US attorney says it will not prosecute companies that cooperate in criminal investigations

Reuters

US attorney says it will not prosecute companies that cooperate in criminal investigations

Jay Clayton, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, speaks during a press conference in New York City, U.S., December 10, 2025. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon · Reuters

By Chris Prentice

Thu, February 5, 2026 at 3:57 PM EST

2 min read

By Chris Prentice

NEW YORK, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors plan to increase incentives for companies that cooperate during criminal investigations, including ​promises not to prosecute them, the U.S. Attorney in Manhattan said ‌on Thursday.

Jay Clayton's remarks at an industry conference come as the Justice Department is scaling back ‌corporate crime enforcement and refocusing on immigration and drug cases under the Trump administration.

Companies need to know there is a specific benefit to cooperating with U.S. prosecutors in rooting out wrongdoers, Clayton said at the Securities Enforcement Forum in ⁠New York.

That includes offering companies ‌so-called non-prosecution agreements, or NPAs -- deals which Democrats have criticized in the past.

"Our approach is going to be: let's ‍get an NPA signed as quickly as possible that calls for continued cooperation," he said.

Clayton, an appointee of President Donald Trump, said the different approach on cooperation would ​benefit shareholders, too. He previously led the Securities and Exchange Commission, a ‌civil regulator, during Trump's first presidential term, and focused on retail investors at the time.

Those retail investors continue to be among his top priorities on white-collar crime issues, he said, noting he has an eye on misconduct in small-cap stocks, private funds and prediction markets. When asked if he foresees ⁠prosecutions in those so-called event contracts, he ​said: "Yes."

Clayton also criticized past enforcement of the ​Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, a 1977 law that bans companies that operate in the U.S. from bribing foreign officials.

The Justice Department ‍paused the law's enforcement ⁠last year and resumed it with a plan for a more scaled-back approach. Clayton criticized the law for putting the U.S. at ⁠a disadvantage to other countries and penalizing companies instead of targeting individual wrongdoers.

"I hate corruption ‌of foreign officials," Clayton said. "I hate the FCPA as applied."

(Reporting by ‌Chris Prentice ; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

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