U.K. Getting Serious with "Bribery Bill"
March 9, 2010
In “U.K. Escalates Anti-Corruption Efforts,” published by The National Law Journal on March 8, Ropes & Gray securities litigation partner Asheesh Goel and associate Nicholas Berg look at the increased enforcement activities of E.U. member countries. In particular, the article focuses on the U.K. Serious Fraud Office’s heightened enforcement of existing laws and the “Bribery Bill” pending in the U.K. Parliament.
"U.S. corporations would do well to pay attention to this emerging focus on bribery in the United Kingdom," Goel and Berg write.
The authors compare the Bribery Bill to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. For example, the current version of the bill creates a specific offense of bribing a foreign public official and includes penalties for a corporation's failure to have adequate controls in place to detect and remediate the bribery of foreign officials. They also note key differences: The Bribery Bill prohibits covered persons and entities from committing bribery of almost any type whether governmental or purely commercial, both inside and outside the United Kingdom.
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