- US attorneys in NYC to announce voluntary-disclosure policy
- Companies that come forward could avoid prosecution, US says
Wall Street’s top federal prosecutors will show leniency towards banks and firms that self-report possible white-collar crimes early under a new nationwide policy.
Under the new policy, firms that come forward with misconduct before it becomes known to the public or prosecutors and then fully cooperate will receive “significant benefits” in any resulting deal. These could include not being required to plead guilty to a crime, receiving a lower sentencing recommendation or avoiding charges altogether, the prosecutors said.
“The new voluntary self-disclosure policy is an important step forward in encouraging corporate accountability,” Williams said.
The policy, which will apply to every US attorney’s office in the country, formalizes goals Deputy Attorney General
The top prosecutors hope the criteria gives companies a clearer road map of when they should come forward and what benefits they can expect. Peace said he hoped companies took advantage of the policy to report criminal misconduct by employees and agents as soon as they become aware of it.
“When they do, they will have far better and more predicable outcomes under this policy,” he said.
One example of what could happen if corporations don’t come forward occurred in May 2022, when Williams’s office insisted that a unit of
The policy’s leniency to companies that self-disclose and cooperate doesn’t extend to individuals involved in wrongdoing, though Williams has also urged cooperators in major cases to come forward as soon as possible. His office has already secured two major guilty pleas to fraud charges stemming from the November collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX and its affiliated hedge fund,
“If you participated in misconduct at FTX or Alameda, now is the time to get ahead of it,” Williams said on Dec. 21. “We are moving quickly, and our patience is not eternal.”
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