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White Collar: Government Litigation and Investigations Update

Victims' Rights May Have More of an Impact on Future Corporate Settlements With the U.S. Government

April 3, 2023

Victims’ rights have long been a focus in cases brought by the U.S. government. That focus has recently received more attention in the context of prosecuting corporations. On March 31, 2023, the revised U.S. Attorney General Guidelines for Victim and Witness Assistance (Guidelines) went into effect. The revised Guidelines “significantly expand support for people who are significantly harmed by a crime but still may not meet the statutory definition of ‘victim’ contained in the Crime Victims’ Rights Act” (CVRA or Act). Additionally, while the Guidelines previously afforded CVRA rights once a defendant was charged, they now “require affording those rights as early in the criminal justice process as is feasible and appropriate,” and thus “prosecutors should, as appropriate, notify victims of plea agreements, deferred prosecution agreements, and non-prosecution agreements before a charging document is filed.” This change could have a considerable impact for companies seeking to settle matters under investigation with the government.

Corporations that come under government investigation often resolve the matters through contractual agreements called deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs). Recently, a federal court in Texas found that the passengers killed in two airplane crashes were victims under the CVRA and that their families were lawful representatives of those victims with standing to challenge the DPA entered into by the airline and the government. Specifically, on October 21, 2022, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas found that the families of the passengers killed in two Boeing 737 MAX crashes in 2018 and 2019 could assert rights under the CVRA to protest the DPA that had been in place between Boeing and the government for more than a year, where those family members had not been given an opportunity to be heard by the government before the DPA was entered. In a highly unusual development, on January 19, 2023, the court ordered Boeing to appear for a public arraignment related to its conduct leading up to the two Boeing 737 Max crashes. A three-hour public hearing of Boeing was held on January 26, at which some victims’ representatives provided personal testimony and others filed written statements on the court’s docket.

Although some courts require public arraignment of corporations entering into DPAs, such practice is not uniform, and the Boeing arraignment appears to be the first time that victims successfully used the CVRA to move a court to hold an arraignment after a DPA had already been entered. While this occurrence was unusual, a February 9 order following the arraignment, which addressed a number of additional requests for relief from the families, can generally be read to limit victims’ ability to challenge the actual terms of an executed DPA under the CVRA. The victims’ families are challenging this ruling in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

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Associate Richard K. Chung contributed to this Sidley Update.

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