Crime: conduct that is prohibited and punished by a government
According to origin: can be common law or statutory crime
According to severity: can be felonies or misdemeanors
White-collar crime: crime that does not inflict or threaten physical harm
Crimes are usually proved with 2 elements:
State of mind ("scienter")
You do not need to know you were committing a crime, you just need to have intended your conduct
Brill v. Chevron Corporation, 804 Fed. Appx. 630 (N.D. Cal. 2020) -- predicate crime not proved where company had no knowledge that money paid to purchase crude oil was financing terrorism
Bad act/omission ("actus reus")
Responsibility for Crimes in the Corporate Context:
Corporations can be held responsible for acts/omissions of employees
Corporate officers/senior managers can be held responsible if they:
Authorized conduct
Failed to supervise conduct
Knew about conduct
U.S. v. Park, 421 U.S. 658 (1975): corporate president was held responsible for corporation's violation of the Food, Drug, & Cosmetic Act where he failed to follow up on remediation efforts with respect to rodent infestation
After the dot-com failures and 2008 crisis, stiffer penalties were enacted for officers and directors
Possible penalties include:
Jail
Fines
Banishment for humans
Fines for companies
Business Crimes
Conspiracy: the planning of a crime. Requires:
Agreement between multiple persons
To commit an unlawful act or to use unlawful means to obtain an otherwise lawful result
Money laundering: intentional participation in a financial transaction designed to hide the source of the funds (I.e. profits from criminal enterprise)
Bribery: act of giving something to someone in return for influencing their judgment in the giver's favor
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: antibribery statute that covers US companies' international operations
Embezzlement: act of stealing another person's property that has been entrusted to you
I.e. as an employee
RICO (Racketeer influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act):
Prohibits racketeering, an illegal activity designed to make a commercial profit that's disguised as a legal business
Prevents infiltration of illegal enterprises into legitimate businesses
Targets organized crime (I.e. Mafia)
Statute is worded so broadly that it has a far greater impact than originally contemplated
REQUIRES:
Defendant is involved
In an enterprise
Affects commerce
Engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity w 2 predicate acts (broadly defined)
Ex: predatory lending schemes, bribing doctors to overprescribe
SOX Act - Fraud and Obstruction of Justice:
Increased penalties for wrongful conduct related to certifying financial statements
Felony to alter/destroy/falsify financial docs with intent to obstruct or influence investigation
Fourth Amendment:
Protects against unreasonable searches and seizures
In places where you have an expectation of privacy, gov needs a warrant issued on a probable cause to conduct a search (unless exceptions)
--> EXCEPTIONS:
Emergencies
Plain view
Dow Chemical Co. v. United States, 476 U.S. 1819 (1986) -- no expectation of privacy from low-flying planes
Permission given
Business defendants enjoy Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizure
They are able to assert attorney-client privilege over attorney-client communications
Even a proper search cannot reach privileged documents
Fifth Amendment:
Includes protection against self-incrimination
Government may not compel a person to be a witness against himself
Corporations are not given protection against self-incrimination
Corporations cannot prevent disclosure of its records on the basis of self-incrimination
Fifth Amendment also includes a right to due process, which in the criminal context includes:
Arraignment (when charges are read and a plea entered)
Preliminary hearing
Discovery (exchange of info for use as evidence)
Trial with cross-examination rights