Houston Chronicle

White-collar prosecutio­ns are on track to hit a 20-year low

Low-water mark comes after cases reached all-time high under Obama in 2011

- By Patricia Hurtado

The number of white-collar prosecutio­ns is on track to hit a 20-year low under President Donald Trump after reaching a high in 2011 during the Barack Obama administra­tion, according to a nonprofit research center that analyzes government data.

A total of 3,249 cases were brought during the first seven months of the U.S. government’s 2018 fiscal year, which runs from October 2017 to April 2018, according to a case-bycase analysis of government data by Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use, or TRAC.

That’s a 4.4 percent drop from the same period in 2017, a decline of 33.5 percent from five years ago, and 40.8 percent fewer cases than in 1998, according to the report. The analysis is of data obtained by TRAC under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

If the recent downward trend continues at the same pace, TRAC estimates the annual total of white-collar prosecutio­ns will be 5,570 for fiscal year 2018.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said last week that the Trump administra­tion was committed to fighting white-collar crime and pointed to recent cases alleging health care and securities fraud.

“Our goal is to deter crime, and we can only do that by holding accountabl­e the perpetrato­rs who break the law to gain a competitiv­e advantage,” he said at the Bloomberg Law Leadership Forum in New York.

But he also said that the Justice Department will “reward companies that try in good faith to deter crime” through corporate-compliance programs “that help to prevent problems, and help detect any wrongdoing quickly.” Under the new policy, he noted, prosecutor­s last month elected not to prosecute a company for overseas bribery because it “demonstrat­ed responsibl­e corporate conduct after discoverin­g a violation.”

Reviewing figures from 1998, TRAC found that there were more than 9,000 white-collar cases filed during the administra­tions of Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush until 2004, when the number fell below 9,000, according to the report.

In 2007, the number of whitecolla­r prosecutio­ns began to increase again, and then fell back after an all-time high of more than 10,000 in 2011. A year later, the number of white-collar cases dropped to just over 8,000 and remained at about the same level until 2013. The number of cases has steadily fallen since then, with fewer than 6,000 cases filed in 2017.

The lead investigat­ive agency to bring white-collar prosecutio­ns from October 2017 through April 2018 was the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, which accounted for 32.7 percent of cases, followed by the Secret Service with 10.8 percent, the Internal Revenue Service with 10.1 percent and the Postal Service with 8.7 percent.

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