In Justice Shift, Corporate Deals Replace Trials
WASHINGTON - In 2005, federal authorities concluded that a Monsanto consultant had visited the home of an Indonesian official and, with the approval of a senior company executive, handed over an envelope stuffed with hundred-dollar bills. The money was meant as a bribe to win looser environmental regulations for Monsanto's cotton crops, according to a court document. Monsanto was also caught concealing the bribe with fake invoices.
A few years earlier, in the age of Enron, these kinds of charges would probably have resulted in a criminal indictment. Instead, Monsanto was allowed to pay $1 million and avoid criminal prosecution by entering into a monitoring agreement with the Justice Department.
In a major shift of policy, the Justice Department, once known for taking down giant corporations, including the accounting firm Arthur Andersen, has put off prosecuting more than 50 companies suspected of wrongdoing over the last three years.
Instead, many companies, from boutique outfits to immense corporations like American Express, have avoided the cost and stigma of defending themselves against criminal charges with a so-called deferred prosecution agreement, which allows the government to collect fines and appoint an outside monitor to impose internal reforms without going through a trial. In many cases, the name of the monitor and the details of the agreement are kept secret.
Deferred prosecutions have become a favorite tool of the Bush administration. But some legal experts now wonder if the policy shift has led companies, in particular financial institutions now under investigation for their roles in the subprime mortgage debacle, to test the limits of corporate anti-fraud laws.
Firms have readily agreed to the deferred prosecutions, said Vikramaditya S. Khanna, a law professor at the University of Michigan who has studied their use, because "clearly it avoids a bigger headache for them."
Some lawyers suggest that companies may be willing to take more risks because they know that, if they are caught, the chances of getting a deferred prosecution are good. "Some companies may bear the risk" of legally questionable business practices if they believe they can cut a deal to defer their prosecution indefinitely, Mr. Khanna said.
Legal experts say the tactic may have sent the wrong signal to corporations - the promise, in effect, of a get-out-of-jail-free card. The growing use of deferred prosecutions also suggests one road map the Justice Department might follow in the subprime mortgage investigations.
Deferred prosecution agreements, or D.P.A.'s, have become controversial because of a medical supply company's agreement to pay up to $52 million to the consulting firm of John Ashcroft, the former attorney general, as an outside monitor to avoid criminal prosecution. That agreement has prompted Congressional inquiries and calls for stricter guidelines.
Defenders of deferred prosecutions say that they have been too harshly criticized lately and that they play a crucial role in allowing the government to secure the cooperation of a company while avoiding the time, expense and uncertainty of a trial. The agreements, government officials say, also avoid the type of companywide havoc seen most acutely in the case of Arthur Andersen, the accounting firm that was shuttered in 2002 after being indicted in the Enron scandal. The firm's collapse threw 28,000 employees out of work.
At a Congressional hearing last month, Mr. Ashcroft defended the agreements, saying that they avoided "destroying entire corporations" through criminal indictments. "Prosecutors understand that a corporate indictment can be a corporate death sentence," he said. "A deferred prosecution can avoid the catastrophic collateral consequences and costs that are associated with corporate conviction."
Paul J. McNulty, a former deputy attorney general who put new guidelines in place in 2006 for corporate investigations at the Justice Department, said in an interview, "There's a fundamental misapprehension with D.P.A.'s to think that they're a break for the company."
With the imposition of fines and an outside monitor, "the reality is that for the government, it gets pretty much everything without the difficulty of going forward with an indictment," said Mr. McNulty, who is now in private practice. "I think companies are beginning to wonder whether they ought to fight more, because they are pretty burdensome."
But critics of the agreements question that assertion. Charles Intriago, a former federal prosecutor in Miami who specializes in money-laundering issues, said that huge penalties, like the $65 million fine for American Express Bank International in 2007, were "peanuts" compared with the damage posed by a criminal conviction. The company was accused of failing to enact internal controls to guard against laundering of drug money and other reporting problems.
The agreements were once rare, but their use has skyrocketed in the current administration, with 35 deals last year alone by the Justice Department, lawyers who follow the trend said. Banks, financial service companies and auditors have frequently entered into such agreements, including recent ones involving Merrill Lynch, the Bank of New York, AmSouth Bank, KPMG and others. Beyond financial crimes, deferred agreements have been used in lieu of prosecuting companies - though not individuals - for export control violations, obscenity violations, Medicare and Medicaid fraud, kickbacks and environmental violations.
In general, such agreements result in companies acknowledging wrongdoing by not contesting criminal charges, but without formally admitting guilt. Most agreements end after two or three years with the charges permanently dismissed.
Monsanto, for example, while not admitting guilt, agreed to abstain from further violations of bribery laws. In an e-mail message, Lori Fisher, a spokeswoman, said that Monsanto had cooperated with the Justice Department and fully complied with the agreement, leading to deferred charges being permanently dismissed in early March.
The trend has led to increased speculation about how the Justice Department might use the agreements in investigations against financial companies in the mortgage lending scandal, which has become a top law enforcement priority for the department as the economy has withered.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has 17 open inquiries into accusations of corporate fraud in connection with the subprime scandal, and Neil Power, who leads the bureau's economics crime unit, said in an interview that the number was certain to grow. The F.B.I. has publicly identified only one target - the Doral Financial Corporation, a mortgage company based in Puerto Rico whose former treasurer has already been indicted - but major companies like Countrywide Financial, once the nation's biggest mortgage lender, have also been reported to be under criminal investigation.
Mr. Power said the investigations were a reflection of the "environment of greed" that allowed companies to package mortgages into securities they sold to investors without sufficient documentation of the borrower's ability to repay. One line of criminal inquiry focuses on whether bond companies gave accurate information to investors.
"What we're looking at," he said, "is the fact that they may be performing accounting fraud."
Justice Department officials would not discuss the role that deferred prosecution agreements may play in their ultimate handling of the mortgage investigations. One official said it was "way too early" to begin speculating about such possibilities.
But the prospect already has some experts in the field worried.
Michael McDonald, a former Internal Revenue Service investigator in Miami who is a private consultant and has given seminars on deferred prosecutions, said such deals "should not be on the board" in the subprime mortgage investigations.
"In light of what this did to our economy, people shouldn't just be able to write a check and walk away," Mr. McDonald said. "People should be prosecuted for it and go to jail."
Timothy Dickinson, a lawyer in Washington who was the outside monitor for Monsanto, agreed. Corporate lenders caught up in the mortgage scandals should not assume they will be given the chance for a deferred prosecution, Mr. Dickinson said, and the Justice Department should "insist on a guilty plea" rather than offering a deal.
"It's a tool that will remain to be used by prosecutors in appropriate circumstances, but not every circumstance," he said. "It depends how egregious the conduct is."
© 2008 The New York Times
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18 Comments so far
Show AllThere has been an attempt to diminish the role of the Judiciary(the third branch) as well as our representatives in Congress by those wishing to control our democracy. You don't see it as much these days but I remember all need to replace judges with "right" minded jurists. I always thought you could not make contract contrary to law, maybe one of the more knowledgeable posters could correct me if Im wrong. How could it be legal to go into an agreement to conceal criminal behavior? and up is down and night is day ...
If corporations are "persons," why can't they be locked up?
And if a corporation is found guilty of murder, can it be executed?
Gail: Your knowledge and observations are always great! Thanks. Question: What's in Ashcroft's Guiding "principles", and who is the 2003 memo addressed to?
Just an observation about the title of this article. I would like to suggest a correction. "In Justice Shift, Corporate Deals Replace Trials" should be changed to "Injustice Shift". More accurate and to the point.
Daniel David:
I haven't read through all the comments yet, but after reading yours, I decided I had to respond.
Corporate crimials are supported by both parties. That is where both parties get the majority of their money. Corporate lobbiests. Corporate criminals are equal opportunity criminals. They bribe everybody. They just give more to the party they think has the most power to give them what they want.
And don't even start on how the D's represent the ordinary American. You tell me how Preznit Clinton helped us regular working stiffs by pushing for NAFTA. Or try the legislation that abolished Glass-Stengal that deregulated banks and caused the financial meltdown we are now facing. Or, how about gutting the social safety net? Or?......The list is endless.
Most Dimwits are just as bad as all Repugs. Our government is bought and paid for by the corporations. We live in a corporatocracy that sets the rules for the benefit of corporations, not the people.
Get used to it.
Gail -- of course that all depends on who the "crook" is working for:IF himself, to the gallows
IF a bigger bank, into the "IN" clubNamaste
"Legal experts say the tactic may have sent the wrong signal to corporations - the promise, in effect, of a get-out-of-jail-free card."
I don't believe for a moment that this "tactic" sent a wrong signal. The signal is more than clear to anyone who can see what lies beneath the veneer.
"Deferred prosecution" IS a get-out-of -jail-free card. Deferred prosecution is just another name for "pro-corporatist" liberalism and although engineered by Republicans, it is equally supported by Democrats. After all, large corporate campaign contributions are what keep most of these people in office. As the saying goes....."don't bite the hand that feeds you"!
"Deferred prosecution agreements, or D.P.A.'s, have become controversial because of a medical supply company's agreement to pay up to $52 million to the consulting firm of John Ashcroft, the former attorney general, as an outside monitor to avoid criminal prosecution. That agreement has prompted Congressional inquiries and calls for stricter guidelines."
It should call for Congressional inquires since the "Corporate Fraud Task Force" under Attorney John Ashcroft resvised the guiding "priniciples" for the federal prosecution of business organizations.
In a U.S. Department of Justice MEMORANDUM dated January 20, 2003, FROM: Larry D. Thompson, Deputy Attorney General; SUBJECT: Principles of Federal Prosecution of Business Organizations; it is perfectly clear that prosecutors are being encouraged to use amnesty or "non-prosecution" agreements in exchange for cooperation (in the interest of the public?) from these criminal corporations.
Gee, do you think someone who robbed a bank could get the same amnesty in exchange for promised good behavior?
namaste---you nailed it!
govt corporate welfare has a new benefit,Pay me a Dime,
You'll serve no Time,
What crime?Namaste
jposty: what do you mean by a "truly free market"? Completely unregulated markets will, by their very nature, become corrupt and result in monopolies. There's no such thing; only varying degrees of governmental-corporate collusion (fascism).
It's time to start tearing up the corporate charters of those companies that violate the law. Then we'd see executives start behaving themselves. And on the same subject, it's time to limit (or even do away with entirely) limited liability corporations.
I would refer those interested (or those who might require more reasons to be angry) to 3 great web sites:
http://www.endgame.org/corpfines1.html
and the Corporate Accountability International Media Center at
http://www.stopcorporateabuse.org
and, finally, Russell Mokhiber's awesome project:
http://www.corporatecrimereporter.com
He (Russell) reminds us of our own possible involvement: that whenever we (or our money market or pension fund managers) purchase Exxon stock, or when we fill up our tank at an Exxon gas station, or take a cruise on a ship owned by Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines, ad nauseum, we are, in fact, supporting a criminal recidivist corporation. And that companies that are criminally prosecuted represent only the tip of a very large iceberg of corporate wrongdoing.
Remember that corporations define the laws under which they live.
And because of their political power, big corporations have the resources to defend themselves in courts of law and in the court of public opinion.
Corporations are not persons, and it's time to start deconstructing the statutes, laws and perceptions that treat them as such.
One has to ask: why is Ralph Nader and Brian Moore/Stewart Alexander (SWP candidates) and Cynthia McKinney (Green) the only candidates talking about these issues? Could it be because the Mc-O-Clintons are owned by these very same corporate criminals listed in corporate crime databases?
A few politicians are powerless against monopolies. We the People have the power.
Yawn...
The so-called 'Justice Dept.' hasn't REALLY curtailed ANY major Corporate-Interest (that wasn't already collapsing under it's 'own-weight/corruption') ... since they 'won' against Standard-Oil in the 1800's -- and then "slapped their wrist" (allowing JDRockefeller to Hoax us then-to-now with 'Warming'/'Peak-Oil'/etc.). Teddy kinda turned-things-around 'just a little' (but was therefore denied re-Election, so that blackmailed-Wilson could give us WW-I and the FedReserve and 'Internationalism', instead).
The 'Fix' has been in since we lost that Revolution of ours to the Banking-corporations of Britain in the late-1700's (with a 'reminder' of that-fact in 1812, 1861, and 1913).
It's FAR too-late to 'do' Anything about ANY of this crap...
[You, and our 'government', have been 'incorporated' ('legally', and underwritten by "Assumpsit-Contracts") since 1871 -- and wholly-owned by the 'elites' of Britain]
Don't believe it? Look at the line you sign-upon -- on one of 'your' personal-cheques or Mortgages -- with a magnifying-glass, that-is. [Talk about 'reading the small-print'!]
You've 'belonged' to "Foreign-Interests" since your birth-certificate was 'issued' -- and even the Bible advises being a 'good&loyal-Slave'.
A "shift" in the priorities of the "Justice Department" away from chasing shenanigans at corporations is one very precise definition of a difference between a Republican administration and a Democratic administration.
Republicans play politically to their base--which is composed of the voters who are substantially benefiting from corporate activities.
Democrats play politically to their base--which generally is composed of poorer people who benefit less (or not at all) from the corporations.
Differences in priorities on which laws are enforced most are an inevitable consequence of which party the president hails from---for this influence-the-voter-base reason. Some say there is no difference between Republicans and Democrats---but that opinion comes out of cluelessness.
I don't know about you folks, but if a crime is committed and we know where to find those responsible , I want to see prosecutions and bodies locked away.
In the case of corporate malfeasance I'd expect a strict monitoring regime imposed too.
I've always thought that the fines to corporations (persons under the law) should be commensurate with prison sentences to real persons.
ie a sentence of 5 years (say for illegally dumping pollutants into a river)would mean that the corporation has to pay a fine equal to 5 years of their net revenue based on their last fiscal year. After all, that is what happens when a person sits in a jail cell: no salary=no revenue.
Big_Money,
Funny and dead-to-rights accurate. Depending on government to prosecute corporate crimes is to buy a front-row ticket to the Punch & Judy show. If you get drunk, then the whole thing may entertain, but it won't change anything.
I agree completely Vince, the possible profit outweighs the minuscule fines the government imposes every time. You lock up a couple more corrupt CEO's... the rest will fall right in line.
This goes back to the old argument of government breeding poor business practices. I know i'm going to ripped for this but... if we had a true free market things like this couldn't happen. Corporate waste and corruption would not be existent if the government actually upheld its laws and stopped providing incentives for corporations to act unethically or illegally. Whether its in the financial industry where the government breeds corruption with its fractional-reserve banking system or in the agriculture business, poor government leads to a poor economy.
-James
www.thepoliticus.org
Well, I fully expect the fox to provide us with a full audit of what's going on in the hen house, because I have my retirement fund stashed away in hen futures, and I don't want some whining commie liberals casting doubts on the booming hen population and sparking a failure of investor confidence.
And all your wild accusations about the fox needing 86 more hen houses just to meet his future obligations isn't helping either. The fox has done more than enough to win your confidence by securing the only set of keys to the hen house. And the barn. And the tractor.
All that matters is your confidence. Does the fox need the keys to your house, too?
In a similar vein. A wanna-be developer had a piece of ground (about 200 ac.) he wanted to develop. One impediment was a large stand of protecteced forest along the floodplain of a major tributary to the Allegheny. He logged it anyhow, calculating the profit from development would more than compensate for the fine from EPA. As fate would have it, that ground was right around the hill from a childhood home of Rachel Carson.