Interesting stuff via Bloomberg. on pending legislation that would curb the power of prosecutors investigating corporate crime. The main tool that appears to be in jeopard of coming off the table is the ability of prosecutors to demand that companies under investigation offer up confidential information in talks with their lawyers - waiving attorney client privilege in order to win leniency in plea deals.
This is not exactly a new bill, as some version of it has been floating around for
a year at least. and folks have been
planning for the demise of the
Thompson memo era for a long while now, basically since it was written. They got a boost recently when district court judge Lewis Kaplan of the Southern District of New York found f
ault with the DOJ's actions in its prosecution of a group of former KPMG executives, which as lead to renewed efforts to get a bill passed to protect the sanctity of attorney client privilege.
Investors, well...less so.
-- MDT
Labels: attorney client privilege, corporate investigation, legislation, pre-trial agreements, Thompson memo