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More than a year after Brazil enacted the Clean Companies Act President Dilma Rousseff signed Decree 8,420 to regulate the Act. The regulations came on the heels of massive protests against corruption.
Brazil Corporate/Commercial LawKeywords: Brazil, Clean Companies Act, bid-rigging, penalties
More than a year after Brazil enacted the Clean Companies Act (Law 12,846 of August 1, 2013) ("CCA"), President Dilma Rousseff signed Decree 8,420 (the "Decree") to regulate the Act. The regulations came on the heels of massive protests against corruption.
The CCA imposes strict liability on companies for bribery and offenses such as bid-rigging and collusion, and imposes severe sanctions on companies that fail to comply with the law. The potential penalties include administrative fines ranging from 0.1% to 20% of a company's annual gross revenues during the preceding year, or up to R$60 million if such revenues are difficult to determine. In addition, companies may face judicial sanctions, including dissolution, suspension, disgorgement of profits, loss of public contracts and prohibitions against obtaining incentives, subsidies, grants, donations or loans from public authorities.
The newly-enacted Decree clarifies many aspects of the CCA, including the penalties calculation and the standards for an effective compliance program.
According to the Decree, five factors will be taken into account in determining the total penalty, with percentage fines for each factor ranging from 1% to 5% of the gross revenues earned during the fiscal year prior to the filing of the administrative proceeding, as follows:
Rates ranging from 1% to 5% will be applied, based on the value of the contracts held by the company with the damaged public agency or entity, in amounts ranging from R$1.5 million to more than R$1 billion.
In addition five mitigating factors will be considered when determining the total penalty, with percentage reductions for each factor ranging from 1% to 5% of the gross revenues earned during the fiscal year prior to the filing of the administrative proceeding, as follows:
If it is not possible to determine the penalty based on the aggravating and mitigating factors, or if the result of the calculation is equal to or less than zero, the penalty will equal: (i) 0.1% of the company's gross revenues earned during the fiscal year prior to the filing of the administrative proceeding, excluding taxes; or (ii) R$6,000.00.
In any event, the amount of the penalty will not exceed 20% of the company's gross revenues earned during the fiscal year prior to the filing of the administrative proceeding or three times the amount of the company's monetary gains nor shall the penalty be lower than the amount of the company's monetary gain.
The Decree provides minimum standards to be considered by the authorities whenever assessing whether a compliance program is effective and, therefore, entitles a company to a reduced sanction. According to the Decree, an effective programs requires:
The Decree reinforces the necessity of having an effective compliance program in place, as it requires that all leniency agreements that can be entered into under the CCA provide for the adoption of or improvements to a company compliance procedures, where necessary.
Originally published March 20, 2015
Founded in 2001, Tauil & Chequer Advogados is a full service law firm with approximately 90 lawyers and offices in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Vitória. T&C represents local and international businesses on their domestic and cross-border activities and offers clients the full range of legal services including: corporate and M&A; debt and equity capital markets; banking and finance; employment and benefits; environmental; intellectual property; litigation and dispute resolution; restructuring, bankruptcy and insolvency; tax; and real estate. The firm has a particularly strong and longstanding presence in the energy, oil and gas and infrastructure industries as well as with pension and investment funds. In December 2009, T&C entered into an agreement to operate in association with Mayer Brown LLP and become "Tauil & Chequer Advogados in association with Mayer Brown LLP."
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