Compliance
Compliance Corner: Spain Goes In OECD's Naughty Corner

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The
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development has
fired a warning shot at Spain for not doing enough to thwart
bribery and corruption. This is the second time the Paris-based
organisation has scolded a European nation on this subject in a
matter of days. It issued a
warning to Finland last week.
The OECD said that Spain has only successfully convicted two
people in a single foreign bribery case and has failed to convict
a single company since the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention took
force two years ago.
“Spain continues to close cases prematurely. Prosecutors have
insufficient time to conduct their investigations and face
challenges in deploying adequate investigative measures. Spain
needs to address these issues urgently and improve detection by
regulating voluntary self-disclosure and protecting
whistleblowers,” the organisation said.
In its statement yesterday, the OECD said that a working group
has completed a “phase 4” evaluation of how Spain is implementing
the Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials
in International Business Transactions and related
instruments.
The OECD said its report “expresses concerns about the
restrictive interpretation of the foreign bribery offence by
Spanish judges, the exceedingly short statute of limitations
applicable to proceedings against legal persons, and how
corporate criminal liability is triggered in practice.”
The working group has recommended that Madrid urgently adopts its
draft law on whistleblower protection and ensures that
specialised prosecutors have enough time to investigate cases in
which the threshold for opening a probe allows effective
checks and prosecutions to take place.
The statute of limitations for pursuing a foreign bribery case
against legal persons should fit that which applies to
individuals. The OECD said that Spain should also consider
introducing a system of non-trial resolutions for foreign bribery
cases which follow the principles of due process,
transparency and accountability.
The OECD added that the report also mentioned several “positive
developments and good practices,” such as the rise in
foreign bribery probes.