CORPORATE CRIMINAL LIABILITY - 4th Edition Published
We are delighted to announce that the fourth edition of ‘Corporate Criminal Liability’ has now been published by Sweet & Maxwell. Written by our own Amanda Pinto QC and Martin Evans QC, it is the only book for those advising companies in a criminal context, providing a scholarly analysis of the principles of corporate liability as well as a practical guide to jurisdiction, procedure, sentencing and confiscation. We have negotiated a 10% discount if ordered here through the publishers quoting CORPCR21 (discount is applied at the ‘review order’ stage).
The fourth edition of Corporate Criminal Liability has been thoroughly revised, expanded and updated to explain the criminal process from the perspective of the corporate defendant with a scholarly analysis of the principles of corporate liability. In particular, it provides expert discussion on the latest practice on DPAs, issues with identification theory and delegation, questions of jurisdiction, and sentencing. The work also explains specific offences such as insolvency restrictions, Companies Act offences, and corporate manslaughter.
Key features
Provides a guide to what company’s should be doing in order to avoid the potential for breaking the law under the various heads of offences as well as a list of ‘best practices’ currently used by those industries
Explains and develops the theory of the ‘corporate veil’ and how/when the veil can be lifted
Provides an advanced guide as to how companies should be interacting with external authorities involved with investigating criminality as well as what internal mechanisms should be triggered when criminality is discovered or suspected internally/externally.
When it comes to the court process, the book details (at a practitioner’s level) how cases are opened and closed and what companies can expect from the court system, addressing issues of ‘anonymity’, ‘evidential burdens’ and relevant limitation periods for each specific offence.
New to this edition
Considers all key cases since the last edition including the Barclays case on corporate identification
Reviews practice in deferred prosecution orders after investigations into Rolls Royce and Tesco
A fully updated Appendix table as a ‘quick reference’ guide to specific offences, how they are tried, and aspects of sentencing