Title: CRIMINALIZATION OF ANTITRUST
1CRIMINALIZATION OF ANTITRUST THE NEW CONSENSUS?
- ABA Section of International LawFall Meeting
2008September 25, 2008Brussels
2For jurisdictions that can provide the necessary
legal protections for the accused, criminal
sanctions provide the greatest potential for
deterrence and the most appropriate punishment
for individual cartelists
ICN, 2004 Cartels Workshop
3Criminalization of Antitrust
- Canada and the U.S. have had criminal antitrust
offences since 1889 and 1890 respectively - In Europe the focus has traditionally been placed
on administrative enforcement - UK criminalized certain anticompetitive conduct
in 2002 followed by Ireland in 2004 - Recent cases in UK and Ireland suggest a shift
towards effective application of criminal
sanctions - Recently, Russia, the Netherlands, the Czech
Republic have called for criminal sanctions for
cartel conduct - Several other EU countries have contemplated
certain violations of antitrust laws as criminal
offences France, Germany, Austria, Denmark,
Estonia, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia - Draft legislation was introduced in Australia in
2008
4UNITED STATES
- Per se offence for hard core cartel conduct
- in theory also Rule of Reason
- Corporate and individual sanctions
- DOJ and State/local prosecutors not FTC
- Amnesty / Leniency / Leniency Plus
- Sentencing Guidelines / Alternative Fine
Provision - Effect of conviction on civil follow-on cases
- HOT TOPICS
- Extradition Norris case
- Marine Hose search sentencing cooperation
- Collateral offences fraud and corruption,
obstruction
5CANADA
- Criminal offences
- conspiracy, bid rigging, price discrimination,
price maintenance, predatory pricing - Bifurcated approach
- Competition Bureau (investigative agency)
- Director of Public Prosecution (prosecutor)
- Undueness standard not per se illegal
- No Sentencing Guidelines
- HOT TOPICS
- Competition Policy Review Panel Report
- Draft Information Bulletin on Sentencing and
Leniency in Cartel Cases - Use of Prohibition Orders
6UNITED KINGDOM
- Enterprise Act of 2002 effective as of June
2003 - Criminal sanctions
- Director disqualification orders
- Confiscation orders
- OFTs dual track approach (criminal/civil)
- OFT / Commissions dual track approach
(criminal/civil) - HOT TOPICS
- US/UK criminal enforcement Marine Hose case
- UK stand-alone criminal enforcement BA/Virgin
case - Increasing focus by corporate advisors on the
role of individuals - Financial reward programme for informers
- Risk of individual applications for immunity
- Obstruction risks for company and individuals
- Separate legal advice
7AUSTRALIA
- Draft bill January 2008 - new legislation by end
2008 introducing dual civil-criminal regime for
cartel conduct - prohibitions reflect basic OECD definition of
hard-core cartel conduct - dishonesty proposed as key differentiator
- corporate and individual liability
- Bifurcated approach to enforcement
- ACCC (investigative agency)
- Director of Public Prosecutions (prosecutor)
- Court-imposed penalties no Sentencing Guidelines
- HOT TOPICS
- Extent of differentiation between criminal and
civil prohibitions appropriateness of dishonesty
element - Workability of the bifurcated model
- Extent of ACCC powers and resources
- Increase in private enforcement
- Criminal charges for obstruction following civil
settlement (fall-out from the Visy case)
8SWEDEN
- Swedish Government Committee on Modernisation of
the Competition rules (2003-2004), a
criminalization model for hard-core cartels - New Competition Act (Nov 1, 2008)
- criminalization rejected but disqualification
orders for cartel infringements - will keep so far unsuccessful leniency program
(introduced in 2002) - Competition Authority may issue fines against
undertakings in uncontested cases - HOT TOPICS
- Bid rigging asphalt case
- Heavy investments and prestige put into the
Swedish leniency program - ECN aspects
- Strong opposition against a criminal amnesty
system for individuals
9- IS CRIMINALIZATION DESIRABLE?
10IS CRIMINALIZATION DESIRABLE?
- Why criminalization might be desirable?
- deterrence
- individual accountability attributes to more
effective enforcement - enhanced investigative powers (search and
seizure, subpoena) - increased effectiveness of leniency/amnesty
programs - BUT
- reasonable punishment? deprivation of liberties
and freedoms? - high legal and evidentiary burdens
- chilling effect on business
- more resources and decreased efficiency
- negative effect on leniency programs?
-
11IS CRIMINALIZATION DESIRABLE?
- Are there any other alternative means?
- individual administrative fines
- disqualification orders / prohibition orders as
an alternative - private enforcement as a supplement/complement
12- SCOPE OF A CRIMINAL ANTITRUST OFFENCE
13SCOPE OF A CRIMINAL ANTITRUST OFFENCE
- Should criminal sanctions be reserved for hard
core cartel conduct? - What standard should be applied?
- per se (U.S. and Australia)
- in US, general Sherman Act provisions detail
left to courts - in Australia, detailed statutory provisions
proposed with problems of undue complexity and
potential overreach - dishonesty (UK and Australia?) or other
aggravating features (UK) - the dishonesty test ordinary people would
consider the alleged conduct dishonest and
defendant knew that ordinary people would think
the conduct to be dishonest - implications of the Norris litigation
- undueness (Canada)
- accused intended to enter into the agreement and
knew or ought reasonably to have known that the
agreement (if entered into) would prevent or
lessen competition unduly
14- EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION OF CRIMINAL ANTITRUST
ENFORCEMENT
15EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION OF CRIMINAL ANTITRUST
ENFORCEMENT
- Two tier approach in Europe (Commission and
NCAs) - co-operative (U.S.) or conflicting? (Korea,
Brazil) - Bifurcated model in Canada and Australia
(investigative agency and public prosecutor) - court imposed sentences / no sentencing
guidelines - leniency / immunity considerations
- Amnesty / leniency Plus
- Sanctions for individuals
16EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION OF A CRIMINAL ANTITRUST
ENFORCEMENT
- Transparency and certainty
- High risk of detection
- Significant sanctions
- Investigative powers
- Cooperation among enforcement agencies
- Support from different stakeholders regulators,
business community, agencies, judiciary
17- THE CRIMINALIZATION OF ANTITRUST AND
MULTIJURISDICTIONAL INVESTIGATIONS
18THE CRIMINALIZATION OF ANTITRUST AND
MULTIJURISDICTIONAL INVESTIGATIONS
- Co-operation agreements
- Intergovernmental networking training (eg ICN)
- know-how sharing and significance of personal
contacts - coordinated approach to enforcement priorities
- technical assistance programs
- Proliferation of leniency/amnesty programs
- guarantee applicants who seek leniency protection
against criminal prosecution - additional evidence gathering opportunities
- set off provisions in leniency / plea
agreements - Extradition treaties
- Cross-border markets
19Caron Yvonne Beaton-Wells Philipp Girardet The
University of Melbourne SJ Berwin LLP Victoria,
Australia London, England Susana Cabrera Per
Karlsson GARRIGUES Advokatfirman Vinge
KB Madrid, Spain Stockholm, Sweden Ken
Ewing Elisa Kearney Steptoe Johnson
LLP Davies Ward Phillips Vineberg
LLP Washington D.C., USA Toronto,
Canada