1 / 19

Surprise Government Interviews - A Case Study

This presentation explores the purpose and expectations of surprise interviews conducted by government agencies, using a case study of a price-fixing investigation. It highlights the legal rights and concerns for employees and the potential consequences of lying to federal agents.

jsandy
Download Presentation

Surprise Government Interviews - A Case Study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SURPRISE GOVERNMENT INTERVIEWS – A CASE STUDY David M. Rosenfield Joseph P. Dooley Counsel Managing Director Herrick, Feinstein LLP KPMG LLP 2 Park Avenue 345 Park Avenue New York, New York 10016 New York, NY 10154 (212) 592-1513 (212) 872-7708 April 16, 2008 Presentation to the Greater New York Chapter of the Association of Corporate Counsel

  2. The Purpose of the Surprise Interview • Valuable tool designed to obtain critical evidence • May catch employee in a lie – employee is unprepared and facts may either be inculpatory or embarrassing • Simultaneous surprise interviews prevent employees from “getting their stories straight” • Minimizes the likelihood that the company can intervene and stop the interview

  3. What to Expect in a Surprise Interview • Carried out by either criminal investigators (FBI agents) or regulators (securities, banking) • Usually at employee’s home • Embarrassment factor may tempt employee to just get it over with • If by phone, may seem less confrontational • May also be attempted at the office during the execution of a search warrant or during a surprise regulatory examination 2

  4. What to Expect in a Surprise Interview (cont.) • No Miranda warning required because not a custodial interrogation • Normally two agents; notes are taken • No witness to support employee’s recollection of interview if it differs from agents’ recollection • Report will be prepared • If no search warrant, agents may seek voluntary consent to search premises and/or computer • Pocket subpoena may be served whether or not the employee submits to the interview 3

  5. Critical Legal Rights and Legal Concerns • Employees are not legally required to participate in the interview • Unlike a subpoena where testimony is compelled • But some regulators can impose sanctions for failure to cooperate • Employee is entitled to retain personal counsel or speak to a supervisor or company attorney 4

  6. Legal Rights and Concerns (cont.) • Any statements made are not “off the record,” and can later be used against the company and/or the employee • Lying to a federal agent is a crime • There are 1001 reasons not to lie, as 18 U.S.C. §1001 prohibits lying to or concealing material information from a federal official • Federal obstruction of justice statutes may also apply 5

  7. Case Study FBI Price-Fixing Investigationof Indiana Ready-MixedConcrete Companies 6

  8. Background • Beginning in July 2000, five of the largest ready-mixed concrete companies in the Indianapolis area entered into an illegal price-fixing conspiracy • Secret meetings took place (including two inside a horse barn) at which company representatives agreed to fix prices 7

  9. Background (cont.) • In October 2003, a manager of another concrete company who had been pressured to participate in the price-fixing conspiracy notified the FBI, and then cooperated • This case became the Justice Department’s largest domestic price-fixing investigation ever • Ten executives were sent to prison and fines totaling $35 million were levied • A class action complaint was filed which is still pending 8

  10. The Raids and the Surprise Interviews • On May 25, 2004, FBI and other law enforcement agents simultaneously executed search warrants at the offices of the five concrete companies, and conducted surprise interviews • Conspirators could not “get together and either destroy evidence and/or concoct a story to protect their culpability” • Many conspirators lied to FBI agents and one even destroyed incriminating evidence • John Blatzheim invited agents into his home, shutting the door to a screened-in porch to avoid alarming his wife; Blatzheim then lied to the agents about his knowledge of price-fixing meetings 9

  11. The Raids and the Surprise Interviews (cont.) • Chris Beaver of Beaver Materials also lied to the FBI: Beaver. . . invited investigators in and offered them refreshments. He was calm and talkative, but he repeatedly denied any involvement. His wife was getting their children ready for school. Beaver. . . later said he had hoped authorities would leave without hauling him away in handcuffs as his children watched from atop the staircase. • Ricky Beaver also lied to the FBI during his interview at Beaver Materials’ offices, later recalling, “there were a lot of things racing through my mind – everything but the truth” 10

  12. The Deals, Pleas and Fines • The first company in the door to cooperate was to receive amnesty • Shelby Materials won the race, fully cooperated, and received amnesty for itself and two of its officers • The largest company that participated in the conspiracy, Irving Materials, also cooperated and was given amnesty in markets other than Indianapolis • As a result of its actions in Indianapolis, however, Irving Materials pled guilty to a price-fixing conspiracy and paid a record $29.2 million fine; additionally, 4 Irving executives pled guilty • The remaining companies and conspirators each had to either plead guilty or face a criminal trial • Company counsel need to recognize the potential consequences a company faces from a guilty plea 11

  13. The Indictment of Chris & Ricky Beaver and Beaver Materials • On April 11, 2006, Beaver Materials, Chris and Ricky Beaver and John Blatzheim were indicted • Each defendant was charged with conspiracy to violate the Sherman Act (15 U.S.C. §1) by engaging in a price-fixing conspiracy • Blatzheim and the Beavers were also charged with having made materially false statements to agents in violation of 18 U.S.C. §1001, in that each had falsely denied knowledge of the price-fixing conspiracy 12

  14. The Indictment (cont.) • On November 2, 2006, Blatzheim entered into a plea agreement with the government • Blatzheim pled guilty to the Sherman Act price-fixing charge against him, and the false statements charge was dismissed • Blatzheim was sentenced to nine months in prison 13

  15. The Trial, Sentencing & Appeal of Chris & Rick Beavers and Beaver Materials • After a three-day trial that began on November 13, 2006, the jury found the defendants guilty on all counts • On February 9, 2007, the district court sentenced Chris and Ricky Beaver to identical 27 month prison terms and $5,000 fines • Beaver Materials was fined $1.75 million • Chris Beaver appealed to the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, but the appeal was denied on February 4, 2008 14

  16. Key Issues in Chris Beaver’s Appeal of his False Statements Conviction • Chris Beaver argued that the government had failed to establish that his statements met the materiality requirement of §1001 • The 7th Circuit held that to be material Beaver’s statements must have “had the tendency to influence, or were capable of influencing, the FBI’s investigation” • Beaver argued that his false statements could not have influenced the FBI because his attorney had sent a letter to the government 3 days after the interview correcting Beaver’s misstatements 15

  17. Chris Beaver’s Appeal (cont.) • The 7th Circuit upheld the jury’s determination that Beaver’s false statements were material: • The attorney’s letter’s “vague language perpetuated Christopher’s lies by implying that someone else [at Beaver Materials] had misled the FBI” • Beaver could not avoid a §1001 conviction by correcting his false statements days after making them, as “§1001 contains no recantation defense” • The materiality of Beaver’s false statements had to be assessed as of the time he made them 16

  18. Conclusion As this case study demonstrates, the decision by a company employee as to whether or not to submit to a surprise interview during a criminal investigation is a critical one for both the employee and the company. Declining to do so, so that the employee has a chance to carefully review the facts and speak to an attorney, is usually the best choice. 17

  19. SURPRISE GOVERNMENT INTERVIEWS – A CASE STUDY David M. Rosenfield Joseph P. Dooley Counsel Managing Director Herrick, Feinstein LLP KPMG LLP 2 Park Avenue 345 Park Avenue New York, New York 10016 New York, NY 10154 (212) 592-1513 (212) 872-7708 drosenfield@herrick.comjpdooley@kpmg.com www.herrick.comwww.us.kpmg.com HF3996094

More Related