Listen "One Month to More Effective Reporting and Investigations - Miranda Warnings for Employees?"
Episode Synopsis
Must an investigator warn an employee that concealing information from company lawyers conducting an internal FCPA investigation could be a federal crime? Even if the company attorneys provided the now standard corporate attorney Upjohn warning? Does a company attorney asking questions morph into a de facto federal agent during an internal company investigation regarding alleged FCPA violations and is the attorney thereby required to provide a Mirandawarning to employees during said investigation?
Employees who are subject to being interviewed or otherwise required to cooperate in an internal investigation may find themselves on the sharp horns of a dilemma requiring either (1) cooperating with the internal investigation or (2) losing their jobs for failure to cooperate by providing documents, testimony or other evidence. Many U.S. businesses mandate full employee cooperation with internal investigations or those handled by outside counsel on behalf of a corporation. These requirements can exert a coercive force, “often inducing employees to act contrary to their personal legal interests in favor of candidly disclosing wrongdoing to corporate counsel.” Moreover, such a corporate policy may permit a company to claim to the government a spirit of cooperation in the hopes of avoiding prosecution in addition to increasing the chances of earning meaningful credit under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines or the FCPA Corporate Enforcement Policy.
Three key takeaways:
Make sure you provide an Upjohn warning.
If an employee demands counsel to represent them during an internal investigation, who bears the cost?
Always check state law requirements around internal investigations.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Employees who are subject to being interviewed or otherwise required to cooperate in an internal investigation may find themselves on the sharp horns of a dilemma requiring either (1) cooperating with the internal investigation or (2) losing their jobs for failure to cooperate by providing documents, testimony or other evidence. Many U.S. businesses mandate full employee cooperation with internal investigations or those handled by outside counsel on behalf of a corporation. These requirements can exert a coercive force, “often inducing employees to act contrary to their personal legal interests in favor of candidly disclosing wrongdoing to corporate counsel.” Moreover, such a corporate policy may permit a company to claim to the government a spirit of cooperation in the hopes of avoiding prosecution in addition to increasing the chances of earning meaningful credit under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines or the FCPA Corporate Enforcement Policy.
Three key takeaways:
Make sure you provide an Upjohn warning.
If an employee demands counsel to represent them during an internal investigation, who bears the cost?
Always check state law requirements around internal investigations.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
More episodes of the podcast 31 Days to a More Effective Compliance Program
Day 28 - The Importance of Data Governance
28/01/2025
Day 26 - CCO Authority and Independence
26/01/2025
Day 24 - Internal Reporting and Triage
24/01/2025
Day 23 - Investigative Protocols
23/01/2025
Day 22 - Levels of Due Diligence
22/01/2025
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