Author ORCID Identifier
0009-0003-8399-0096
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2024
Keywords
Subsidiary-only conviction, Corporate group, Criminal liability, Settlements, Corporate prosecutors
Abstract
Corporate groups comprise parent companies and one or more subsidiaries, which parents use to manage liabilities, transactions, operations, and regulation. Those subsidiaries can also be used to manage criminal accountability when multiple entities within a corporate group share responsibility for a common offense. A parent, for instance, might reach a settlement with prosecutors that requires its subsidiary to plead guilty to a crime, without conviction of the parent itself—a subsidiary-only conviction (SOC). The parent will thus avoid bearing collateral consequences—such as contracting or industry bars—that would follow its own conviction. For the prosecutor, such settlements can respond to criminal law’s expressive purposes while avoiding socially unacceptable collateral consequences from parent-level conviction. This kind of settlement presents an under-considered application of entity partitioning in which adjudicated criminal liability is isolated to a subsidiary, leaving the rest of a firm’s assets unencumbered by a conviction’s collateral consequences. This criminal partitioning differs, however, from better-known private asset partitioning. That is because within a firm, entity borders tend to be more porous to criminal than to private liability. Thus, in the criminal context, partitioning occurs through ex post settlement between parents and prosecutors, rather than the ex ante and unilateral use of asset partitioning seen in the private context. After considering this extension in light of prosecutorial practice and a ten-year dataset of federal SOC settlements, this Article calls for expanded use of SOC settlements as a means for balancing competing public interests in corporate enforcement and the avoidance of social cost.
First Page
2013
Publication Title
Fordham Law Review
Recommended Citation
Andrew K. Jennings, Criminal Subsidiaries, 92 Fordham L. Rev. 2013 (2024).
Included in
Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Commons, Business Organizations Law Commons, Legal Remedies Commons, Public Policy Commons, Securities Law Commons