Skip to main content
White Collar: Government Litigation and Investigations Update

Making Sense of DOJ’s New Monaco Memo on Corporate Enforcement

September 21, 2022

Last week, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Deputy Attorney General, Lisa Monaco, issued a 15-page memo discussing revisions to DOJ’s heavily-scrutinized Corporate Enforcement Policy. The September 15 release of the Monaco Memo was accompanied by a speech the same day by DAG Monaco and a speech the next day by the head of the DOJ Criminal Division, Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Polite.

The immediate reporting on DAG Monaco’s speech and the Monaco Memo tended to highlight her statements that DOJ would no longer engage in “business as usual” regarding its investigations of corporations and corporate officials, and that DOJ was now instituting its first-ever “department-wide policies” on some areas.

The reality is more nuanced. A close look at the Monaco Memo in the context of DOJ’s existing Corporate Enforcement Policy shows that the changes to DOJ’s policies are on discrete topics, but some of these changes signal that DOJ is implementing a substantial shift toward a more aggressive approach in corporate crime matters – especially in terms of DOJ’s expectations for the pace of corporate internal investigations and related disclosures to DOJ. The Memo and accompanying speeches also provide important insights into how corporations can expect DOJ to analyze some of the key concepts in federal corporate enforcement, including “cooperation credit” and “voluntary self-disclosure.” And in some areas, the Monaco Memo breaks new ground with detailed DOJ guidance. As explained below, these areas include:

  1. Cooperation Credit and the “Timely” Disclosure of Information Learned in Internal Investigations
  2. Clarifying (In the Future) the Benefits of Voluntary Self-Disclosure
  3. Clarifying (In the Future) How To Earn Maximum Cooperation Credit
  4. DOJ Scrutiny of Discrete Corporate Policies – Including Executive Compensation Policies – In Assessing Compliance Programs
  5. Delaying Corporate Resolutions Until DOJ’s Investigation of Individuals Is Completed
  6. Guidance for Corporations with Prior Misconduct Resolutions (Criminal and Non-Criminal)
  7. Documents Located Abroad
  8. New Guidelines For Independent Corporate Monitor Process
Contacts
Sidley’s White Collar practice spans the globe and is consistently recognized as a leader for criminal investigations, agency enforcement actions, False Claims Act matters, and other governmental inquiries and litigation. If you have questions regarding this Update, please contact the Sidley lawyer with whom you work, or one of our White Collar partners or counsel:
Washington D.C.
Boston
Los Angeles
Dallas
New York
Chicago
San Francisco
London
Singapore
Senior managing associate Marisa S. West and associate Lauri A. Bonacorsi contributed to this Sidley Update.

Attorney Advertising—Sidley Austin LLP is a global law firm. Our addresses and contact information can be found at www.sidley.com/en/locations/offices.

Sidley provides this information as a service to clients and other friends for educational purposes only. It should not be construed or relied on as legal advice or to create a lawyer-client relationship. Readers should not act upon this information without seeking advice from professional advisers. Sidley and Sidley Austin refer to Sidley Austin LLP and affiliated partnerships as explained at www.sidley.com/disclaimer.

© Sidley Austin LLP