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Deferred Prosecution Agreements in England and Wales: legal framework, judicial oversight, SFO co-operation demands and strategic choices one year after introduction

Published on: 04 June 2015

Published by a LexisNexis Corporate Crime expert
Legal News
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Article summary

It has now been just over a year since DPAs became available, but how are they being used in practice?

Just over a year on from the introduction of DPAs, how are they actually being applied? In short, there have been no concluded matters to date, though we understand negotiations are in progress in a number of high‑profile cases...

What is the legal framework around DPAs?

The legal basis for DPAs is contained in the Crime and Courts Act 2013, s 45 and Sch 17. These provisions outline the scheme, while operational detail is provided in joint guidance from the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) and the Crown Prosecution Service. In essence, a DPA is an arrangement between a prosecutor—most commonly the SFO—and a corporate organisation: a criminal charge is brought but not pursued provided the organisation fulfils pre‑negotiated conditions, typically including payment of a significant fine and possibly the imposition of monitoring measures. It is not an agreement that the corporate organisation will not be prosecuted...

What are the benefits for companies of using DPAs? In theory, DPAs

...

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