Regulatory: Start worrying about the FCPA “rocket docket”

The DOJ and SEC’s recent guidance overshadowed this potentially significant development

The recently-announced (and long-awaited) FCPA Guidance is not only explicitly non-binding on government enforcers, but it is also lacking any true “news” concerning the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) and Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) FCPA enforcement positions. That said, the guidance, issued on Nov. 14, does add significant value by collecting the agencies’ prior opinions and providing helpful clarifications and hypothetical case studies for corporate counsel.

The guidance, moreover, highlights the importance of effective anti-corruption compliance programs, identifying the basic elements the DOJ and the SEC consider when evaluating such programs. More specifically, the 120-page guidance addresses, among other things:

  • The definition of a foreign official
  • Gifts and entertainment
  • The “hallmarks” of an effective corporate compliance program

Even though the guidance does not represent a significant departure from the agencies’ prior positions, it does offer a compendium of FCPA enforcement positions that corporate counsel as of this writing no doubt are, for good reason, carefully reviewing.

The attention heaped on the guidance is understandable. But from the perspective of companies or individuals facing potential anti-corruption enforcement action, there has been other recent news that may well deserve similar attention.

The intense interest in the guidance to some extent drowned out recent reports that federal prosecutors may be contemplating a new, and traditionally more prosecution-friendly, prime venue for the filing of their anti-corruption actions. And if this comes to pass, companies facing potential FCPA charges will be well-advised to take a hard look at their current litigation plan.

The venue long-considered a welcome prosecutorial port is the Eastern District of Virginia (EDVA). Experienced prosecutor and EDVA U.S. Attorney Neil MacBride, speaking at an American Bar Association event in October, publicly highlighted the particular advantages of the EDVA’s legendary “rocket docket” for the prosecution of Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) cases. The key advantages to FCPA prosecutors will be:

  1. Tight trial deadlines with few continuance
  2. No-nonsense judges
  3. Tough-on crime, prosecution-friendly juries

If the district’s top prosecutor gets his way, the EDVA will join D.C. and Houston as the current districts of choice for the filing of FCPA cases.

From the perspective of the outside counsel selection process, FCPA charges brought in the EDVA will place a premium on counsel with demonstrated records of actual trial experience in complex criminal cases. Former federal prosecutors with deep trial backgrounds and subject-matter experience, in turn, will likely see increased demands for their expertise. Such counsel will be in the best position to help clients effectively navigate through the country’s fastest federal trial docket. Experienced and trial-ready counsel also stand a better chance to be taken seriously by the courts and prosecutors who have a knack for quickly assessing whether defense counsel have what it takes to defend complex corruption cases under the strictures of a highly-compressed motion and trial schedule.  

The EDVA, after all, is not the best place to learn the nuances of trial practice, and an anti-corruption case of global scope is certainly not the kind of case through which to learn the finer points of federal prosecution and defense. The possibility that the government may add the EDVA as a new venue for FCPA cases is a development companies ignore at their own peril.

About the Author
T. Markus Funk

T. Markus Funk

T. Markus Funk is a White Collar Defense and Internal Investigations partner at Perkins Coie, where he co-heads the firm’s Corporate Social Responsibility and Supply Chain Compliance Practice (the first such practice among the AmLaw 100). He is also the co-author of the book Child Exploitation and Trafficking:  Examining the Global Challenges and U.S. Responses (2012, co-authored with Chicago U.S. District Judge Virginia M. Kendall), and serves on the ABA’s Presidential Anti-Trafficking Task Force and as Co-Chair of the ABA’s Corporate Social Responsibility and Forced Labor Task Force. From 2000-2010, Markus was a federal prosecutor in Chicago and from 2004-06, he lived in Pristina, Kosovo where he led USDOJ and State Department efforts to combat trafficking in the Balkans. He can be reached at (312) 324-8681 or MFunk@perkinscoie.com.

About the Author
Elizabeth Banzhoff

Elizabeth Banzhoff

Elizabeth M. Banzhoff is an associate at Perkins Coie in Denver. She previously served as a law clerk to Judge Richard Smoak, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida, and Chief Justice Michael L. Bender of the Colorado Supreme Court.

Comments

InsideScoop Daily eNewsletter

InsideScoop delivers the latest-breaking news affecting in-house counsel. Get the latest business trends, current corporate litigation, labor developments, technology initiatives and more — FREE. Sign up now!

You have been subscribed! You will receive a confirmation email soon.

See the entire list of InsideCounsel eNewsletters.

Resource Library


7 Simple Strategies for Improving Legal Fee Budgeting Certainty

Understanding the legal fee budgeting paradigm and following seven simple strategies will help you control...

Complimentary White Paper: Best Practices for Meeting Critical eDiscovery Challenges

Packed with practical advice, this white paper discusses best practices for meeting eDiscovery challenges across...

Complimentary White Paper "Key Considerations for Collection Methodologies and Resources"

This white paper addresses the need for companies to reevaluate their current collection policies in...

Moving Matters In-House: How Technology Enables Legal In-Sourcing

Strategically shifting more matters to in-house counsel has proven to be an effective strategy to...

5 Ways to Promote Responsible Content Sharing

Find out five ways that organizations can promote responsible sharing of content among employees by...

Reducing the Costs of eDiscovery from Collection to Court!

Predictive coding is only one of many ways organizations can make eDiscovery faster, cheaper and...

Discovery Shifts to the Cloud

Adoption of Cloud computing continues to gain momentum. How can IT and Legal Teams avoid...

Lower Your Total Cost of Ownership

With the deployment of Proofpoint Enterprise Archive, organizations have realized significant cost savings in automating...

Health and Safety Risks of Counterfeits in the Global Supply...

This whitepaper underscores the prevalence of counterfeits within global supply chains across a number of...

Get the facts you need to Help Implement Sound Legal...

This whitepaper will examine the cases that are setting precedents. Download "Legal Hold and Self-Collection:...

View All »

Advertisement. Closing in 15 seconds.