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- Title
UNREGULATED INTERNAL INVESTIGATIONS: ACHIEVING FAIRNESS FOR CORPORATE CONSTITUENTS.
- Authors
GREEN, BRUCE A.; PODGOR, ELLEN S.
- Abstract
This Article focuses on the relationship between corporations and their employee constituents in the context of corporate internal investigations, an unregulated multimillion-dollar business. The classic approach provided in the 1981 Supreme Court opinion, Upjohn v. United States, is contrasted with the reality of modern-day internal investigations that may exploit individuals to achieve a corporate benefit with the government. Attorney-client privilege becomes an issue as corporate constituents perceive that corporate counsel is representing their interests, when in fact these internal investigators are obtaining information for the corporation to barter with the government. Legal precedent and ethics rules provide little relief to these corporate employees. This Article suggests that courts need to move beyond the Upjohn decision and recognize this new landscape. It advocates for corporate fair dealing and provides a multifaceted approach to achieve this aim. Ultimately this Article considers how best to level the playing field between corporations and their employees in matters related to the corporate internal investigation.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL relations; APPELLATE courts; CORPORATE lawyers; ETHICS; INFORMATION retrieval; DECISION making
- Publication
Boston College Law Review, 2013, Vol 54, Issue 1, p73
- ISSN
0161-6587
- Publication type
Article