This week’s most significant headline from the Department of Justice is the official launch of the Trade Fraud Task Force, signaling a major crackdown on duty evasion, supply chain crimes, and unlawful import practices in collaboration with the Department of Homeland Security. This marks the DOJ’s most aggressive effort yet to tackle trade-based financial crime that costs the United States billions each year.
Alongside that, the DOJ has announced sweeping updates to its white-collar crime prosecution strategy under Criminal Division Chief Matthew Galeotti. These revisions clarify that targeting corporate fraud remains a top priority, citing major threats to both national and economic security. However, the Department now urges prosecutors to avoid excessive enforcement that could punish legitimate risk-taking or hinder innovation among American businesses. New department guidance stresses alternatives to prosecution, more use of deferred prosecution agreements—think leniency when organizations self-report and cooperate—and less reliance on heavy-handed compliance monitors.
For businesses and organizations, especially those involved in international trade or subject to tariffs, these developments mean increased scrutiny paired with new incentives to voluntarily disclose wrongdoing. There’s now a guaranteed path to a declination, or no prosecution, if companies come forward swiftly and fix problems, provided there aren’t aggravating circumstances. According to DOJ’s announcement at the SIFMA Anti-Money Laundering Conference, companies that self-report issues within 120 days of an internal whistleblower alert may benefit from dramatic fine reductions, even if the DOJ already knows about the misconduct.
Leadership at DOJ also has restructured parts of the organization to better align enforcement on consumer protection and fraud, strengthening partnerships with Customs and Border Protection for real-time data and enforcement. This not only impacts importers but could echo across state and local governments as federal priorities shift, prompting closer coordination and possibly more involvement in cases typically left to local authorities.
For American citizens, these changes aim to reduce consumer harm, cut down on fraud, and bolster national security, all while hoping not to overburden law-abiding businesses. The global outreach—such as extraditing human smugglers linked to the Chiapas, Mexico tragedy—demonstrates DOJ’s evolving role in transnational crime, which will affect international relations and cooperation.
Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco put it this way: “We’re demanding accountability but making clear that good-faith actors who own up to mistakes and fix them will be treated fairly.”
Listeners should watch for upcoming deadlines if your organization is considering self-reporting, and expect further DOJ policy briefings in the months ahead. If you have information on illegal trade practices or financial fraud, both the DOJ and Customs and Border Protection have confidential portals for tips.
For more on these changes and to see how they might affect you or your organization, visit justice.gov or reach out to your local DOJ office. To submit input on proposed policymaking, watch for DOJ public comment periods.
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