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Features

Judicial Skepticism Mounts Over the Use and Reach of Appellate Waivers Image

Judicial Skepticism Mounts Over the Use and Reach of Appellate Waivers

Harry Sandick & Danielle Quinn

A defendant who pleads guilty is usually required to waive a host of constitutional and statutory rights, such as the right to a jury trial, the right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses, the right to testify and present evidence. However, many defendants are also required to waive their right to appeal in order to receive a favorable plea agreement with the government.

Features

Should Trump's Foreign Policy Affect Criminal Prosecutions? Image

Should Trump's Foreign Policy Affect Criminal Prosecutions?

Robert J. Anello & Kostya Lantsman

Business has gone global. So too has business-related crime. In the interconnected business environment, white-collar criminal investigations and prosecutions frequently present cross-border issues and affect U.S. foreign relations. Indeed, in some recent high-profile cases, the Trump administration has implied that it sees law enforcement — or the lack of it — as one of the tools in its foreign policy arsenal.

Columns & Departments

In the Courts Image

In the Courts

Surya Kundu

Seventh Circuit Distinguishes Between Truth and Truthiness

Columns & Departments

Business Crimes Hotline Image

Business Crimes Hotline

Surya Kundu

To Release or Not Release Grand Jury Documents? The D.C. Circuit Says No.

Features

"Spoofing" as Fraud: A Novel and Untested Theory of Prosecution Image

"Spoofing" as Fraud: A Novel and Untested Theory of Prosecution

Jodi Misher Peikin & Justin Roller

The DOJ has signaled its intent to pursue prosecutions for spoofing — which the law defines as "bidding or offering with the intent to cancel the bid or offer before execution" — aggressively. This article begins with a brief discussion of the elements that the government must prove to establish commodities fraud and wire fraud. It then examines recent spoofing prosecutions that raise important questions about the applicability of the traditional fraud statutes to spoofing-related activity. How the federal courts answer these open questions will have significant implications for participants in the commodities markets.

Features

FCA Cases: Convincing DOJ to Move to Dismiss Image

FCA Cases: Convincing DOJ to Move to Dismiss

Jacqueline C. Wolff

Recent actions by the DOJ suggest that although the DOJ may continue to prosecute certain relators' FCA cases, other relators may find themselves on the other side of a government motion to dismiss.

Columns & Departments

In the Courts Image

In the Courts

Kate Monks

The Ninth Circuit affirmed the majority of an $11 million jury verdict brought by a whistleblower who claimed that his company fired him for raising concerns about possible FCPA violations.

Columns & Departments

Business Crimes Hotline Image

Business Crimes Hotline

Kate Monks

The former CEO of a pharmaceutical company was found guilty by a jury on eight counts of wire fraud affecting a financial institution for orchestrating a scheme that led to the collapse of one of Puerto Rico's biggest banks.

Features

FCA and Statute of Limitations: A Puzzle for the Supreme Court Image

FCA and Statute of Limitations: A Puzzle for the Supreme Court

Jonathan S. Feld, Eric Klein & Andrew VanEgmond

The FCA is not a model of clarity. In a certiorari petition in United States ex rel. Hunt v. Cochise Consultancy, the U.S. Supreme Court will address an area of uncertainty that has led to a three-way circuit split regarding the FCA's statute of limitations. Depending on the outcome, FCA defendants could end up facing even more claims up to a decade old or, alternatively, have a new limitation on FCA actions upon which to rely.

Features

Eighth Circuit Rejects Ponzi Scheme Presumption to Protect Legitimate Loan Repayments Image

Eighth Circuit Rejects Ponzi Scheme Presumption to Protect Legitimate Loan Repayments

Michael L. Cook

In <i>Stoebner v. Opportunity Finance, LLC</i>, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that “… Ponzi scheme payments to satisfy legitimate antecedent debts to defendant banks could not be avoided” by a bankruptcy trustee “absent transaction-specific proof of actual intent to defraud or the statutory elements of constructive fraud — transfer by an insolvent debtor who did not receive reasonably equivalent value in exchange.”

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