and facts specific to the crime, with appropriate reductions for cooperation and
acceptance of responsibility, and for business entities, additional factors such as
voluntary disclosure, cooperation, pre-existing compliance programs, and
remediation.”31
Factors that affect criminal fines under the Guidelines include: the number of employees
in the organization; whether high-level personnel were involved in or condoned the
26
15 U.S.C. § 78ff(a).
Id.
28
18 U.S.C. §3571 (d).
29
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. DEP’T of Justice
Criminal Div. & U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n Enforceent Div., at 68.
30
The U.S. Sentencing Guidelines are promulgated by the U.S. Sentencing Commission:
The United States Sentencing Commission (“Commission”) is an independent agency in
the judicial branch composed of seven voting and two non-voting ex-officio members. Its
principal purpose is to establish sentencing policies and practices for the federal criminal
justice system that will assure the ends of justice by promulgating detailed guidelines
prescribing the appropriate sentences for offenders convicted of federal crimes. The
Guidelines and policy statements promulgated by the Commission are issued pursuant to
Section 994(a) of Title 28, United States Code.U.S. Sentencing Guidelines § 1A1.1
(2011).
31
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, Supra Note 29.
27
6
conduct; prior criminal history; whether the organization had a pre-existing compliance
and ethics program; voluntary disclosure; cooperation; and acceptance of responsibility. 32
Fines associated with a violation are large. Below is a table that demonstrates the
largest corporate FCPA settlements:
Company
Year
Amount
$800 million(DOJ – $450 million)(SEC
– $350 million)
$579 million(DOJ – $402 million)(SEC
– $177 million)
2008
3. Total
$398 million(DOJ – $245 million)(SEC
– $153 million)
2013
4. Alcoa
$384 million(DOJ – $209 million)(SEC
– $175 million)
2014
$365 million(DOJ – $240 million)(SEC
– $125 million)
2010
6. Technnip
$338 million(DOJ – $240 million)(SEC
– $ 98 million)
2010
7. JGC
$219 million(DOJ – $219 million)
2011
8. Daimler
$185 million(DOJ – $94 million)(SEC – 2010
$91 million)
9. Weatherford Int’l
$153 million(DOJ – $87 million)(SEC – 2013
$66 million)
10. Alcatel-Lucent
$137 million(DOJ – $92 million)(SEC – 2010
$45 million)
1. Siemens
2. KBR / Halliburton
5. Snamprogetti /
ENI
33
32
33
Id.
This table is available at: http://www.fcpaprofessor.com/fcpa-101#q17.
7
2009
Statutory Structure: Purpose
In 1977, the legislative history of the FCPA indicated that the purpose of the
statute was to discourage unethical conduct by U.S. businesses and ensure the efficiency
of international markets. 34 In 1977, the FCPA was intended to halt the revealed corrupt
practices, create a level playing field for honest business, and restore public confidence in
the integrity of the marketplace.35 Although domestic outcry existed in 1977, foreign
policy goals also existed. That goal was to secure a positive reputation for U.S.
corporations overseas in order to maintain Cold War alliances.36 The legislative record
indicated those foreign policy concerns,
“Corporate bribery is bad business. In our free market system it is basic that the
sale of products should take place on the basis of price, quality, and service.
Corporate bribery is fundamentally destructive of this basic tenet. Corporate
bribery of foreign officials takes place primarily to assist corporations in gaining
business. Foreign corporate bribes also affect our domestic competitive climate
when domestic firms engage in such practices as a substitute for healthy
competition for foreign business. ”37
The rationale for including anti-corruption provisions in laws partially governed
by the SEC is to assure the integrity of corporate securities as well as the integrity of the
securities markets to the public who purchases securities and invests in the securities
markets.38 The SEC was established to protect investors through market integrity and
34
H.R. Rep. No. 95-640, at 4 (1977) (“[Bribery] rewards corruption instead of efficiency
and puts pressure on ethical enterprises to lower their standards.”)
35
S. Rep. No. 95-114 at 4 (1977) available at
http://www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa/history/1977/seateret-95-114.pdf
36
Andrew Brady Spalding, Unwitting Sanctions: Understanding Anti-Bribery Legislation
as Economic Sanction Against Emerging Markets, 62 FLA. L . Rev. 351 (2010) at 37890.
37
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. DEP’T of Justice
Criminal Div. & U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n Enforceent Div., at 1.
38
The Investor’s Advocate: How the SEC Protects Investors, Maintains Market Integrity,
and Facilitates Capital Foramtion, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, available
at: http://www.sec.gov/about/whatwedo.shtml#.U3ZVZs09llw. (Citing that, “The main
8
transparency. 39The purpose of the securities laws is to assure investors that they are not
investing in something that is fraudulent.40
The FCPA however is an ideological document.41 Part of its purpose is to uphold
the values of “good business.”42 This ideological purpose is the driving force behind the
DOJ’s expansion of the FCPA.
Historical Compliance with the FCPA
The original process of compliance with the FCPA would be that a corporation
with an illicit payment problem would go to a corporate “confessional” and repent. The
corporation would be required to publicly disclose the questionable payments it had made
as well as agree to commission an independent internal investigation to determine the full
nature and extent of its worldwide bribery and any other questionable activities. 43 The
last stage of corporate compliance would be to assure the Commission that appropriate
steps had been taken to insure that recurrence was not possible.44 Because the private
investigation was not guaranteed to have the requisite integrity and objectivity, the
purpose of these laws can be reduced to two common sense notions: Companies publicly
offering securities for investment dollars must tell the public the truth about their
businesses, the securities they are selling, and the risks involved in investing. People who
sell and trade securities – brokers, dealers, and exchanges – must treat investors fairly and
honestly, putting investor’s interests first.”)
39
Id.
40
Id.
41
H.R. REP. No. 95-640 at 4-5 (1977) available at
http://www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa/history/1977/housepret-95-640.pdf. (“The
payment of bribes to influence…is unethical. It is counter to the moral expectations and
values of the American public.”)
42
Id.
43
See Securities and Exchange Commission, Report of the Securities and Exchange
Commission on Questionable and Illegal Corporate Payments and Practices 13-17
(1976).
44
Id.
9
Commission reserved the right to bring formal action. 45The U.S. corporate community
was informally assured, but not promised, that if all went well, no Commission action
would be brought against a voluntarily complying corporation. 46
The original program was a huge success for the federal government. Over 400
corporations participated. 47
The FCPA was created in the wake of the Lockheed and United Brands bribery
scandals. The Lockheed scandal started late in 1975 when an SEC investigation into
Lockheed Corporation revealed that the aircraft manufacturer had paid at least $22
million (about $90 million in current dollars) in bribes to foreign government officials
and political organizations.48 In 1975, this was not illegal, but proper customary practices
of compliance did exist and Lockheed failed to follow them. 49In like cases, the custom
was for the corporation to reveal to the SEC which foreign officials had received bribes
and then an agreement would follow to cease further like payments.50 The Lockheed case
was different because Lockheed refused to disclose their bribes’ beneficiaries and would
make no promise to stop future payments. Lockheed argued that bribes were normal,
necessary, and consistent with the practices of other U.S. multinationals abroad. 51
45
Id.
Id.
47
Foreign Corrupt Pracitces Act Antibribery Provisions, Note 10 at 131.
48
Ann Hollingshead, A Brief History of U.S. Policy Toward Foreign Bribery, Financial
Transparency Coalition, July 28, 2010.
49
Id.
50
The SEC had jurisdiction over these claims because the companies’ failure to properly
report the payments was non-compliance with the Securities and Exchange Act. See Note
11.
51
Ann Hollingshead, A Brief History of U.S. Policy Toward Foreign Bribery, Financial
Transparency Coalition, July 28, 2010.
46
10
Lockheed was also an exacerbated case, because the SEC investigation revealed that the
company had bribed the Prime Minister of Japan as well as the President of Italy. 52
The United Brands bribery was unveiled shortly after the suicide of its president,
Eli Black, in February of 1975.53 The SEC investigation uncovered that the company
negotiated a reduction in an export tax in Central America.54 The Honduran President,
Oswaldo Lopez Arellano, had helped orchestrate $1.25 million in bribes and received a
portion of the money. 55
The FCPA was enacted as a political and ideological movement that built steam
in light of these public scandals. The political left built off these scandals to support a
tenet of the Democratic Party that still exists today: minimizing corporate power and
influence. The events that occurred around the Watergate Scandal were the perfect storm
and a combination that proved powerfully compelling to pass the FCPA.
The success of the FCPA has spiraled into massively costly compliance programs
for U.S. corporations as well as mounting damages claims by the Department of Justice
for “non-complying” companies who are made to be public examples.56 So how
responsible is the U.S. for improving the morals of people and governments abroad? Is
52
Id.
Marcelo Bucheli, Bananas and Business: The United Fruit Company in Colombia,
New York University Press (2005).
54
Id.
55
Id. at 76.
56
The FCPA does not provide litigants a private right of action. However, civil disputes
between private parties deal with violations of the FCPA substantively. Technically,
private litigants cannot sue directly under the umbrella of the FCPA. See Douglas R.
Youg, The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act as a Factor in Private Civil Litigation, (2002)
available at: http://www.fbm.com/files/Publication/2b79d8bf-740f-45c7-8ff29980da7c7b89/Presentation/PublicationAttachment/e70b13d2-ecca-4bf3-807d99b19fd76632/3C02CACD-4C60-467B-B371-5C58427333E0_document.pdf.
53
11
the FCPA necessary for the health of the global economic market? Or is it just another
example of American exceptionalism tilting at windmills?
This paper finds that (1) the United States continues to pursue an effectively
unilateral and stand-alone approach to deterring foreign corruption, especially with
respect to enforcement activity and the significance of fines and sanctions (2) the United
States’ current approach asymmetrically imposes heavy fines leaving those subject to the
FCPA at a serious competitive disadvantage and (3) these circumstances are unlikely to
change. The United States must reevaluate its approach to crusading global corruption.
THE FCPA TODAY
The United States, for almost two decades, was the only country with a law like
the FCPA.57 Although the FCPA was symbolically important, it was ineffective and did
not affect the business of U.S. multinationals.58 That changed with two events. First, in
1997 the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (“OECD”)59 banned
bribery of foreign officials.60 Secondly, the U.N. called on its member states to back up
the OECD and do the same.61 As this intergovernmental push for corruption reform
occurred, the Bush and Obama Administrations significantly stepped up enforcement of
the FCPA in the U.S.62 The enforcement ramp up in the U.S. extends to ensuring that
57
James Surowiecki, Invisible Hand, Greased Palm, The New Yorker, May 14, 2012.
Id. The measure of ineffectiveness is comparative to the unilateral prosecution that
exists today.
59
The OECD is an international economic organization whose purpose is to stimulate
economic progress and world trade. The OECD provides a platform where member
countries can compare policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify
good practices and coordinate domestic and international policies. See About the OECD,
Available at: http://www.oecd.org/about/.
60
James Surowiecki, Invisible Hand, Greased Palm, Supra Note 57.
61
Id.
62
Id.
58
12
compliance is an unavoidable part of any multinational’s business.63 In the past 5 years,
companies have paid the U.S. government almost four billion dollars in FCPA fines. 64
Multinational corporations are complaining. The FCPA as it exists today, makes it
difficult to do business abroad, especially because, in many developing countries, bribery
is viewed as schmiergeld. Although the FCPA is currently focused to change the
philosophy of schmiergeld by acting through economic sanctions, the effect may not be
prudent. For multinationals, the fear of potential prosecution effectively raises the cost of
doing business in high-corruption countries, which makes the likelihood of operating
there very low. So although the U.S. government is reaching its goals through scare
tactics, the cost of being ethically sound is not economically sensible.
Developing countries have hypertrophied bureaucracies, which require businesses
to deal with enormous amounts of red tape. The political scientist Samuel Huntington
once argued that under these conditions bribery was a reasonably efficient way for
businesses to cut through that red tape. As Huntington said, “The only thing worse than a
society with a rigid, over centralized, dishonest bureaucracy is on with a rigid, over
centralized honest bureaucracy.”65 Without bribery, doing any kind of business in a
developing country takes much longer and the result is less economic activity. Less
economic activity means fewer big companies developing business and less trade. Seen
this way, bribery does not just grease the palms, but also the wheels of commerce.
63
The FCPA makes compliance unavoidable because of the hefty sanctions forced upon
companies without compliance programs. It really acts as an ultimatum.
64
Id.
65
Arnold J. Heidenheimer, Political Corruption: Concepts and Contexts, Transaction
Publishers (2002) At 323.
13
In a utopian world, good behavior would be good business, but the world is not
that simple. The catch in today’s world is that bans on bribery are effective only when
they are widespread. Unilateral enforcements laws, like the FCPA, loose their effect,
when other countries fail to enforce similar bans. The FCPA loses its effect amongst it’s
own multinationals, because they are competing with companies in the global market
place who can and do bribe. If bans are not widespread, U.S. companies begin to feel the
competitive pressure to bribe. Today, some of the biggest players in the global market,
including BRICS nations like India,66 do not have anti bribery laws. Major global
economic players like China and Russia have laws , but those laws are not enforced.
67
Transparency International found that Chinese and Russian companies were most likely
to pay bribes.68 This is especially troublesome in light of the fact that they invested $120
billion dollars abroad in 2010 alone.69 While the FCPA has failed to clean up the climate
of official corruption that afflicts many ill governed countries, it has granted a huge
competitive advantage to companies not within the DOJ’s reach. (China) The conclusion
that the U.S. Federal Government must reach is that: (1) everyone else in the global
market bribes; (2) U.S. multinational’s can not bribe because they are scared of FCPA
enforcement and the fines that come with enforcement; (3) U.S. multinationals are at a
competitive disadvantage because they cannot bribe; (4) Therefore, the Federal
Government should repeal the FCPA and put U.S. multinationals on a level playing field.
66
BRICS is an acronym for the economies of ‘Brazil, Russia, India and China’ and
became prominent after Goldman Sachs coined the term when speculating that by 2050
these four economies would be wealthier than most of the current major economic
powers. Investopia definition Available at: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/bric.asp
67
James Surowiecki, Invisible Hand, Greased Palm, The New Yorker, May 14, 2012.
69
Id.
14
Ill Effects: The Facts
From 2005 to 2009, The DOJ and the SEC brought four times as many corporate
enforcement actions as they did in the previous five years. 70 Actions against individual
defendants have precipitously risen as well. 71 In 2010, U.S. enforcement activity more
than doubled from enforcement action numbers in 2009.72 These increases not only
represent heightened scrutiny of large publicly traded U.S. companies, but also the
expanding scope of enforcement against non-U.S. and non-publicly traded companies.
Eight of the ten largest FCPA settlements in history occurred in 2010 or 2011( with the
remaining two occurring after 2007.)73 Not coincidentally, both the DOJ and SEC have
announced plans to increase their resources dedicated to FCPA enforcement. 74
Obviously these increases in enforcement amplified the ill effects of the FCPA on
multinational companies and international business transactions.
The effects of the FCPA on transactions are seen principally in (1) transaction
costs (increased due diligence efforts), (2) post- transaction integration costs (adding
appropriate FCPA compliance procedures to an acquired company or across a company
that was not previously subject to the FCPA), (3) increased risk of exposure to an
enforcement action and related costs (international investigations and fines) and (4) as a
70
Danforth Newcomb & Philip Urofsky, Shearman & Sterling LLP, FCPA A Digest of
cases and Review Releases Relating to Bribes to Foreign Officials Under the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 (October 1, 2009), 1-126 (2009)
71
Id.
72
Trace Global Enforcement Report 2011, Figure II available at
http://www.ibe.org.uk/usefiles/globalenforementreport2011.pdf.
73
Andrew Weissman and Alixandra Smith, Restoring Balance, Proposed Amendments to
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, released by the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal
Reform, October 2010 at 2
74
Richard L. Cassin, The FCPA Blog, J&J Joins New Top Ten (April 8, 2011)
15
result of (1),(2), and (3), the abandonment or lack of interest in transactions that
otherwise would have been completed. As a result, large mature European Companies
and U.S. Companies are put at a regulatory disadvantage to their non-covered
competitors.75 This regulatory asymmetry not only effects companies subject to the
FCPA but also affects U.S. markets.
75
Large mature European Companies fall under the jurisdictional reach of the FCPA,
because the vague terms of the FCPA allow the inclusion of anyone who uses the U.S.
mails or any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce in furtherance of a corrupt
payment to a foreign official. “The FCPA also applies to certain foreign nationals or
entities that are not issuers or domestic concerns. Since 1998, the FCPA’s anti-bribery
provisions have applied to foreign persons and foreign non-issuer entities that, either
directly or through an agent, engage in any act in furtherance of a corrupt payment (or an
offer, promise, or authorization to pay) while in the territory of the United states. Also,
officers, directors, employees, agents or stockholders acting on behalf of such persons or
entities may be subject…” A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,
U.S. DEP’T of Justice Criminal Div. & U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n Enforceent Div., at
11; 15 U.S.C. § 78dd-3(a). As discussed above, foreign companies that have securities
registered in the United States or that are required to file periodic reports with the SEC,
including certain foreign companies with American Depository Receipts, are covered by
the FCPA’s anti-bribery provisions governing “issuers” under 15 U.S.C. § 78dd-1; See
International Anti-Bribery and Fair Competition Act of 1998, Pub. L. 105-366, 112 Stat.
3302 (1998); 15 U.S.C. § 78dd-3(a); see also U.S. Dept. of Justice, Criminal Resource
Manual § 9-1018 (Nov. 2000) (the Department “interprets [Section 78dd-3(a)] as
conferring jurisdiction whenever a foreign company or national causes an act to be done
within the territory of the United States by any person acting as that company’s or
national’s agent.”). This interpretation is consistent with U.S. treaty obligations. See S.
Rep. No. 105-2177 (1998) (expressing Congress’ intention that the 1998 amendments to
the FCPA “conformit to the requirements of and to implement the OECD Convention.”);
Anti-Bribery Convention at art. 4.1, supra note 19 (“Each Party shall take such measures
as may be necessary to establish its jurisdiction over the bribery of a foreign public
official when the offence is committed in whole or in part in its territory.”); 15 U.S.C. §
78dd-3(a); see, e.g., Criminal Information, United States v. Alcatel-Lucent France, S.A.,
et al., No. 10-cr-20906 (S.D. Fla. Dec. 27, 2010), ECF No. 1 [hereinafter United States v.
Alcatel-Lucent France] (subsidiary of French publicly traded company convicted of
conspiracy to violate FCPA), available at http://www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/
fcpa/cases/alcatel-lucent-sa-etal/12-27-10alcatel-et-al-info.pdf; Criminal Information,
United States v. DaimlerChrysler Automotive Russia
SAO, No. 10-cr-64 (D.D.C. Mar. 22, 2010), ECF No. 1 (subsidiary of German publicly
traded company convicted of violating FCPA), available at
http://www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa/cases/daimler/03-22- 10daimlerrussia16
COURSES OF ACTION: FINDING A BANDAID
Repeal
Walter Olson of the CATO Institute argues that the FCPA, “is a feel-good piece
of over criminalization that oversteps the proper bounds of federal lawmaking” so much
in fact that its passage should have been prevented. 76
The FCPA should be repealed for four distinct reasons. First, the FCPA is vague.
Its vagueness leaves multinationals wondering where the line is between tolerated
payments and improper bribes. Some are even left wondering, “Who counts as an
‘official’?”
Secondly, the FCPA is extraterritorial.77 Currently, the FCPA yields expansive
power that purports to punish overseas misdeeds that do not deprive Americans of liberty
or property and whose punishment is better left to other authorities.
Third, the FCPA is vicarious. It inflicts liability on businesses and unknowing
higher ups over the actions of rogue local subsidiaries, salespeople and facilitators.
Finally, he FCPA is punitive. The FCPA’s victims face twenty-year prison terms
and inflict penalties for minimal non-threatening behavior.
info.pdf; Criminal Information, United States v. Siemens S.A. (Argentina), No. 08-cr-368
(D.D.C. Dec. 12, 2008), ECF No. 1 (subsidiary of German publicly traded company
convicted of violating FCPA), available at
http://www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa/cases/ siemens/12-12-08siemensargeninfo.pdf.
76
Walter Olson, The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: Clarification Is Not Enough, CATO
at Liberty, Novermber 11, 2011.
77
The term extraterritorial describes a law or decree that is valid outside of a country’s
territory. The FCPA is extraterritorial, because its jurisdiction extends to the actions of
foreigners and acts that occur outside of the U.S.
17
(1) The FCPA is Vague
The key terms of the statute are vague and interpreted broadly. The FCPA
prohibits giving or promising anything of value to a foreign official for the purposes of
influence.78 The definition of “foreign official” under the act is,
“any officer or employee of a foreign government or any department,
agency, or instrumentality thereof…or any person acting in an official
capacity for or on behalf of any such government or department, agency,
or instrumentality.”79
Additionally, the DOJ and the SEC interpret terms such as “instrumentality” or
“person acting in an official capacity for or on behalf of” broadly. As a result,
corporations may reasonably believe that they are not interacting with a foreign official
or that oversight is not necessary. The confusion comes to a head with state owned
enterprises (“SOE”). An SOE is a commercial enterprise that is an instrumentality of the
government. In many developing nations, utilities companies are SOEs. Nearly any SOE
employee with managerial authority could be a “foreign official” under the FCPA. More
confusion occurs when companies are substantially or majority owned and managed by
the private sector but are still considered SOEs. 80 The broad interpretation of “foreign
official” lacks strong support in the legislative history, other statutory language, and even
other countries’ approaches to foreign corruption. 81 The reality is that the breadth and
uncertainty in the application of substantive terms of the FCPA make corporate
78
15 U.S.C. § 78 dd-1(a) (2006).
Id. § 78 dd-1(f).
80
The Nigeria LNG Limited is a natural gas company that is 49% state owned and 51%
privately owned, but is considered an SOE and as such an instrumentality of the Nigerian
Government. Mike Koehler, The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in the Ultimate Year of
its Decade of Resurgence, 43 Ind. L. Rev. 389, 412-13 (2010).
81
Joel M. Cohen, Michael P. Holland, Under the FCPA, Who is a Foreign Official
Anyway?, 63 Bus. Law. 1243, 1250 (2008).
79
18
compliance efforts broad, and accordingly insufficient in the eyes of the DOJ and SEC.
8283
(2) The FCPA is Extraterritorial
The U.S. government has granted itself expansive jurisdiction under the FCPA
that complements its expansive interpretation of its substantive terms. The FCPA antibribery provisions apply to “domestic concerns,” which encompass U.S. citizens,
nationals and residents, as well as any company with its principal place of business in the
U.S. or any company organized under the laws of the U.S., a state or a territory. 84 It is
unexpected that the United States would have interest in these parties and assert
jurisdiction over them. The FCPA’s jurisdictional reach also extends to any issuer with a
class of securities registered in the United States, as well as to any person or company
that engages in a corrupt act “while in the territory of the United States.” 85
(3) The FCPA is Vicarious
The U.S. interprets the FCPA’s jurisdiction to extend to conduct by foreign subsidiaries
and joint ventures of companies that are originally subject to the FCPA. This includes
82
The existence of a broad compliance programs will be a factor in the DOJ’s damages
calculations as proscribed by the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines. However, it is one of many
factors in that calculation, and does not allow a company to avoid penalties and fines
altogether. A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. DEP’T of
Justice Criminal Div. & U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n Enforceent Div., at 68.
83
Id. at 1255-63.
84
15 U.S.C. § 78 dd-2 (2006).
85
Id. § 78 dd-1 and 3. “while in the territory of the United States” is particularly far
reaching; in some cases, a foreign company with sparse to no activity in the U.S. has
been charged with violating the FCPA as a result of alleged corrupt payments made to a
foreign government official, where the only U.S. connection was that the funds were
routed through a U.S. bank. Paul R. Berger, Erin W. Sheehy, Kenya K. Davis and Bruce
E. Yannett, Is that a Bribe?, 26 INT’L FIN. L . REV. 76, 76 (2007) (the article discussed
Statoil and Christian Sapsizian, who were both charged with FCPA violations based on
activity in a U.S. bank account specifically the transfer of funds between them and
foreign officials.)
19
instances where parent company control is limited.86 The DOJ gives guidance as to when
a parent company could be liable. The DOJ explains that,
“There are two ways in which a parent company may be liable for bribes paid by its
subsidiary. First, a parent may have participated sufficiently in the activity to be
directly liable for the conduct—as, for example, when it directed its subsidiary’s
misconduct or otherwise directly participated in the bribe scheme.Second, a parent
may be liable for its subsidiary’s conduct under traditional agency principles. The
fundamental characteristic of agency is control.”87
Almost all international conduct and actors are subject to the scrutiny of U.S.
enforcement, because the FCPA’s jurisdiction is overly broad and the DOJ and SEC
prosecute a wide array of activity.
(4) The FCPA is Punitive
The DOJ and the SEC impose costs that are effectually punitive on companies
subject to the FCPA. In addition to the obvious costs of compliance, such as due
diligence, maintaining compliance programs and conducting internal investigations in the
event of corruption, companies also face less obvious costs that put them at a competitive
86
For example, in one instance, a Kazakh immigration prosecutor threatened to fine, jail,
or deport employees of a U.S. company’s subsidiary. Believing the threats to be genuine,
the employees in Kazakhstan sought guidance from senior management of the U.S.
subsidiary and were authorized to make the payments. The employees then paid the
government official a total of $45,000 using personal funds. The subsidiary reimbursed
the employees, but it falsely recorded the reimbursements as “salary advances” or “visa
fines.” The parent company, which eventually discovered these payments, as well as
other improperly booked cash payments made to a Kazakhstani consultant to obtain
visas, was charged with civil violations of the accounting provisions. Admin. Proceeding
Order, In the Matter of NATCO Group Inc., Exchange Act Release No. 61325 ( Jan. 11,
2010), available at http://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/2010/34-61325.pdf (imposing
cease-and-desist order and $65,000 civil monetary penalty).
87
A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. DEP’T of Justice
Criminal Div. & U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n Enforceent Div., at 27; Pacific Can Co. v.
Hewes, 95 F.2d 42, 46 (9th Cir. 1938) (“Where one corporation is controlled by another,
the former acts not for itself but as directed by the latter, the same as an agent, and the
principal is liable for the acts of its agent within the scope of the agent’s authority.”);
United States v. NYNEX Corp., 788 F. Supp. 16, 18 n.3 (D.D.C. 1992) (holding that “[a]
corporation can of course be held criminally liable for the acts of its agents,” including
“the conduct of its subsidiaries.”).
20
disadvantage. For example, competitors not subject to the FCPA’s jurisdictional reach do
not have to require foreign joint venture partners to adopt costly compliance measures.
In some cases, companies are forced to forgo certain overseas business opportunities
altogether because the risk of corruption is so high that no compliance efforts would
sufficiently reduce enforcement risks.
(1) Direct Costs Associated with the FCPA
The direct costs associated with the FCPA include direct out of pocket costs in the
form of compliance programs, internal audits and investigations, and fines imposed for
settlements or violations.
The obvious direct costs of the FCPA are the fines and penalties associated with noncompliance. These fines have dramatically increased in recent years. In 2007, the largest
fine was $28.5 million against Titan Corporation. Today, each of the top eight fines
exceeds $100 million with the top five exceeding $300 million. 88 Adding insult to injury,
the penalties imposed by the SEC and DOJ usually greatly exceed the corrupt payment or
the profit gained from allegedly corrupt deeds. 89 No company wants to take on the risk
of being indicted or taking an issue to trial, therefore the only potential check on the
continuing increase in the size of penalties is the discretion of those imposing them.
Companies subject to the FCPA spend substantial financial resources implementing
internal controls and internal investigations that prevent and identify instances of
potential misconduct. Compliance with the FCPA essentially requires collecting data and
88
See Newcomb & Urofsky, Supra note 21 at vii-xiii
United States v. Helmerich & Payne, Inc. (2009) (H&P paid $173,000 to avoid
$200,000 in customs cost, and was penalized $1 million by the DOJ and disgorgement of
$400,000 to the SEC) U.S. v. Control Components, Inc., No. 09-00162 (C.D. Ca. 2009)
(CCI made corrupt payments of 4.9 and agreed to a nearly $18 million fine).
89
21
voluntarily self-reporting. This process is extremely expensive. Preventive investigations
range from $2 to 20 million per enterprise.90
In the context of cross border business transactions, especially transactions involving
targets with international operations, FCPA due diligence has become overly
burdensome. When evaluating acquisition targets, companies covered by the FCPA
(especially those that have a prior history of FCPA enforcement) require a deep dive into
the target’s business practices. Similarly, when a company subject to the FCPA enters
into a consulting agreement with an agent outside the U.S., the FCPA counsel requires
them to do a thorough background check to shield itself from potential FCPA liability by
the consultant. 91
The current FCPA regime forces companies into over compliance that is extreme and
costly. The greater issue is companies that invest great resources in compliance have no
assurance that in the event of an alleged violation (even one that could not reasonably
have been detected or prevented) their efforts will be rewarded with lenient or gentle
prosecution or forgiveness. 92 Adding to the cost, a foreign agent must be monitored.
Neither the DOJ nor the SEC are satisfied if a company claims that it went through
painstaking due diligence prior to a foreign acquisition or a contract with an agent if the
company failed to monitor the acquisition or agent throughout the term of the
90
Daniel J. Grimm, The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in Merger and Acquisition
Transactions: Successor Liability and its Consequences, 7 N.Y.U.J.L. & BUS. 247, 27276 (2010).
91
David Isaak, FCPA Compliance – Navigating the Minefield of Intermediaries, 17
CURRENTS INT’L TRADE L.J. 22 (2008).
92
Outside the U.S., in some countries with anti-bribery provisions, the adoption and the
effective implementation of an adequate organizational risk management and control
model potentially exonerates companies from liability. U.S. authorities do not appear
willing to dilute the effects of the respondeat superior doctrine.
22
engagement. 93 The great irony is that many times foreign agents are retained precisely to
help in the due diligence process, because the company lacks the requisite knowledge, or
connections to the target country. 94 Often overlooked by companies is the need to
continue FCPA compliance integration to remedy any existing issues or prevent the
occurrence of future non-compliance. These costs are significant, recurring, and often
overlooked.
(2) Indirect Costs Associated with the FCPA
When a company subject to the FCPA is competing to acquire or partner with a
“target” company it must factor into its deal the relative compliance costs associated with
the transaction and the fact that they will be higher. Basically, the company subject to the
FCPA has to pay more for the same opportunity, which absolutely places the company at
a competitive disadvantage.
The strain placed on business relationships from ensuring compliance and requiring
non-U.S. business partners to adopt U.S. style business practices for compliance is a huge
indirect cost. Proper enforcement requires companies to ask probing and uncomfortable
questions of any foreign entity they wish to acquire, merge, partner, or do business with.
95
The invasive nature of due diligence creates discomfort and distrust between the U.S.
regulated company and any foreign counterpart who is rightfully offended by the FCPA
line of questioning.
93
See Isaak, Supra note 35.
Mike Koehler, The FCPA, Foreign Agents, and Lessons From the Halliburton
Enforcement Action, 36 OHIO N.U.L. REV. 457, 458 – 60 (2010).
95
Transcript of Panel Discussion: Effective FCPA/Export Controls Due Diligence in
Mergers and Acquisitions, 17 CURRENTS INT’L TRADE L.J. 28 (2008) (FCPA due
diligence creates challenges because of the types of questions that must be asked).
94
23
Furthermore, numerous examples exists where the FCPA forces a U.S. regulated
company to deviate from the customs and traditions of a foreign country (celebratory
meals/exchange of gifts)96 and this has deeply offended the foreign corporate officers and
government officials they are required to establish relationships and business
opportunities with. This dynamic is only exacerbated by the fact that the FCPA’s terms
are interpreted broadly and are somewhat all encompassing. Corporations and officers are
rendered overly cautious and avoid not only objectionable conduct but also acts that
actually should be encouraged.
REPEAL IS UNLIKELY
Despite the direct and indirect costs to U.S. governed businesses and the
economic markets, repealing the FCPA, unfortunately is not a viable option. The United
States is unquestionably the leader in the ideological fight against corruption. And as
such, repealing the FCPA is unrealistic.
Furthermore, unfettered and uncontrolled bribery is in fact a bad thing. Recently,
a foreign businessman was shot twice in the head by a “krysha” or Russian bribe-seeking
gang. 97His children’s safety was threatened when a gang member waved photographs of
them going to school. 98 Bribery laws exist to prevent this kind of extreme behavior. The
international bribery laws that do exist criminalize bribes paid under realistic threats of
96
It is custom and expected in China to complete contract negotiations with a large
banquet like celebration attended by hundreds of individuals, followed by an exchange of
gifts. Mike Koehler, The Unique FCPA Compliance Challenges of Doing Business in
China, 25 WIS. INT’L L.J. 397, 417 (2008). The FCPA does not give a de minimis value
exception for “anything of value”.
97
Tim Worstall, Wal-Mart and Corruption in Mexico: So What?, Forbes (2012) available
at: http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2012/04/22/wal-mart-and-corruption-inmexico-so-what/?&_suid=140027300469309047956210561097.
98
Id.
24
imminent violence. Bribery laws must exist to prevent violent extortion. This view is
reiterated throughout the world. Bribery laws should not criminalize activity that fosters
actual business deals, like Schmiergeld. The punitive nature of the FCPA criminalizes
what is normal and necessary business behavior in many parts of the world. The FCPA is
overzealous.
BORROWED WISDOM: INTERNATIONAL APPROACHES
The OECD convention signatories are required to: (1) criminalize bribery of
foreign public officials, (2) hold corporations and other legal persons liable for bribery,
(3) prohibit “off the books” payments and other accounting practices that may facilitate
corruption, (4) make bribery an extraditable offense and (5) provide mutual legal
assistance to each other in bribery cases. 99 The convention does not require the adoption
of a specific set of legal rules, but rather adoption of the Convention’s aforementioned
principals should be upheld on a “functional equivalence” basis. This basis allows
different countries to use varying methods, according to the idiosyncrasies of their
individual legal systems and customs. 100
Among OECD signatories, the U.S. by far has the highest number of prosecutions
and the greatest fines. For example, the U.S. brought 67 prosecutions under the FCPA in
2006-2007 alone, 15 countries, “including Australia, Mexico, New Zealand, and
Portugal,” brought none. 101 Canada and Japan each brought one prosecution, each with
99
Indira Carr & Opi Outhwaite, The OECD Anti-Bribery Convention Ten Years On, 5
MANCHESTER J. INT’L ECON. L. 3, 6-7 (2008). Over 30 countries adopted the OECD
and its standards were incorporated into the FCPA by the International Anti-Bribery and
Fair Competition Act of 1998.
100
John Hatchard, Recent Developments in Combating the Bribery of Foreign Public
Officials: A Cause for Optimism?, 85 U. DET.MERCY L. REV. 1, 8 (2007).
101
Id.
25
minor consequences.102 In fact, from 2000 to 2010, the U.S. brought more than 3.5 times
more foreign bribery actions than all the other countries combined. 103 The numbers are
not proportionate to the international activity of each country. It is unlikely that the
corporations within these countries conduct their international business in a substantially
different manner than those subject to the FCPA (in fact there are many companies that
are subject to multiple regimes).104
Many countries that are home to important multinational companies are not
parties to the OECD Convention.105 As the world economic forum continues to become
even more globalized, the effectiveness of any transnational anti-corruption effort that
fails to cover these enterprises will ultimately be limited.
The global anti-corruption playing field can bee seen with three tiers: (1) the
FCPA (expansive law and zealous enforcement), (2) other OECD Convention signatories
(legally similar but lighter and more flexible enforcement), (3) non-OECD signatories
(limited law with no notable enforcement). The playing field is clearly not level and
leveling is a daunting task. Leveling the playing field is unlikely to occur, because of
ideological and cultural differences that prevent foreign countries from matching the U.S.
anti-corruption efforts. The only option the U.S. has, absent of full repeal, is a drastic pull
back of the FCPA’s jurisdictional reach and enforcement. One viable option is that the
DOJ and SEC adopt a functional equivalence basis, allowing each multinational within
102
Id.
Trace Global Enforcement Report 2011, Figure II, supra note 23.
104
The U.K., internationally regarded as like-minded with the U.S., has been criticized
for its failure to effectively prosecute foreign bribery. See Hatchard, supra note 44 at 8-9
105
Id. at 11.
103
26
the FCPA’s jurisdiction to be flexible to the fluctuations in corporate customs and
practices amongst offshore ventures.
What can the U.S. Federal Government Do Now?
Former Attorney General, Michael B. Mukasey, testified before Congress making
several suggestions as to how the FCPA could be altered. His proposal included: (1)
clarifying the definition of terms used in the law, including the term “foreign official”;
(2) adding an affirmative defense for companies that have rigorous compliance programs
in place but still ran into trouble; (3) adding a “willfulness” requirement for corporate
criminal liability; (4) limiting successor liability for the prior corrupt activities of a
business that was acquired; (5) improving the way the DOJ provides guidance and advice
to companies that are trying to comply with the law; and (6) limiting a parent company’s
liability when it was unaware of the foul behavior of their subsidiary. 106 Although Mr.
Mukasey’s suggestions are beneficial, they do not go far enough.
The Former General Counsel of the SEC, James R. Doty, suggested that the SEC
create a “REG. FCPA” like regulation D under the SEC act of 1933.107 In Mr. Doty’s
view, this addition would “establish a permissive filing regime; by making the filing, a
registrant would benefit from a regulatory presumption of compliance.”108 Under his
visions, “Reg. FCPA would set forth items required to be described, represented or
disclosed, with appropriate exhibits, constituting the registrant’s FCPA Compliance
Program” and “[t]he filed FCPA Compliance Program would be subject to Staff review
106
The Foreign Corrupt Practice Act: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Crime,
Terrorism, and Homeland Sec. of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary (June, 14, 2011).
107
17 C.F.R. §230.501 et seq. Regulation D is considered a safe harbor for the private
offering exemption of Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
108
James R. Doty, Toward a Reg. FCPA: A modest Proposal for Change in
Administering the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, 62 Bus. Law. 1233, 1234 (2007).
27
and comment, as with the Annual Report on Form 10-K”109 Mr. Doty believes this
system would be easy to administer and the SEC could use its experience with similar
regulations to ensure its smooth functioning. 110 Simplifying the reporting of bribes
doesn’t solve all of the issues associated with the FCPA.
A majority of the posited solutions pursue a more effective adequate preventative
measures defense or different degrees of leniency schemes. 111 These approaches foster
positive compliance and contribute to long-term reduction of misconduct.112 These
suggestions alone are insufficient because they do not provide companies with guidance
and cannot resolve the power imbalance between the prosecution and businesses that fear
the huge costs associated with an FCPA indictment.
A Hybrid Approach
A hybrid approach, combining a statutory adequate preventative measures defense
along with a formal leniency program is the DOJ’s and SEC’s surest bet to continue their
crusade against global bribery while allowing multinationals to profit economically.
109
Id.
Id.
111
FCPA Hearing, supra note 50 at 23 (advocating for the creation of a compliance
defense); Andrew Weissmann & Alixandra Smith, U.S. CHAMBER INST. FOR LEGAL
REFORM, RESTORING BALANCE; PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE
FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT 1 (2010) (recommending the creation of a
compliance defense); James R. Doty, Toward a Re. FCPA: A Modest Proposal for
Change in Administering the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, 62 BUS. LAW. 1233, 123536 (2007) (advocating a new regulatory filing system that would afford a safe harbor to
complying businesses); Tarun & Tomczak, A Proposal for a United States Department of
Justice Foreing Corrupt Practices Act Leniency Policy, 47 AM. CRIM. L. REV. 153,
212-13 (2010) (proposing a leniency program modeled after one currently used by the
DOJ’s Antitrust Division).
112
Tarun & Tomczak, supra note 54, at 236 (clear and predictable policies provide
incentive for compliance, cooperation, and self disclosure).
110
28
(1) The Statutory Defense Addition
The DOJ and SEC should adopt and implement an affirmative defense of
adequate compliance into the regulatory scheme of the FCPA. The current regulatory
scheme that lacks any affirmative defenses discourages investment in internal anti bribery
policies and self-reporting identified violations. The adequate preventative measures
defense would not be absolute, but rather a company would need to prove that it
reasonably implemented and maintained anti-bribery programs. 113
The United Kingdom’s anti-bribery legislation, enacted in 2010, contains an
affirmative defense provision for adequate internal compliance. So far, there has not been
a suggestion that the U.K. defense is being abused.114 Furthermore, twelve OECD
signatories, including Austrailia, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland, all have a
functional compliance defense.115
The addition of a statutory defense would increase compliance with the FCPA
while incentivizing businesses to identify and self report violations. Proactive compliance
by businesses will substantially reduce the rate of violations. With a statutory defense in
113
Nonbinding and Advisory in nature, the 2012 Resource Guide suggests general
principles of best practices and lacks specific recommendations or guidance regarding
how compliance affects prosecutorial decisions. Lindsay Lawyer, “Underwhelmed” by
New Guidance, FCPA BLOG, http://www.fcpablog.com/blog/2012/lindsey-lawyerunderwhelmed-by-new-guidance-.html.
114
Bribery Act, 2010, c. 23 §7 (Eng.) (a corporation can proce in its defense that it had
adequate procedures in place designed to prevent persons associated with it from
engaging in prohibited conduct.); Jon Jordan, The Adequate Procedures Defense Under
the UK Bribery Act: A British Idea for the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, 17 STAN. J.L.
BUS. & FIN. 25, 32-33 (2011-2012). Multinationals invoking the defense must satisfy
the rigid criteria set out by the UK’s ministry of Justice. This criteria ensures that the
defense is not easily manipulated through paper compliance. See MINISTRY OF
JUSTICE, THE BRIBERY ACT 2010: GUIDANCE 20-31 (2011).
115
The Compliance Defense Around the World, FCPA PROFESSOR (June 28, 2011),
http://www.fcpaprofessor.com.the-compliance-defense-around-the-world.
29
place, prosecutors will no longer be able to prosecute compliant corporations for the acts
of a single employee. Thus, a statutory defense will also give businesses protection from
prosecutors. Clearly, a statutory defense will level the power disparity between
prosecutors and businesses that has become intrinsic to the FCPA.
(3) The Formal Leniency Policy Addition
Alone, a statutory defense will not add full clarity or predictability to the enforcement
process. Companies will have the ability to defend themselves against the DOJ, but they
still will be forced to engage in the guesswork associated with FCPA compliance. An
approach that would lessen ambiguity is the adoption of formal leniency policies. 116
Leniency policies would require the DOJ to spell out clear and predictable sanctions and
instruct as to how those sanctions could be reduced for companies that self report
violations. As such, companies would be incentivized to report misdeeds. Businesses
would also be afforded the ability to make informed decisions. The additions of formal
policies that are communicated succinctly in advance of prosecution would allow
businesses to make the decision to invest in compliance. 117
CONCLUSION
Many U.S. multinationals are willing to comply with the FCPA but are daunted
by the vagueness of the current requirements. It is the role of the U.S. legislators and
regulators to cut through the confusion and dispel concerns of compliance in vain. The
addition of both a statutory defense and a formal leniency program would provide
protection to businesses throughout the investigation, inquiry, and prosecution stages.
116
Tarun & Tomczak, supra Note 54, at 156, 190 (proposing a leniency policy similar to
those in the antitrust prosecutions).
117
Id.
30
This hybrid approach would also make compliance economically achievable for
participating companies by providing incentives to institute costly compliance programs,
self-report violations, and cooperate with law enforcement. This approach most
importantly provides companies with leverage in negotiations with prosecutors who, in
the absence of judicial oversight, have abused their discretion in the enforcement of
clearly ambiguous terms.
This hybrid solution is not an end all be all. By itself , the hybrid approach does
not provide instructions, restrain the jurisdictional reach, or clarify ambiguous statutory
terms. However, it does reduce uncertainty and provides much needed leverage to
multinationals. A hybrid approach between both legislators and regulators will transform
current FCPA enforcement from authoritative prosecution to a collaborative and
productive dialogue between government and business.
31