
Gibson Dunn has published a very fine and detailed summary of U.S. and global criminal antitrust developments in 2011 (2011 Year-End Criminal Antitrust Update).
From Gibson Dunn:
“The Department of Justice obtained more than $1 billion in FY 2011 from criminal antitrust offenders, the second-highest amount in its history. The total payments consist of an estimated $523 million in criminal fines and more than $500 million in restitution, penalties, and disgorgement paid to state and federal agencies. This staggering amount represents an increase of more than 78% from FY 2010 and sends a clear message to the corporate world that DOJ’s zealous pursuit of large fines for collusive conduct continues unabated.
Another important measure of success for the Department of Justice, Antitrust Division also significantly advanced in FY 2011; the number of criminal cases filed increased 50% to 90 cases, which included 27 corporations and 82 individuals–each category significantly higher than in FY 2010.
Despite these achievements for the Antitrust Division, other metrics revealed significant year-over-year declines in FY 2011. Most notably, several statistics relating to incarceration of antitrust defendants reached multi-year lows: the number of individuals sentenced to prison decreased 28% to just 21 defendants, the length of the average prison sentence fell 44% to 17 months, and the total prison time imposed on defendants dropped 60% to 10,544 days. …
Given the Antitrust Division’s numerous ongoing investigations–a number of which involve large, complex, international cartel matters that have not yet been announced publicly–we expect 2012 to be another banner year in criminal antitrust enforcement. …”
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