Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • On 24 April 2025, the UK Serious Fraud Office (the SFO) issued updated guidance clarifying its approach to self-reporting, cooperation and the use of DPAs for companies facing criminal liability
  • The SFO introduced a presumption that companies self-reporting suspected wrongdoing and cooperating can negotiate a DPA rather than face prosecution, marking a departure from the existing approach, which has no outcome guarantees. This illustrates the SFO’s desire to incentivise cooperation from companies facing criminal liability
  • Guidance provides examples of what would be deemed cooperative and uncooperative conduct

Can DPAs represent a blanket solution?

Under the Crime and Courts Act 2013, Deferred Prosecution Agreements (DPAs) serve as an alternative to prosecution where deemed appropriate by a judge and in the public interest. While companies do not have a statutory duty to self-report, the new guidance outlines self-reports that constitute a “key consideration” in the SFO’s assessment of a company’s cooperation.

In his speech at the GIR Conference on 24 April 2025, the SFO’s Director outlined that self-reports offer a “cast-iron guarantee” that companies will be invited to negotiate a DPA. The SFO’s attempt to pursue DPAs as an almost guaranteed option to settle outside of court may raise concerns about the need to conduct a case-by-case assessment of public interest.