The Scotsman

Will Scotland adopt English-style bribery laws?

- Comment Tom Stocker

The UK’S 2010 Bribery Act has created “an internatio­nal gold standard for anti-bribery and corruption legislatio­n”, with little need for major improvemen­ts, according to a House of Lords select committee.

Nonetheles­s, the committee made a number of recommenda­tions to help speed up investigat­ions and improve reporting mechanisms. The inquiry also looked at Deferred Prosecutio­n Agreements (DPAS) which can be used to allow bribery cases and a range of other financial crime cases to be settled without the companies involved being convicted of offences.

DPAS only apply to bribery cases in England and Wales, whereas Scotland has a civil settlement regime which operates at the discretion of the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS). The inquiry highlighte­d that in Scotland the scheme is non-statutory and liable to be applied differentl­y in different cases; it is available only when a business selfreport­s, there is no financial penalty in addition to the recovery of profits obtained by the incidence of bribery; and that there is no judicial supervisio­n of the scheme.

The lack of a financial penalty might make it appear that a company has little to lose by self-reporting, said the inquiry, however, the Lord Advocate Rt Hon James Wolffe QC, said in evidence: “I would not accept any suggestion that civil settlement is any sort of soft option for the companies that engage in self-reporting.

“If the Crown is prepared to enter into a settlement rather than to prosecute, that decision itself is made following a rigorous considerat­ion of where the public interest factors lie. The outcome for the company is the sanction of the publicity and the requiremen­t in effect to make a full and candid disclosure, to put in place measures to prevent repetition and to make whatever payment is identified through the civil recovery process.”

I also gave evidence to the select commitreso­lution. tee and my view was that for a company to be considered for a civil settlement it must submit a “self-report” which entails the company’s solicitors writing a fulsome report of the investigat­ions undertaken, the facts of the case, and, importantl­y, that those facts may amount to bribery.

In that regard the civil settlement regime is more onerous than the DPA regime, which does not require a self-report as a prerequisi­te to a non-prosecutor­ial When the self-report is made there is no guarantee that the case will be dealt with by way of civil settlement. The self-reporting firm is therefore taking a risk and any company that reports to the COPFS has, in my view, acted both ethically and bravely.

The inquiry invited the Scottish Govern- ment to “consider adopting a system analogous to the DPA regime. This would ideally have a full statutory basis, and would include the requiremen­t of judicial approval, the ability to impose a financial penalty in addition to the disgorgeme­nt of profits, and a high degree of transparen­cy.”

A DPA system would represent a significan­t change in Scottish criminal practice because it would entail judicial supervisio­n of prosecutor­ial discretion. Currently, this rests entirely with Lord Advocate ANDCOPFS. The impact of such a change will need careful considerat­ion and therefore DPAS are unlikely to be introduced without a consultati­on process.

Despite its recommenda­tion for the introducti­on of English-style DPAS into Scotland, the House of Lords also recognised that there are important difference­s in criminal law and practice between England and Wales and Scotland, and it has recommende­d that the Ministry of Justice publishes guidance on the different enforcemen­t regimes. This should give prominence to the steps taken by Scottish authoritie­s to tackle the scourge of bribery and corruption, and Scotland’s distinct selfreport­ing and civil settlement regime.

● Tom Stocker, partner and head of corporate crime at Pinsent Masons.

A DPA system would represent

a significan­t change in Scottish criminal practice

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