| Comparative Corporate Criminal Liability: Exploring the Uniquely American Doctrine Through Comparative Criminal Procedure |
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| Written by Edward B. Diskant [View as PDF] | |
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118 Yale L.J. 126 (2008).
In the United States, corporations—as entities—can be
criminally tried and convicted for crimes committed by individual directors,
managers, and even low-level employees. From a comparative perspective, such
corporate liability marks the United States as relatively unique. Few other
Western countries impose entity liability, and those that do impose such liability
comparatively infrequently and under the threat of far less serious punishment.
The question of why the United States—and the United States virtually
alone—imposes corporate criminal liability has been the subject of limited
scholarly attention. This Note seeks to fill that void through the prism of
comparative law. Using Germany—a country that imposes no corporate criminal
liability—as a foil, this Note argues that the American doctrine can best be
explained not through criminal theory but rather through criminal procedure.
American criminal procedure imposes unique difficulties on American
investigators and prosecutors seeking to root out individual white-collar
criminals. But it also imparts powers to those prosecutors that are unknown to
their German counterparts. Among them is the power to threaten criminal
indictment, one that allows prosecutors to force American corporations to cooperate,
to waive the attorney-client privilege, and to cut ties to individual employees
under investigation, thereby facilitating the prosecution of those individual
defendants. Using differences in criminal procedure rather than criminal theory
to explain the uniquely American doctrine, this Note concludes by suggesting
how the criminal procedure approach can best be used to understand—and
potentially to reform—an American system that critics increasingly decry as
broken.
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