A survivor’s guide to monitorships

Katherine A. Lemire (klemire@stoneturn.com) is a Partner at StoneTurn in New York City.

Despite talk that monitorships are on the decline, this form of regulatory oversight continues to be relied upon by the U.S. Department of Justice, as well as by other federal, state, and municipal regulators and prosecutors.

Living with a monitor in your midst may test your firm in myriad ways. The monitor may be reasonable, but his or her team members may get carried away with their authority. At the same time, employees and executives in your firm may believe the monitorship is unwarranted, politically driven, overly burdensome, and costly. Despite these perceptions — whether grounded in reality or not — the fact remains that the monitor is simply a day-to-day reality for you and your firm. This article provides practical recommendations for corporate executives and in-house counsel tasked with navigating a multi-year government-imposed monitorship.

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