Intl Criminal Court
Intl Criminal Court
Intl Criminal Court
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
P
ublic corruption is endemic at the highest levels of government in many na-
tions. Such “grand corruption” is costly, is closely correlated with the most
serious abuses of human rights, and threatens the stability of many nations
and the world. Grand corruption depends on a culture of impunity that exists because
of the unwillingness of leaders to permit the honest and able investigation of their
friends, families, and, indeed, themselves.
Mark L. Wolf International efforts to combat grand corruption have been inadequate and
is a Senior United ineffective. Similar circumstances concerning genocide and other egregious abuses
States District Judge of human rights led to the creation of the International Criminal Court (“ICC”) in
for the District of
Massachusetts. 2002.
Before his
appointment in An International Anti-Corruption Court (“IACC”), similar to the ICC or as part of
1985, he served as
a Special Assistant it, should now be established to provide a forum for the criminal enforcement of
to United States the laws prohibiting grand corruption that exist in virtually every country, and
Attorney General the undertakings that are requirements of various treaties and international
Edward H. Levi
(1975-1977) and as organizations. Staffed by elite investigators and prosecutors as well as impartial
the chief federal judges, an IACC would have the potential to erode the widespread culture of
public corruption impunity, contribute to creating conditions conducive to the democratic election
prosecutor in
Massachusetts of honest officials in countries which have long histories of grand corruption, and
(1981-1985). honor the courageous efforts of the many people, particularly young people, who are
increasingly exposing and opposing corruption at great personal peril.
1 Judge Wolf first proposed an International Anti-Corruption Court in Russia, at the 2012 St. Petersburg
International Legal Forum, and received valuable advice on the proposal at the 2014 World Forum on
Governance, convened by the Brookings Institution and Zaostreno in Prague, Czech Republic.
Judge Wolf gratefully acknowledges the assistance in preparing this article of Nathan Samuels, the
Managing Director of Not in My Country, Lindita Ciko, Jonathan Cox, Analisa Smith-Perez, and Gina
Starfield.
However, this rhetoric contrasts starkly with the reality of the ineffective international efforts
to combat corruption.
The experience of the United States provides a model for a new international approach to
combating corruption. Public corruption exists in the United States. State and local officials,
particularly, at times abuse their public offices for private gain. However, in contrast to many
other nations, the United States is serious about combating corruption.
In the United States, we do not rely on elected state prosecutors to do this because they are
often part of the political establishment that must be challenged and, in any event, lack the
necessary legal authority and resources. Rather, we rely primarily on federal investigators,
prosecutors, and courts to pursue and punish corrupt state and local officials.
In the United States, sometimes acting on information provided by private parties who want
to remain anonymous, independent media often expose corruption. Federal investigators are
authorized to conduct undercover operations and secretly record conversations, and are adept
at unraveling complicated financial transactions. Federal prosecutors are capable of trying
complex cases successfully before impartial judges and juries. As a result, public officials
convicted of corruption often receive serious sentences, which have the potential to deter
others and to create a political climate in which good government is also good politics.
In many other countries, however, corruption is pervasive at the highest levels of the national
government and is unpunished. Such misconduct has come to be known as “grand corruption,”
which occurs “when ‘politicians and state agents entitled to make and enforce the law in the
name of the people, are misusing this authority to sustain their power, status and wealth.’”3
Grand corruption depends on the existence of a culture of impunity. In countries with such a
culture, there is neither the will nor the capacity to investigate, prosecute, and punish grand
2 Kofi A. Annan, Foreword to United Nations Convention Against Corruption, G.A. Res. 58/4, U.N. Doc. A/RES/58/4,
at iii (Oct. 31, 2003), available at http://www.unodc.org/documents/treaties/UNCAC/Publications/Convention/08-
50026_E.pdf.
3 Global Org. of Parliamentarians Against Corruption, Prosecuting Grand Corruption as an International Crime 2
(2013) (quoting The Basics of Anti-Corruption, U4: The Anti-Corruption Resource Center, http://
www.u4.no/articles/the-basics-of-anti-corruption (2013)), available at http://gopacnetwork.org/Docs/DiscussionPa-
per_ProsecutingGrandCorruption_EN.pdf.
Massive violations of human rights by high level officials in countries with a culture of
impunity led to the creation of the International Criminal Court, in 2002, for the prosecution of
genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. An International Anti-Corruption Court, as
part of the ICC or as an independent entity, is now equally necessary and appropriate because
of the consequences of grand corruption.
Corruption is clearly costly. It has been estimated that $1 trillion is paid in bribes annually, and
the cost of all forms of corruption is more than 5% of global GDP.4 An estimated $8.4 trillion
was lost in developing regions due to illicit financial flows between 2000 and 2009, which is
ten times more than those regions received in foreign aid,5 and roughly the annual GDP of
China in 2012.6
The cost of corruption is not limited to poorer countries, however. In 2011, Global Financial
Integrity found that Russia had the third largest outflow of illicit capital in the world, and
bribery, theft, kickbacks, and corruption had cost Russia $427 billion from 2000 to 2008.7
In 2010, a World Bank working paper estimated that Russia’s corruption-fueled “shadow
economy” constituted 43.6% of the country’s GDP.8
Corruption also creates a political climate in which organized crime and terrorist organizations
thrive. For example, drug lords operate easily in Mexico with the protection of corrupt officials,
including law enforcement officers. Similarly, al Qaeda long found safe havens in countries
characterized by corruption such as Afghanistan and Yemen.
Nevertheless, the greatest consequence of grand corruption is not its economic cost or the
protection it provides to criminals. Grand corruption is most significant because it destroys
4 Int’l Chamber of Com. et al., Clean Business is Good Business 2 (2008), available at http://www.weforum.org/
pdf/paci/BusinessCaseAgainstCorruption.pdf; see also The Costs of Corruption, World Bank (Apr. 8, 2004), http://
go.worldbank.org/LJA29GHA80.
5 Dev Kar & Sarah Freitas, Illicit Financial Flows from the Developing World Over the Decade Ending 2009, Global
Fin. Integrity (Dec. 15, 2011), http://www.gfintegrity.org/report/illicit-financial-flows-from-the-developing-world-over-
the-decade-ending-2009/.
6 GDP (Current US$), World Bank, http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP CD?display=default.
7 Dev Kar & Sarah Freitas, Global Fin. Integrity, Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries over the Decade
Ending 2009, at 12 tbl.C (2011), available at http://www.gfintegrity.org/storage/gfip/documents/reports/IFFDec2011/
illicit_financial_flows_from_developing_countries_over_the_decade_ending_2009.pdf.
8 Friedrich Schneider et al., Shadow Economies All Over the World 23 tbl.3.3.3 (World Bank Dev. Res. Grp., Working
Paper No. 5356, 2010), available at http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/IW3P/IB/201
0/10/14/000158349_20101014160704/Rendered/PDF/WPS5356.pdf.
People throughout the world increasingly share the understanding, expressed in the American
Declaration of Independence:
that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.—
That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just
powers from the consent of the governed . . . .9
No nation’s citizens have consented to the abuse of public office for personal profit. Corruption
is a violation of the right to honest government which is essential to protecting and promoting
the most fundamental human rights.
This truth is being increasingly recognized. In 2013, the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, stated: “[C]orruption is an enormous obstacle to the
realization of all human rights—civil, political, economic, social and cultural, as well as the
right to development. Corruption violates the core human rights principles of transparency,
accountability, non-discrimination and meaningful participation in every aspect of life of the
community.”10
In view of the universal right to honest government, and the close correlation between grand
corruption and egregious abuses of the most fundamental human rights, the White House
Because corruption is a perversion of the purpose for which governments are constituted, it is
not surprising that current events demonstrate the universal and enduring wisdom of Supreme
Court Justice Louis Brandeis’ observation that:
[G]overnment is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches
the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes
a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto
himself; it invites anarchy.14
People around the world, particularly younger people, are now demonstrating that grand
corruption will not be tolerated and, indeed, will incite unrest, if not revolution. For example,
“[t]he runaway corruption of [Viktor] Yanukovych’s rule—and the cynicism that it symbolised
—was one of the motors of the Maidan protests that toppled him from power.”15 After
Yanukovych fled, “[t]he pictures of the former president’s plush compound—his vintage car
collection and fancy pheasants, the private restaurant and golf course—[] struck a chord in
the same way the palaces of Ben Ali and the wealth of Hosni Mubarak angered the people of
Tunisia and Egypt.”16
Similarly, in 2008, Siemens AG was accused of paying $1.4 billion in bribes around the world,
including more than $55 million in Russia.21 Siemens agreed to pay a $450 million fine and
to disgorge $350 million in profits to settle the case and related criminal charges.22 Seimens’
subsidiaries in Russia were barred from World Bank projects for four years.23 Germany released
the names of twelve Russian officials reportedly bribed by Siemens.24 Yet none of them have
been prosecuted either.
Rather, in Russia, as in Nigeria, it is often those who expose corruption who are punished.
Sergei Magnitsky was probing the embezzlement of $230 million from his client, Hermitage
Capital, when he was arrested for alleged tax fraud, was denied medical care in prison, and
died there.25 Similarly, Navalny was prosecuted and convicted on corruption charges that had
previously been abandoned twice, after he exposed substantially inflated payments evidencing
kickbacks by Russia’s Gazprom and VTB Bank, and revealed that the head of the Russian
Investigative Committee, which directed his prosecution, had a hidden interest in real estate in
the Czech Republic, where he had Permanent Resident status.26
18 Press Release, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Daimler AG and Three Subsidiaries Resolve Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
Investigation and Agree to Pay $93.6 Million in Criminal Penalties (Apr. 1, 2010), available at http://www.justice.gov/
opa/pr/2010/April/10-crm-360.html; Information ¶19, United States v. Daimler AG, No. 1:10-cr-00063-RJL (D.D.C. Mar.
22, 2010).
19 See Press Release, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, supra note 18.
20 This is How We Roll: Russians Learn How to Pronounce FCPA, Russia Monitor (May 4, 2010), http://therussia-
monitor.com/2010/05/04/this-is-how-we-roll-russians-learn-how-to-pronounce-FCPA/.
21 Compl. ¶¶60, 63, SEC v. Siemens Aktiengesellschaft, No. 1:08-cv-02167-RJL (D.D.C. Dec. 12, 2008).
22 Press Release, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Charges Siemens AG for Engaging in Worldwide Bribery (Dec. 15,
2008), available at http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/2008-294.htm.
23 Press Release, Siemens AG, Legal Proceedings (Apr. 29, 2010), available at http://www.siemens.com/press/pool/
de/events/corporate/2010-q2/2010-q2-legal-proceedings-e.pdf.
24 Andrew E. Kramer, Russia Slow to Pick Up the Lead in Bribery Cases, N.Y. Times (Apr. 29, 2010), http://www.
nytimes.com/2010/04/30/business/global/30ruble.html.
25 Ellen Barry, Lawyer Held in Tax Case in Russia Dies in Jail, N.Y. Times, Nov. 18, 2009, at A10, available at http://
www.nytimes.com/2009/11/18/world/europe/18russia.html.
26 Julia Ioffe, Net Impact: One Man’s Cyber Crusade Against Russian Corruption, New Yorker (Apr. 4, 2011), http://
www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/04/04/110404fa_fact_ioffe; Nataliya Vasilyeva, Activist Presses Russian Corpo-
Similarly, while Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was long regarded as corrupt, he was only
convicted of embezzling many millions of dollars of public funds for his personal use in lavish
homes and palaces in May 2014, after he was removed from office, convicted of directing
the killing of hundreds of protestors, and granted a new trial on appeal. Mubarak’s recent
conviction for grand corruption has been reported to be an effort to “spare the government
installed last summer by the country’s defense minister . . . a potential embarrassment: the
chance that Mr. Mubarak might be a free man again.”28
Grand corruption in many countries is supported by the quiet complicity of other nations,
which benefit from foreign investment and official favor. Corruption results in the expatriation
of billions of dollars annually. Officials place some of the proceeds of their crimes where they
can be enjoyed. This is possible only because existing anti-corruption and money laundering
measures are not vigorously or consistently enforced.
For example, in 2006, Prime Minister Tony Blair ordered the termination of an investigation of
alleged bribes paid by a British weapons firm, BAE Systems, in Saudi Arabia after that nation
threatened to break diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom.29 Ultimately, those bribes
were proven in an FCPA prosecution in the United States.
The more recent experience of the Ukraine is also illustrative. As the Guardian has reported:
The Ukrainian elites have for years salted away ill-gotten gains throughout the EU while
the authorities, specifically in the UK, Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Switzerland
and Latvia, failed to apply their anti-corruption and anti-money laundering legislation
to stop them.
In other words, the British government is reluctant to charge foreign citizens with
money laundering without the explicit approval and co-operation of that citizen’s
government. How is this system supposed to work if it is the government officials that
are stashing cash and buying villas in faraway places around the world?
The real world consequences of this policy are obvious: the only foreign citizens in
danger of investigation, let alone prosecution—Ukrainian or otherwise—are those out of
favour with their home governments. Those shielded from prosecution in Ukraine are
automatically afforded the same protection in the UK and elsewhere.30
As I said, Watergate demonstrated that in the United States every person, even the President,
must obey the law and court orders, and will be investigated if there are legitimate suspicions
about his conduct. I also described how corruption had been found to be “a way of life”31
in public contracting in Massachusetts in the 1970’s, and how I had been rewarded with a
Presidential appointment as a judge after the team of federal prosecutors I led for four years
achieved more than 40 consecutive convictions in public corruption cases.
I also discussed the then recent trial of the former Speaker of the Massachusetts House
of Representatives, which resulted in my sentencing him to serve eight years in prison for
As I explained in Russia, the resources that made the successful prosecution of the former
Speaker possible in the United States exist in few other countries. In many nations lawmakers
enact legislative immunities that prohibit investigations unless the Parliament itself authorizes
them. At a minimum, this eliminates the opportunity for secret investigations and frequently
blocks any investigation at all. Indeed, in many nations legislation prohibits undercover
operations, wiretapping, or consensual recording of conversations, which are often essential to
proving crimes that are structured to be difficult to detect and prove.
Few countries have an independent media, in part because, in contrast to the United States,
journalists risk being ordered by courts to pay substantial litigation costs and libel judgments
if they report on official misconduct. As is now occurring in Turkey, prosecutors and judges
can be removed from office by the targets of their investigations if they act independently and
impartially.32 In any event, investigators and prosecutors generally lack the training, experience,
and tools to conduct complex financial investigations or to present their cases capably in
court. Few countries use jurors to decide criminal cases, although jurors are harder for officials
to influence than judges, who in many countries take direction from those in power and thus
administer the kind of “telephone justice” that is infamous in Russia.
There have been positive developments in the international effort to combat corruption. There
are now innumerable organizations that do exceptional work in exposing corruption, aided
greatly by their ability to use the Internet to document and disseminate information which
traditional, government-controlled media will not report. In addition, certain international
institutions, such as the World Trade Organization (“WTO”) and the European Union, require
the adoption of national laws and the creation of national agencies to combat corruption as
conditions for membership.
32 Andrew Finkel, The Filth in Erdogan’s Closet, N.Y. Times (Dec. 27, 2013), http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/28/
opinion/the-filth-in-erdogans-closet.html.
In addition, the International Anti-Corruption Court should, like federal courts in the United
States, be empowered by international law to hear civil fraud and corruption cases brought by
private “whistleblowers.”34 The United States False Claims Act authorizes qui tam actions by
private citizens, who sue on behalf of the United States those who have allegedly defrauded
In contrast to criminal cases, which require proof beyond a reasonable doubt to obtain a
conviction, a civil fraud charge must be proved only by a preponderance of the evidence and is,
therefore, easier to establish. Relators’ lawyers typically work on a contingent fee basis. Thus,
lawyers are available to private citizens who are financially unable to match the companies
being sued. In addition, under the American system, a relator who brings an unsuccessful claim
does not usually have to pay the prevailing defendant’s attorneys’ fees.
All of these features of the False Claims Act greatly expand the resources devoted to
combating fraud against the United States, including fraud perpetrated with the collusion of
corrupt officials, and minimize the risk that politically powerful government contractors will
succeed in keeping well-founded cases from being brought against them by the Department
of Justice. As a result, in nine thousand False Claims Act cases between 1987 and 2005, the
United States recovered $15 billion, two-thirds of which came from cases first brought by
private citizens.36
In any event, submission to the jurisdiction of the International Anti-Corruption Court should
be incorporated in the United Nations Convention Against Corruption. It should also be made
a condition of membership in international organizations such as the OECD and WTO, and for
obtaining loans from international lenders such as the World Bank. Similarly, among other
new measures to combat corruption being discussed in the current negotiations of the fifth
round of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment partnership, participation in an International
Anti-Corruption Court should be included, which would then serve as a model for other trade
treaties.38
It may be argued that an IACC would violate national sovereignty. However, the FCPA, and
comparable statutes enacted in other countries, already create a form of universal jurisdiction
for the bribery of foreign officials. Multilateral decisions would be required to initiate a
prosecution in an International Anti-Corruption Court. Prosecution in The Hague, or some
similar venue, should be a less offensive incursion on national sovereignty than an FCPA
prosecution in the United States based on the decision of a single country.
Moreover, recognizing the link between grand corruption and abuses of human rights has the
potential to lead to the more effective prosecution and punishment of perpetrators of those
abuses. High-level officials responsible for genocide, for example, typically operate through
subordinates and allies, making their criminal culpability difficult to prove by the eyewitness
testimony of victims. However, the money laundering frequently associated with grand
corruption can often be proven based on more easily acquired documentary evidence alone.
Therefore, if an IACC is established and empowered to decide cases involving bribery and other
39 Karen Alter & Juliet Sorensen, Let Nations, Not the World, Prosecute Corruption, U.S. News & World Rep. (Apr.
30, 2013, 3:45 PM), http://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2014/04/30/dont-add-corruption-to-the-international-
criminal-courts-mandate.
40 Pillay, supra note 10.
41 Id.
42 Anne Applebaum, A Global Human Rights Opportunity, Wash. Post, Dec. 15, 2012, at A19.
It may be argued that the performance of the International Criminal Court does not justify
either expansion of its jurisdiction or emulation. The initial work of the ICC has been
ponderously slow; it took more than six years to try the first suspect captured, Thomas
Lubanga of the Congo, and his appeal is still pending.43
In addition, the ICC has been criticized as a form of Western imperialism because its
prosecutions have focused solely on Africa. However, this is attributable, in part, to the facts
that: thirty-three African states joined the court, the most from any region; genocide and
crimes against humanity have occurred repeatedly in Africa since the ICC was created in 2002;
and the culture of impunity is particularly pronounced in African nations.44 Nevertheless,
it is true that the ICC has not opened full investigations into violence in countries such as
Afghanistan, Iraq, or Myanmar, where the United States and other members of the United
Nations Security Council have strong interests.45
However, an International Anti-Corruption Court should have at least one major advantage
over the ICC—the support of the United States. The United States has not joined the ICC and
initially used its power to restrict the ICC’s efforts because of a fear that United States citizens
would be prosecuted there despite the principle of complementarity which should preclude
such cases.
In contrast, the United States has good reason to fully support an International Anti-Corruption
Court. American companies generally behave ethically and, in any event, are significantly
deterred from paying bribes by the threat of prosecution for violating the FCPA. They would
benefit from the more level international playing field an IACC would provide.
Undoubtedly, other practical, and perhaps principled, arguments can be made against the
creation of an IACC. However, again, Secretary General Annan was right when he wrote that
corruption is an “insidious plague” that destroys the capacity of government to protect the
rights and improve the plight of the people it is constituted to serve. Grand corruption depends
43 Wairagala Wakabi, Age of Soldiers at Center of Lubanga Appeals Hearing, Int’l Justice Monitor (May 20, 2014),
http://www.ijmonitor.org/2014/05/age-of-soldiers-at-center-of-lubanga-appeals-hearing/.
44 David Bosco, Justice Delayed, Foreign Pol’y, June 29, 2012, available at http://www.foreignpolicy.com/arti-
cles/2012/06/29/justice_delayed.
45 Id.
For these people, the best hope is an international forum for the effective prosecution of grand
corruption, eroding the culture of impunity, and contributing to the opportunity for democratic
elections to produce honest officials with the will to serve the public good in countries
which have long been led by corrupt criminals. The effort to establish an International
Anti-Corruption Court will both encourage and engage these courageous people. If and when
the effort succeeds, their courage will be rewarded. If the effort fails, at least they, and the
democratic ideal of honest government that inspires them, will have been honored by the
international community.
Editors
Christine Jacobs
Beth Stone