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Learn how to effectively prepare for and respond to inspections and searches conducted by regulatory agencies. Understand the difference between civil and criminal enforcement mechanisms and the potential consequences. Gain insights on common violations and strategies to mitigate risks.
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INSPECTIONS AND SEARCHES PREPARATION AND RESPONSE Richard E. Glaze, Jr. Balch & Bingham LLP Atlanta, GA 404-962-3566 rglaze@balch.com AWMA August 3, 2011
Scope Civil vs. Criminal Enforcement Enforcement Mechanisms Response to Enforcement Investigations inspections information requests subpoenas warrants
Many cases can be civil or criminal Many as EPA cases could, theoretically, be either criminal or civil In theory, very fine line between civil and criminal for many violations – very low intent or knowledge threshold
CRIMINAL PROSECUTION IS A GROWING THREAT • Emphasis on Enforcement • Fewer Easy Cases • Substantial Resources
COMMON ENVIRONMENTAL VIOLATIONS • Hazardous Wastes (RCRA) • Clean Air Act • Release Reporting (CERCLA, EPCRA) • Pesticide Misuse (FIFRA) • Asbestos Removal (CAA) • Discharges to Water or Pretreatment System (CWA)
Associated Federal Crimes False Statements Conspiracy Obstruction of Justice Fraud
Agency Enforcement Options Civil only Criminal only Parallel enforcement Consecutive
AGENTS/INSPECTORS Agency civil inspectors have authority granted by statute – confined to EnvironmentalLaws CID Agents have full title 18 authority – guns warrants arrest power authority for all federal crimes Task force partners
Civil Case Development • Inspections and Information Requests • Statutory information gathering authority via • Inspections • Self monitoring • Information requests with mandatory answers (no 5th amendment protection for corporations) • Note: This information can be (and often is) used for criminal investigations/prosecutions
Authority for Civil Inspections • “the Administrator or his authorized representative (including an authorized contractor acting as a representative of the Administrator), upon presentation of his credentials - • (i) shall have a right of entry to, upon, or through any premises in which an emissions source is located or in which any records required to be maintained under paragraph 1 of this section are located, and • (ii) may at reasonable times have access to and copy any records, inspect any monitoring equipment or methods required under paragraph 1 and sample any emissions which the (owner or operator of the source) is required to sample under paragraph (1). Clean Air Act Section 114 (a) (3), 42 U.S.C. § 7413
Administrative Warrants • When civil inspectors are rebuffed • Probable cause requirement much less burdensome: specific evidence of civil violations OR pursuant to neutral inspection scheme
Criminal Case Development Leads: Disgruntled Employees Citizens EPA and state agency referrals from civil Task forces Investigation (warrants, subpoenas interviews) Referral to DOJ Prosecution
Legal Basis for Criminal Warrants FOURTH AMENDMENT to US CONSTITUTION The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no Warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
PREPARATION • Compliance • Keep production areas, materials and waste storage areas, and offices clean and organized • Regulatory files segregated from operations files and financial files physically and electronically • Document retention policy (limit paper) • Strict compliance with email policies and limit emails when possible
Be Prepared, cont. Don’t Scrimp Infrastructure Agency relationships Legal counsel
Prepare Employees • Designate employees: To handle agency inspectors, including agents
What to do when EPA Arrives • Check credentials • Read warrant (make sure it is all there and correctly identifies the place) • Accompany the agent/inspector and watch the agents carefully to protect your files • Note what is inspected/searched/seized • Be courteous but do not admit violations or volunteer unnecessary information • Take samples of what inspector samples or request splits (CID won’t split) • Offer copies of critical documents instead of originals
Employees • Civil – go about your business • Criminal – interview attempts • During search • After search
Response to Initial Contact Can Affect Enforcement Decision • Dishonesty, hiding or delaying production of information • Refusal of Entry • Only in extreme circumstances • Can you fix it? • Will you have to disclose it anyway?
On their way out - Get receipts for what was seized or copied - Ask what they are seeking and why get as much specific information as possible
after they leave Unless inspection revealed no violations immediately assess potential violations and your response Corrective action is almost always appropriate (to avoid multi day penalties and knowing conduct) Consider reporting the corrective action before the agency makes demands
After they leave, cont. Obtain inspection report as soon as possible Do not wait for report for corrective action, however Criminal warrant requires immediate action.
Conclusions • Compliance • Preparedness • Response
Questions? Richard Glaze, Jr. Balch & Bingham LLP Atlanta, GA 404-962-3566 rglaze@balch.com