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Department of Justice Issues Letter Limiting Use of Agency Guidance in Civil Enforcement Actions
01/25/2018US Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand issued a letter regarding the use of agency guidance, defined in the memo as “any agency statement of general applicability and future effect. . .that is designed to advise parties outside of the federal Executive Branch about legal rights and obligations,” as a tool for civil enforcement actions. In the letter, Ms. Brand references a November 16, 2017 memo from US Attorney General Jeff Sessions entitled “Prohibition of Improper Guidance Documents.” The letter from Ms. Brand reiterates that guidance documents may not be used to circumvent the notice-and-comment rulemaking process. The letter also highlights that Department of Justice personnel are prohibited from using agency guidance documents as a means to require that regulated entities take or refrain from any action not otherwise mandated by law or regulation, and that non-compliance with agency guidance should not in and of itself result in an enforcement action. The letter notes that while agency guidance may be used for other purposes, such as showing that the financial institution had knowledge regarding its obligations under law or regulation, DOJ personnel should not use non-compliance with agency guidance as presumptive or conclusive evidence that a financial entity violated the underlying law or regulation.
View full text of DOJ letter.
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