Order Code RS22588
January 30, 2007
The Thompson Memorandum In Short:
Attorneys’ Fees and Waiver of Corporate
Attorney-Client and Work Product Protection
Charles Doyle
Senior Specialist
American Law Division
Summary
Corporations are subject to civil and criminal liability for misconduct, committed
for their benefit, by their officers, employees and agents. Under most circumstances,
they enjoy the right to attorney-client privileges and attorney work product protection
in connection with government investigations of possible misconduct. The Justice
Department’s Thompson Memorandum in describing federal prosecution policies
suggested that a corporation faced an increased risk of prosecution if it claimed those
privileges or if it paid the business-related litigation costs of its officers and employees.
The Memorandum has sparked considerable debate before Congress and elsewhere.
Among other events, at least one federal court has concluded that the manner of
implementing the policy ran contrary to the dictates of the Fifth and Sixth Amendment.
A curative amendment to the Federal Rules of Evidence has been proposed. The
Memorandum has been revised. Both Houses held hearings on the matter during the
109th Congress and related legislation has been introduced during the 110th (S. 186).
This is a brief discussion of the controversy’s legal background and chronology.
This is an abridged version of CRS Report RL33842, The Thompson
Memorandum: Attorneys’ Fees and Waiver of Corporate Attorney-Client and Work
Product Protection
, without the footnotes and citations to authority found in the longer
report.
Attorney-Client Privilege and Work Product Protection. The attorney-client
privilege and work product protection are federal evidentiary privileges. The attorney-
client privilege is one of oldest common law privileges. The purpose of the privilege is
to encourage full and frank communication between attorneys and their clients and
thereby promote broader public interests in the observance of law and the administration
of justice. It protects confidential communications with an attorney made in order to
obtain legal advice or assistance. It is available to corporations as well as to individuals.
Although disclosure ordinarily waives the privilege, the circuits are divided over whether

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the privilege may survive disclosure for limited selective purposes (selective waiver) to
government investigators or regulators.
At least since the Supreme Court announced its decision in Hickman v. Taylor, the
federal courts have recognized that an attorney’s work product gathered or created in
anticipation of litigation enjoys qualified disclosure protection. The protection can be
waived, but here too the circuits are divided on the question of whether it can survive a
selective waiver in the form of disclosure to a government investigator or regulator.
Deputy Attorney General Memoranda and Related Matters. Four Deputy
Attorneys General have issued memoranda to guide the exercise of prosecutorial
discretion on the question of whether criminal charges should be brought against a
corporation. Each includes provisions concerning the waiver of attorney-client and
attorney work product protection and all but one address employee legal costs and joint
defense agreements as well.
Signed on June 19, 1999, the Holder Memorandum was designed to provide
prosecutors with factors to be considered when determining whether to charge a
corporation with criminal activity. It emphasized that “[t]hese factors are, however, not
outcome-determinative and are only guidelines.” The factors consisted of: “1. The nature
and seriousness of the offense ... 2. The pervasiveness of wrongdoing within the
corporation ... 3. The corporation’s history of similar conduct ... 4. The corporation’s
timely and voluntary disclosure of wrongdoing and its willingness to cooperate in the
investigation of its agents ... 5. The existence and adequacy of the corporation’s
compliance program ... 6. The corporation’s remedial actions ... 7. Collateral
consequences ... and 8. The adequacy of non-criminal remedies ... .” In the section
devoted to cooperation and voluntary disclosure, the Memorandum stated that “In
gauging the extent of the corporation’s cooperation, the prosecutor may consider the
corporation’s willingness ... to waive the attorney-client and work product privileges.”
The Memorandum also addressed the adverse weight that might be given a corporation’s
participation in a joint defense agreement with its officers or employees and its agreement
to pay their legal fees. Although several academics and defense counsel expressed
concern over the possible impact of the waiver feature of the Holder Memorandum, a
survey of United States Attorneys conducted in late 2002 indicated that waivers were
rarely requested.
On January 30, 2003, the Holder Memorandum was superseded by the Thompson
Memorandum. The Thompson Memorandum was essentially a reissuance of its
predecessor. Little of the text was new. That portion of the Memoranda devoted to the
waiver of attorney-client and work product protections, and cooperation and voluntary
disclosure in general — Part VI — was the same in both except for a new paragraph
added in the Thompson Memorandum. The addition said nothing about waivers per se,
but made clear the risks that a corporation ran if it failed to be forthcoming early on or
continued to support those officers or employees that prosecutors thought culpable. Yet
this is one of the few amendments to the Holder Memorandum. To some, the wholescale
adoption of language from the earlier Memorandum suggested a Justice Department
perception that the problem with the Holder Memorandum was not its content but its
application.

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The policies articulated in the Holder and Thompson Memoranda were at least
roughly similar to enforcement policies announced by a substantial number of federal
regulatory agencies that call for voluntary corporate disclosure of statutory or regulatory
violations. Some specifically mention the waiver of the attorney-client or work product
protection, while others seem to speak with sufficient generality to justify consideration
on enforcement and sanction questions.
In May of 2004, the United States Sentencing Commission amended Commentary
in the Sentencing Guidelines that some read as an endorsement of this new more
aggressive approach. The change explicitly described the circumstances under which a
corporation’s failure to waive could have sentencing consequences. Although apparently
crafted at least in part to ease corporate anxiety, it seemed to have the opposite effect.
The following August, the American Bar Association voted to recommend that the
Commentary be changed to state that waiver should not be considered a sentencing factor.
The Commission instead removed from the Commentary the language quoted above that
it had added in 2004.
Then on October 21, 2005 came the McCallum Memorandum. It made no revision
in the Thompson Memorandum, but briefly addressed the manner in which the Thompson
Memorandum’s policy on waiver was to be implemented. The various United States
Attorneys were instructed to prepare written guidelines for supervisory approval of
requests for corporate waivers. The effort did little to assuage critics.
On May 15, 2006, the Federal Advisory Committee on Evidence reported a
proposed evidentiary rule amendment crafted to resolve the splits in the circuits over the
selective waiver of corporate attorney-client and work product protection. The
Committee recommended a new proposed Federal Rule of Evidence, proposed Rule 502,
which among other things, would provide that disclosure of protected attorney-client or
work product information to governmental investigators or regulators would not
constitute a waiver of those protections with respect to third parties. At this point, the rule
is a proposal. Before it becomes effective it must be considered and approved first by the
Standing Committee on the Rules of Practice and Procedure, then by the Judicial
Conference of the United States, and then by the Supreme Court, at which point it might
be transmitted to Congress. It would become effective in six months unless modified or
rejected by statute.
Constitutional Concerns. In summer of 2006, a court in the Southern District
of New York held in United States v. Stein that implementation of the Thompson
Memorandum’s policy with regard to a corporation’s reimbursement of the attorneys’ fees
of its employees and pressure on them to make incriminating statements violated the Fifth
Amendment substantive due process rights of the employees, their Fifth Amendment
privilege against self-incrimination, as well as their Sixth Amendment right to the
assistance of counsel. The case began with the criminal tax investigation of an accounting
firm and its employees. After prosecutors issued subject letters to more than twenty of
the firm’s officers and employees, they met with the firm’s attorneys. At the meeting the
firm indicated that intended to “clean house,” that it had already taken some personnel
actions, that it meant to cooperate fully with the government’s investigation, and that its
objective was to avoid indictment of the firm and the fate of Arthur Andersen by acting
so as to protect the firm and not the employees and officers targeted. The firm indicated
that it had been its practice to cover the litigation costs of its employees but that it would

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not pay the fees of employees who refused to cooperate with the government’s
investigation or who invoked their Fifth Amendment privilege. Prosecutors referred to
the Thompson Memorandum and the Sentencing Guidelines and indicated they would
take into account any instances where the firm was legally obligated to pay attorneys fees.
They also indicated, however, that misconduct should not be rewarded and that
prosecutors would examine “under a microscope” the payment of any fees that were not
legally required.
In consultation with prosecutors, the firm sent the subjects of the investigation form
letters informing them that attorneys’ fees would be capped at $400,000 and that fees
would be cut off for any employee charged with criminal wrongdoing. Thereafter
prosecutors advised the firm’s attorney when one of the firm’s employees proved
uncooperative; the firm then advised the employees that they would be fired and their
attorneys’ fees cut off if they did not cooperate; and did so in cases of those employees
who remained recalcitrant. The firm then entered into a deferred prosecution agreement
with prosecutors for the eventual dismissal of charges under which it agreed to waive
indictment; pay a $456 million fine; accept restrictions on its practice; waive all privileges
including but not limited to attorney-client and attorney work product; and provide the
government with extensive cooperation in its investigation and prosecution of the firm’s
former officers and employees.

The by-then indicted former officers and employees moved to have their indictments
dismissed on constitutional grounds. The court agreed that constitutional violations had
occurred but declined at least temporarily to dismiss the indictments under the
understanding that the government had agreed that it would accept, without prejudice to
the firm in its deferred prosecution agreement or otherwise, any fee arrangement that the
firm should come to with its former officers and employees. The court then announced
that it would accept ancillary jurisdiction over a civil action by the defendants against the
firm and in a subsequent decision generally denied the firm’s motion for summary
judgment.
The court concluded that a criminal defendant has a substantive due process right to
obtain and use in order to prepare a defense resources lawfully available to him or her,
free of knowing or reckless government interference. It also found that the Thompson
Memorandum and the pressure the prosecutor’s exerted upon the accounting firm to cut
off the payment of attorneys’ fees for the firm’s former employees impinged upon the
right. While the court conceded that the government had a compelling interest in
investigating and prosecuting crime and in preventing obstruction of those efforts, it felt
the means chosen to serve its interests were insufficiently tailored to satisfy strict scrutiny.
On the right to counsel issue, the government contended that their conduct could not
constitute a violation of the Sixth Amendment because (1) it had occurred before
indictment and thus before the right to counsel had attached and (2) the employees had
no Sixth Amendment right to pay for their counsel of choice with someone else’s money.
Attachment was no obstacle, replied the court, when the motive or at least the clearly
foreseeable result was to impede the employee’s criminal defense after they were indicted.
As for the Supreme Court’s someone-else’s-money comment, it referred to defendants
using the government’s money, money to which they had neither right nor expectation.
By contrast in the case before it, the court said the defendants had every reason to expect
that the firm would have assumed their legal expenses, but for the government’s
intervention. The court resolved the self-incrimination issue in a separate decision

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following defendants’ suppression motions. Here, the government was a bit more
successful, for although the court found a violation in some instances it declined to do so
in others. As a general rule statements secured under governmental threat of job
termination are inadmissible in subsequent criminal proceedings. During the course of
the Stein case investigation, several employees had initially refused to talk to authorities.
Prosecutors then brought the matter to the attention of the firm’s attorneys and employees
were told to cooperate or payment of their attorneys’ fees would be discontinued and if
still employed they would be fired. In some cases, the coercion resulted in involuntary
statements; in others the employees made voluntary statements for reasons of their own
notwithstanding the pressure. To the government’s argument that no Fifth Amendment
consequences flowed from the conduct of the firm, a private non-governmental actor, the
court found the firm’s conduct attributable to the government. Yet in the end only two
of the nine challenged statements were suppressed.
Legislative Activity in the 109th Congress. Both the House and Senate
Judiciary Committees held hearings on the policy reflected in the Thompson
Memorandum during the 109th Congress, and in its final days, Senator Specter introduced
S. 30 which, among other things, would have prohibited federal authorities from
requesting a waiver of organizational attorney-client or work product protection or
predicating the adverse exercise of prosecutorial discretion of the absence of such a
waiver or the payment of attorneys’ fees for their employees or officers.
McNulty Memorandum. The McNulty Memorandum, announced December 12,
2006, supersedes the Thompson and McCallum Memoranda. While it incorporates a
great deal of the substance of its predecessors, the McNulty Memorandum rewrites the
principles and commentary that address corporate attorney-client and work product
protection waivers as well as those covering the payment of employee litigation costs.
It drops the specific reference to the waivers from the general statement of factors
to be weighed when considering whether to charge a corporation. Where earlier
Memoranda stated that waiver was not an “absolute” requirement for the favorable
exercise of prosecutorial discretion, suggesting to some that it was a requirement under
most circumstances, the McNulty Memorandum suggests that prosecutors’ waiver
requests are to be considered the exception rather than the rule.
Moreover, the McNulty Memorandum divides attorney-client and work product
material into two categories. Category I consists of factual information. Category II
material is described in much the same manner as opinion work product material. The
Memorandum cautions prosecutors that only in rare circumstances should they seek the
waiver of Category II material. A request for Category I must be approved by the United
States Attorney in consultation with the head of the Department’s Criminal Division; a
request for Category II information requires prior approval of the Deputy Attorney
General. A corporation’s refusal to waive cannot be considered in the exercise of
prosecutorial discretion. The Memorandum also adds an explicit provision concerning
attorneys’ fees, declaring that, “Prosecutors generally should not take into account
whether a corporation is advancing attorneys’ fees to employees or agents under
investigation and indictment,” except in “extremely rare cases” where it can be taken into
account with the approval of the Deputy Attorney General. Initial reaction appears to
have been favorable, but some critics continue to prefer an absolute ban on Justice
Department corporate waiver requests.

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Legislative Activity in the 110th Congress. Senator Specter has introduced the
Attorney-Client Privilege Protection Act of 2007 (S. 186). The bill as introduced is
identical to S. 30 (109th Cong.) that the Senator introduced at the end of the last Congress.
The bill would bar the Justice Department and other federal investigative, regulatory or
prosecutorial agencies from requesting that an organization: (1) waive its attorney-client
privilege or attorney work product protection; (2) decline to pay the legal expenses of an
employee; (3) avoid joint defense, information sharing or common interest agreements
with its employees; (4) refrain from disclosing information concerning an investigation
or enforcement action to employees; or (5) terminate or discipline an employee for the
employee’s exercise of a legal right or prerogative with respect to a governmental inquiry.
It would also preclude using such organizational activity as the basis in whole or in part
for a civil or criminal charge against the organization. The bill would allow the
government to requesting information it believes is beyond the scope of the attorney-client
privilege or the attorney work product protection. And it would not prevent an
organization, on its own initiative, from sharing the results of an internal investigation
with authorities.