Admissions of Guilt in Civil Enforcement
By Verity Winship & Jennifer K. Robbennolt. Full text here.
Should agencies require admissions of wrongdoing from the targets of civil enforcement? Administrative agencies rely heavily on settlement as a key enforcement tool. Admissions of wrongdoing—or, more commonly, declarations that nothing is admitted—form part of these settlement agreements and the underlying negotiations. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has come under particular fire for allowing enforcement targets to settle while neither admitting nor denying allegations, and we use its policy changes as a case study. But our observations are aimed more broadly at civil enforcement across agencies and our examples come from a wide range of administrative agencies. We use the explicit debate over the SEC’s practices to draw attention to the high (and mostly unexamined) stakes of admissions for enforcement throughout the administrative system.
The Article identifies possible enforcement models and provides a nuanced account of what it means to make and require admissions. Although the policy choice is often portrayed as binary—either an agency requires admissions or it does not—the reality is more varied. We break down the options, addressing how admissions of wrongdoing interact with denials and identifying more precisely what may be admitted (Facts? Legal violation? Intent?). Taking our lead from judges, regulators, and commentators who have described agencies’ approaches to admissions with words like “truth,” “guilt,” “confession,” and “apology,” we link this discussion to empirical studies of the psychology of blame, responsibility, and apologies. We use these studies to shed light on the function and value of admissions and the implications for agency settlement negotiations.