1. What White Collar Litigation Involves and How Criminal Charges Differ from Regulatory Enforcement
Criminal charges and civil regulatory enforcement arise from the same conduct. They create fundamentally different situations for the defendant.
A civil SEC enforcement action can produce disgorgement, civil penalties, and an officer-and-director bar. A parallel criminal prosecution for the same conduct can produce imprisonment. The government bears the same burden in every criminal case: proof beyond a reasonable doubt as to each element of each charged offense. For wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1343, the government must prove a scheme to defraud, use of wire communications in furtherance of the scheme, and specific intent to defraud. For securities fraud under Rule 10b-5, it must prove a material misrepresentation or omission, scienter, connection to the purchase or sale of securities, reliance, economic loss, and loss causation. Each element is a trial issue, and any element the government cannot prove beyond reasonable doubt is an acquittal.
The gap between a civil regulatory case and a criminal prosecution is the element of willful criminal intent. A company that made an aggressive but good-faith accounting decision may face an SEC enforcement action for financial statement fraud; the same conduct produces a criminal prosecution only if the government can prove the defendant knew the representations were false and acted with intent to deceive. This is why intent is the central battleground in nearly every white collar criminal case, and why the defense's ability to contest intent through documentary evidence, advice of counsel, and witness testimony determines outcomes that jury selection alone cannot.
What Brady, Giglio, and the Jencks Act Require from the Government in Discovery
The government's disclosure obligations in criminal cases are among the most powerful defense tools in white collar litigation, and violations of those obligations have produced dismissals, reversals, and retrials in cases the government believed it had won.
Brady v. Maryland established that the government must disclose any evidence that is material and favorable to the accused, including evidence that impeaches the government's witnesses. The obligation is constitutional. A Brady violation that suppresses material exculpatory evidence undermines confidence in the verdict and can require reversal even after conviction. Giglio v. United States extended Brady's reach to impeachment material for government witnesses, requiring disclosure of any promise, reward, or inducement the government made to cooperating witnesses in exchange for their testimony, including plea agreements, deferred prosecution agreements, cooperation letters, and payments made to confidential informants.
The Jencks Act at 18 U.S.C. § 3500 requires the government to produce prior statements of witnesses who testify for the prosecution, after the witness's direct examination is completed. In major white collar cases, Jencks material often includes interview reports, grand jury transcripts, and email correspondence that the defense has not previously seen and that may contain inconsistencies with trial testimony. Thorough review of Jencks material at trial, line by line against what the witness said on direct, is one of the most productive sources of cross-examination material in any white collar prosecution.
| White Collar Charge | Statutory Basis | Required Intent Element | Primary Defense Approach |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wire fraud | 18 U.S.C. § 1343 | Specific intent to defraud | Good faith; no scheme; absence of fraudulent intent |
| Securities fraud | § 10(b), Rule 10b-5 | Scienter (knowing or reckless) | Good faith belief in accuracy; no material misrepresentation |
| Bank fraud | 18 U.S.C. § 1344 | Intent to defraud financial institution | Knowledge of falsity; materiality to bank's decision |
| Healthcare fraud | 18 U.S.C. § 1347 | Knowing and willful | Advice of counsel; billing complexity; good-faith belief |
| Tax evasion | 26 U.S.C. § 7201 | Willfulness | Reliance on accountant; complexity; good-faith dispute |
2. Where White Collar Litigation Is Won in Pretrial Motions and What the Key Battles Are
Pretrial motions are where the shape of the trial is determined. A successful motion to dismiss narrows or eliminates charges. A successful motion to suppress changes the evidentiary landscape. A successful Daubert motion removes testimony the government planned to build its case around.
A motion to dismiss for failure to state an offense tests whether the conduct charged actually constitutes the crime alleged under the applicable statute. In white collar cases, this challenge has particular force when the government has stretched a statute to cover conduct that has not previously been prosecuted as criminal, or when the indictment fails to allege facts that, if true, would establish each element of the charged offense. The Supreme Court's decisions in Yates v. United States and Skilling v. United States illustrate how narrowing interpretations of broadly worded statutes like the honest services fraud provision of 18 U.S.C. § 1346 can eliminate whole categories of charges at the motion stage.
Motions to suppress evidence obtained through searches or electronic surveillance challenge whether the warrant was supported by probable cause, whether the warrant was executed within its scope, and whether the affidavit in support of the warrant contained material misrepresentations. In complex white collar cases involving computers, financial records, and communications, the search warrant's particularity requirements are frequently at issue: a warrant authorizing seizure of "all documents and records" at a business location may violate the Fourth Amendment's requirement that the items to be seized be described with particularity. Evidence suppressed because the warrant was defective cannot be used at trial, and in document-intensive white collar cases, suppression of key records can fundamentally change the government's case.
How Cooperating Witnesses Define the Government'S Case and How Defense Counsel Attacks Them
Most white collar convictions rest on cooperating witnesses. These are individuals who participated in the same conduct as the defendant, pleaded guilty, and agreed to testify against the defendant in exchange for a government sentencing recommendation. Understanding their incentives is the beginning of the defense strategy.
A cooperating witness whose plea agreement contains a promise of substantial assistance consideration has a financial interest in the defendant's conviction that is as direct and measurable as any other form of payment for testimony. The Giglio material disclosing the cooperation agreement terms, any prior agreements the cooperator had with the government, any benefits received by the cooperator's family members, and any prior inconsistent statements the cooperator made in proffers or grand jury testimony is the foundation of the cross-examination. A cooperator who told a different story in the grand jury than at trial, who received benefits that were not fully disclosed in the plea agreement, or who was initially told that a particular defendant was not a target has been impeached on the most fundamental question the jury will ask: why should I believe this person?
Expert witnesses hired by the government to calculate loss amounts, trace financial transactions, or establish that accounting representations were false present a different category of challenge. Under FRE 702 after the 2023 amendment, the proponent of expert testimony must establish admissibility by a preponderance of the evidence. A government financial expert whose methodology relies on assumptions that no reasonable financial analyst would accept, whose loss calculation includes transactions that cannot be causally linked to the defendant's specific conduct, or who applies a valuation methodology that has not been tested against known outcomes is a viable Daubert target whose exclusion can eliminate the loss figure that drives the sentencing guidelines calculation.
Criminal forfeiture in white collar cases operates as a separate penalty that often exceeds the criminal fine. Under 18 U.S.C. § 981 and § 982, the government may seek forfeiture of all property constituting or derived from the proceeds of the offense, including substitute assets when the original proceeds have been dissipated, transferred, or commingled. In fraud cases, forfeiture is typically calculated on the full amount of proceeds received by the defendant, which may be significantly larger than the net gain after business expenses, producing a forfeiture demand that exceeds the defendant's net worth. Third-party claims to forfeited assets, including claims by defrauded victims who want their money returned before the government takes it, are resolved through ancillary proceedings that require separate legal strategy from the underlying criminal defense. White collar criminal defense and federal criminal defense strategy must address forfeiture exposure from the earliest stages of the case.
3. What White Collar Litigation at Trial Requires to Challenge the Government'S Proof of Intent
The government proves criminal intent through documents, financial records, and the testimony of cooperating witnesses who claim to know what the defendant knew and intended. The defense challenges each of those channels.
Documentary evidence of intent typically includes emails, text messages, internal memoranda, and financial records that the government claims show the defendant knew representations were false, knew transactions were improper, or took steps to conceal the conduct. Defense counsel reviews every document in the case for context the government's presentation strips away: approvals by counsel, disclosure to auditors, consistency with prior practice, and business justifications that are inconsistent with criminal intent. A defendant who sought legal advice before making the representations at issue, who disclosed the relevant facts to auditors who approved the accounting, or who followed an established industry practice that was widely used and not previously prosecuted cannot be convicted of willfully criminal conduct without the government accounting for that context.
The advice of counsel defense, when properly presented, is among the strongest in white collar litigation because it establishes that the defendant acted in good faith reliance on legal advice, which negates willful criminal intent. The defense requires that the defendant provided complete and accurate information to counsel, received specific advice about the legality of the conduct, and acted in reliance on that advice. It typically requires waiver of the attorney-client privilege for the advice given, which is a significant strategic decision made in consultation with the defendant and defense counsel. White collar crime and criminal defense and trials counsel must evaluate the full scope of the privilege implications before committing to an advice of counsel presentation.
How the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Calculate White Collar Sentences and Where Defense Counsel Fights
The U.S. Sentencing Guidelines at § 2B1.1 calculate white collar sentences primarily through a loss table that adds offense levels based on the amount of financial loss the defendant's conduct caused. The loss amount drives more of the sentence than any other single factor, and disputing it is the most consequential sentencing litigation a white collar defendant faces.
The § 2B1.1 loss table begins at a base offense level and adds levels for loss in escalating ranges: two levels for loss above $6,500, four levels above $15,000, continuing upward with each doubling of the loss amount until loss above $550 million adds 30 levels to the offense level. A defendant whose conduct caused $10 million in loss faces a fundamentally different guidelines range than one whose conduct caused $1 million. Loss calculation methodology is contested: the government calculates loss based on the total amount invested or the full face value of the fraud, while the defense argues for actual loss limited to amounts victims could not recover, credits for repayments made before charges were filed, and adjustments for market forces unrelated to the defendant's conduct.
Specific offense characteristics that increase sentences include sophisticated means for executing the offense, abuse of a position of trust, obstruction of justice, and leadership role in the scheme. Downward departures and variances from the guidelines range are available for substantial assistance to authorities, acceptance of responsibility, and extraordinary family circumstances, among others. Fraud sentencing guidelines calculation is a separate litigation within the broader white collar case, requiring expert economic testimony about loss methodology and legal briefing on which guideline provisions apply to the specific facts of the offense.
4. Frequently Asked Questions about White Collar Litigation
White collar litigation questions arrive from executives who received a target letter from the DOJ and want to understand what that means for their personal defense, from individuals who are aware that a cooperating former colleague has been meeting with federal prosecutors, from defendants whose company accepted a deferred prosecution agreement and who want to know whether the corporate resolution affects their personal exposure, and from individuals convicted at trial who are evaluating appeal grounds. Those situations generate the following answers.
What Is White Collar Litigation and How Does It Differ from a Regulatory Investigation?
White collar litigation refers to the adversarial proceedings that begin when criminal charges are filed, encompassing indictment, pretrial motion practice, discovery disputes, trial, sentencing, and appeal. It is distinct from a regulatory investigation, which is the government's evidence-gathering phase before any charges are filed. The distinction matters because the defense strategies appropriate at each stage are different: cooperation and voluntary disclosure decisions dominate the investigation phase, while motion practice, witness cross-examination, and sentencing advocacy dominate the litigation phase. White collar litigation begins when a grand jury returns an indictment and the defendant is arraigned on specific charges, transforming the defendant from a target into an accused with full constitutional trial rights.
What Is the Most Important Defense in a White Collar Criminal Case?
Criminal intent, called scienter or willfulness depending on the charge, is what the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt in virtually every white collar case. It is also the most effective defense because it addresses what the defendant actually knew and intended, rather than disputing facts that documents often establish clearly. Defense strategies that negate intent include establishing that the defendant acted in good faith based on advice of counsel, that the defendant disclosed the relevant facts to auditors or compliance personnel who approved the conduct, that the defendant followed established industry practice that was not previously treated as criminal, or that the representations at issue were forward-looking statements accompanied by appropriate risk disclosures. The choice among these approaches depends on the specific charge, the available evidence, and the defendant's own account of events.
How Does the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Loss Calculation Affect a White Collar Sentence?
The loss table at U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 is the dominant factor in white collar sentencing, adding between 2 and 30 offense levels depending on the calculated loss amount. Each additional offense level adds approximately 10 to 20 percent to the sentencing range, meaning the difference between a $500,000 and a $5 million loss calculation can add multiple years to the guidelines range. Defense counsel disputes the loss calculation by challenging the government's methodology, arguing for credit for repayments made before charges were filed, contesting whether all claimed losses were caused by the defendant's specific conduct, and addressing market factors that caused losses independent of the fraudulent conduct. The loss dispute is resolved by the sentencing judge based on evidence and briefing, not by the jury, making it a separately litigated proceeding that follows conviction.
What Happens When the Company Accepts a Deferred Prosecution Agreement but Individual Executives Are Still under Investigation?
A corporate DPA does not bind individual employees. The company's acceptance of a DPA typically includes factual admissions about conduct that occurred at the company, and those admissions are made in the company's name without being binding admissions of individual guilt. However, the factual record established in the DPA, which the government uses to support its investigation and potential prosecution of individual executives, is available for use in individual proceedings. A DPA that identifies specific individuals by role in the conduct creates a roadmap for individual prosecution. An individual executive whose conduct is described in the corporate DPA resolution without being separately charged should not assume the DPA resolved their personal exposure, and the period following a corporate DPA resolution is often when individual prosecutions of company employees are most actively pursued.
08 Jun, 2026









