DOJ's Historic Corporate Enforcement Policy: What Self-Reporting Companies Need to Know Now episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 30, 2026 · 2 MIN

DOJ's Historic Corporate Enforcement Policy: What Self-Reporting Companies Need to Know Now

from Department of Justice (DOJ) News · host Inception Point AI

The Department of Justice just made a seismic shift in how it handles corporate crime. On March 10th, the DOJ released its first ever department-wide corporate enforcement policy, and this is genuinely historic. For the first time, there's one uniform standard governing how federal prosecutors across the entire country treat companies facing criminal charges. Here's what this means in plain language. If a company voluntarily discloses wrongdoing to the DOJ, cooperates fully with investigations, and fixes the problems, the department will not prosecute them. This isn't a maybe. According to analysis from major law firms, this is a guaranteed declination, not a presumptive one. That's a fundamental shift in how the government approaches white collar crime. Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva explained the philosophy behind this move, saying the Criminal Division has been refining its approach based on experience prosecuting sophisticated schemes. The policy applies uniformly across the Department except for antitrust cases, which operate under separate rules. Why does this matter to you? If you run a business or work in compliance, this creates genuine certainty. Previously, your company might face one standard in New York and another in California. Now there's one playbook. Companies can understand exactly what cooperation looks like and what they'll receive in return. The policy also gives prosecutors flexibility on financial penalties, allowing reductions of 50 to 75 percent off sentencing guidelines in near-miss situations. But there's more happening at DOJ beyond this policy. The department announced it lost nearly 10,000 employees between November 2024 and November 2025, with U.S. Attorneys offices cutting 14 percent of their workforce. That's unprecedented. Meanwhile, prosecutors are being asked to handle significantly more work. The new corporate enforcement policy lands as the DOJ is also launching aggressive fraud enforcement initiatives and expanding international criminal investigations. For listeners, the practical takeaway is this. If your organization discovers compliance problems, the incentives are now clearly aligned toward self-reporting rather than hoping no one finds out. The government wants companies to come forward, and it's putting its policy where its mouth is. Keep watching how federal prosecutors implement this policy in coming months. That will reveal whether this truly changes corporate accountability in America. For more on DOJ developments and policy changes, head to quiet please dot ai. Thank you for tuning in and please subscribe. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

The Department of Justice just made a seismic shift in how it handles corporate crime. On March 10th, the DOJ released its first ever department-wide corporate enforcement policy, and this is genuinely historic. For the first time, there's one uniform standard governing how federal prosecutors across the entire country treat companies facing criminal charges. Here's what this means in plain language. If a company voluntarily discloses wrongdoing to the DOJ, cooperates fully with investigations, and fixes the problems, the department will not prosecute them. This isn't a maybe. According to analysis from major law firms, this is a guaranteed declination, not a presumptive one. That's a fundamental shift in how the government approaches white collar crime. Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva explained the philosophy behind this move, saying the Criminal Division has been refining its approach based on experience prosecuting sophisticated schemes. The policy applies uniformly across the Department except for antitrust cases, which operate under separate rules. Why does this matter to you? If you run a business or work in compliance, this creates genuine certainty. Previously, your company might face one standard in New York and another in California. Now there's one playbook. Companies can understand exactly what cooperation looks like and what they'll receive in return. The policy also gives prosecutors flexibility on financial penalties, allowing reductions of 50 to 75 percent off sentencing guidelines in near-miss situations. But there's more happening at DOJ beyond this policy. The department announced it lost nearly 10,000 employees between November 2024 and November 2025, with U.S. Attorneys offices cutting 14 percent of their workforce. That's unprecedented. Meanwhile, prosecutors are being asked to handle significantly more work. The new corporate enforcement policy lands as the DOJ is also launching aggressive fraud enforcement initiatives and expanding international criminal investigations. For listeners, the practical takeaway is this. If your organization discovers compliance problems, the incentives are now clearly aligned toward self-reporting rather than hoping no one finds out. The government wants companies to come forward, and it's putting its policy where its mouth is. Keep watching how federal prosecutors implement this policy in coming months. That will reveal whether this truly changes corporate accountability in America. For more on DOJ developments and policy changes, head to quiet please dot ai. Thank you for tuning in and please subscribe. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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DOJ's Historic Corporate Enforcement Policy: What Self-Reporting Companies Need to Know Now

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This episode was published on March 30, 2026.

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The Department of Justice just made a seismic shift in how it handles corporate crime. On March 10th, the DOJ released its first ever department-wide corporate enforcement policy, and this is genuinely historic. For the first time, there's one...

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