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Expanded corporate criminal liability under ECCTA 2023: managing risks from senior manager attribution—guidance and precedents

Published on: 23 January 2024

Published by a LexisNexis Practice Compliance expert
Legal News
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Article summary

What’s the issue?

Established in 1971, the common law identification doctrine sets the benchmark for determining when the conduct and state of mind of an individual can be treated as those of a corporate person. It has historically been the principal mechanism by which criminal culpability is fastened onto companies. Under this approach, attribution only arises where the offence is committed by the corporation’s ‘directing mind and will’. In reality, this typically captured only the managing director or proprietor, provided they were directly engaged in running the business. Consequently, prosecutors have long faced a demanding threshold. Section 196 of ECCTA alters the landscape: where a senior manager, acting within the actual or ostensible scope of their authority, perpetrates a ‘relevant offence’, the organisation itself commits that offence.

Practical implications for commercial organisations

The practical upshot is that businesses are vulnerable to findings of primary economic crime, with liability attaching where a senior manager within actual or apparent authority commits a relevant offence...

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