306.01 Corporate Crime

This course serves as an introduction to the field of corporate crime, which now covers a large realm of government and law firm practice. The course will give students a first exposure to: (1) the contemporary practice in federal government agencies and medium to large corporate law firms of investigating, sanctioning, and representing corporations and their managers and employees involved in potential criminal violations (and certain civil analogues), and the law that governs those processes; and (2) the debate in the public policy realm over whether, why, how, and when the criminal law should be applied in the corporate and business context.

This field is large, complex, and developing rapidly. This course therefore can cover only a selection of topics, and will emphasize policy and the need to confront gaps and uncertainty in doctrine. As there is no unitary body of black letter law in this field, students should not expect this to be that form of law course. Coverage is likely to include mail and wire fraud, perjury and obstruction of justice, securities fraud (including insider trading and accounting fraud), the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, corporate criminal liability, grand jury powers and procedure, representation of entities and individuals, the Fifth and Sixth Amendments in the corporate context, plea and settlement agreements, and sentencing.

The materials consist of a self-published text available in two-volume, bound book form for approximately $38 total through Amazon, or in pdf form from the instructor’s website. Technology use during class may be restricted. Purchase of the low-cost text is preferrable as printing of pdf may be costly or inconvenient. There may be occasional handouts. Assigned readings average approximately 100 pages per week, with less case law and more fact-based practice documents, problems, and commentary than with a typical case book. The grade will be based primarily on a floating take home exam, with some weight given to class participation.

Spring 2025

Course Number Course Credits Evaluation Method Instructor
306.01
Course Credits
Final Exam
Class participation
Samuel W. Buell
Canvas site: https://canvas.duke.edu/courses/53533
Course
Degree Requirements
Course Requirements - JD
Course Areas of Practice