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The Incredible Shrinking Privilege Strategies for Corporate Criminal Defense After the Thompson Memorandum

The headlines reporting multi-million dollar corporate guilty pleas often miss a point widely understood among white-collar practitioners: The driving force behind the corporate plea is often not the merits of the government's charge, but the corporation's need to reach a global settlement resolving administrative and criminal sanctions that could put the company out of business. Considering the role of prosecutorial discretion and the draconian consequences of a corporate conviction, corporations often have little choice but to plead guilty and cooperate with the government. Recently, the feds have raised the ante in this process by defining "cooperation" to include waiving the attorney-client privilege. Thus, corporations and counsel alike are forced into a Hobson's choice where at least partial waiver may be inevitable.

20 minute readOctober 01, 2003 at 09:22 AM
By
Laurence A. Urgenson
Audrey Harris
The Incredible Shrinking Privilege Strategies for Corporate Criminal Defense After the Thompson Memorandum

The headlines reporting multi-million dollar corporate guilty pleas often miss a point widely understood among white-collar practitioners: The driving force behind the corporate plea is often not the merits of the government's charge,

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