Web Analytics

  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ
Register Login Subscribe
Resources
Awards galleryA-List lawyersLaw firm directory
Sections
News & dealsBusiness law digestDispute digestLegal Q&AFeaturesOpinionCorrespondentsExpert briefing
Topics
Data privacyArtificial intelligenceDispute resolution
Law.asia home
Archive
.TV
Awards
CBLJ Forum•Beijing 2026
Events
Jobs
About us
Contact us
Follow Law.asia

India Business Law Journal
India Business Law Journal

    • LinkedIn
      Facebook
      Twitter
      Whatsapp
      Telegram
      Copy link

      SECTIONS

      • News
      • Business law digest
      • Dispute digest
      • Legal Q&A
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Correspondents
      • Expert briefing

      ABOUT US

      • Editorial board
      • Publisher & credits

      TOPICS

      • Data privacy
      • Artificial intelligence
      • Dispute resolution

      RESOURCES

      • Awards gallery
      • A-List lawyers
      • Law firm directory

      E-READER EDITION

      ARCHIVE
      LinkedIn
      Facebook
      Twitter
      Whatsapp
      Telegram
      Copy link
India Business Law Journal India Business Law Journal
  • Sections
    • News & deals
    • Business law digest
    • Dispute digest
    • Legal Q&A
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Correspondents
    • Expert briefing
  • Videos
  • Awards
  • A-List
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe
  • Events
  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ
  • icon
    • Login
    • Register
  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ

India Business Law Journal
  • Sections
    • News & deals
    • Business law digest
    • Dispute digest
    • Legal Q&A
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Correspondents
    • Expert briefing
  • Videos
  • Awards
  • A-List
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe
  • Events
  • icon
    • Login
    • Register
Home DSK Legal FEPA’s impact on India’s legal and business landscape
  • DSK Legal
  • IBLJ Correspondents

FEPA’s impact on India’s legal and business landscape

By Vikrant Singh Negi and Mohit Bakshi, DSK Legal
28 August 2024
0
307
LinkedIn
Facebook
Twitter
Whatsapp
Telegram
Copy link

With the buzz around ESG (environmental, social and governance principles) growing significantly, companies require a robust framework to deal with bribery and corruption issues. In doing so, they must take into account various legal frameworks for dealing with bribery.

In the past two decades, the legal framework for combating transnational corruption has expanded significantly. Present efforts now address both suppliers (those offering bribes) and demand makers (officials seeking or accepting bribes). According to an OECD survey, nearly 80% of cases involving demand-side bribery do not result in penalties for foreign officials from their respective governments.

In response, the US Foreign Extortion Prevention Act (FEPA) was enacted on 22 December 2023. Under this legislation, the US attorney general must submit annual reports to congress, which are also made publicly accessible on the Department of Justice (DOJ) website. FEPA brings US law into alignment with anti-bribery and corruption statutes in countries such as the UK, France, Switzerland and India. Previously, the DOJ utilised laws on money laundering, fraud and the Travel Act to pursue those receiving bribes – procedures that were cumbersome and resource intensive.

Vikrant Singh Negi
Vikrant Singh Negi
Partner
DSK Legal

The FEPA simplifies the process by criminalising the demand or acceptance of bribes by foreign officials, eliminating the necessity to demonstrate fraudulent intent or financial transactions involving illegal activities. FEPA violations can bring up to 15 years imprisonment and fines up to USD250,000, or three times the value of the bribe.

The FEPA expands the definition of “foreign official” to encompass individuals acting unofficially on behalf of governments and international organisations, while excluding political candidates but including senior political figures. This includes both official and unofficial agents representing governments and entities.

In contrast to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), the FEPA has a zero tolerance stance on bribery, lacking exceptions or affirmative defences. Unlike the FCPA, the FEPA does not recognise facilitation payments, regardless of their legality under foreign laws, or their classification as reasonable and bona fide expenses.

Illustratively, Nigeria’s constitution shields senior officials from charges during their tenure and, in India, prosecuting high-ranking officials necessitates governmental permissions under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, and the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (PCA).

Mohit Bakshi
Mohit Bakshi
Partner
DSK Legal

India’s primary anti-bribery legislation, the PCA, broadly defines “public official” and initially focused solely on penalising bribe recipients. A key question is FEPA enforceability in foreign territories. The FEPA asserts “extra-territorial federal jurisdiction,” allowing the DOJ to prosecute foreign officials or entities involved in alleged offences. Currently, regarding India, the principal means of enforcing the FEPA involves leveraging the mutual legal assistance treaty between India and the US, ratified on 17 October 2001 (US-India MLAT). This treaty empowers the DOJ to enlist aid from Indian law enforcement agencies, co-ordinated through the Indian Ministry of Home Affairs, to investigate alleged offences under the FEPA.

Looking ahead, enforcement of anti-bribery and corruption mandates under the FCPA and the FEPA will likely operate in conjunction, although separate prosecutions remain possible. However, due to the FEPA’s recent inception, its effectiveness in prosecuting public officials remains untested and subject to diverse interpretations.

The interaction or potential conflict between the FEPA and other nations’ corresponding bribery and corruption laws is uncertain and awaits clarification.

From an organisational standpoint, the primary safeguard against DOJ prosecution lies in leveraging the FEPA’s provision for self-disclosure. Consequently, entities would be wise to develop robust whistleblower programmes and comprehensive escalation protocols should a foreign official seek facilitation payments, irrespective of whether such demands are fulfilled.

Adequate provisions within the bribery and corruption compliance framework should extend to foreign officials acting in official or unofficial capacities. Entities that proactively implement and educate their staff on bribery/corruption policies will be well prepared to address potential law enforcement inquiries.

Vikrant Singh Negi and Mohit Bakshi are partners at DSK Legal. The authors would like to thank senior associate Priyamvada Singhania for her contribution.

DSK Legal
1701, One World Centre
Floor 17, Tower 2B
841, Senapati Bapat Marg
Mumbai – 400 013, India
Contact details:
T: +91 22 6658 8000
E: contactus@dsklegal.com

LinkedIn
Facebook
Twitter
Whatsapp
Telegram
Copy link
  • TAGS
  • Anti-bribery
  • Anti-Bribery Legislation
  • Compliance Framework
  • DOJ Prosecution
  • DSK Legal
  • Environmental Social Governance
  • Facilitation Payments
  • Foreign Officials
  • Mohit Bakshi
  • Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty
  • Priyamvada Singhania
  • Transnational Corruption
  • US Foreign Extortion Prevention Act
  • Vikrant Singh Negi
  • Whistleblower Programmes
Previous articleTrio acts on EuroGroup’s USD22m electric motor parts buy
Next articleIndian firm KAnalysis goes international with US expansion
Jan

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

DSK Legal

Impact of Middle East crisis on India’s energy supply

By Rahul Sinha and Mohd Shahan Ulla, DSK Legal
Adani Vizhinjam stake sale
Deal digest

Cyril Amarchand, DSK dock Adani’s USD1.4bn Vizhinjam port deal

Intelligence report

IBLJ Law Firm Awards, 2026

Setting the benchmark for legal excellence in India

Most Recent

McAfee Dark Pattern Penalty

India’s CCPA fines McAfee over violation of consumer rights

3 July 2026
ONGC arbitration award challenge

Arbitration award upheld against ONGC in payment dispute

9 July 2026
CPPIB's Indian data centre partnership

CPPIB in strategic CAD1bn Indian data centre partnership

6 July 2026
Gagan Kathuria Joins AnantLaw

Gagan Kathuria joins AnantLaw as corporate M&A partner

3 July 2026

Market Pulse

Gagan Kathuria Joins AnantLaw

Gagan Kathuria joins AnantLaw as corporate M&A partner

3 July 2026
Juris Corp Equity Partner Promotions

Juris Corp bolsters leadership with four new equity partners

3 July 2026
Rajanala Yella Reddy joins TLH

Yella Reddy a TLH partner in Andhra Pradesh’s Vijayawada city

29 June 2026

Correspondents

India foreign exchange regulations

FEMA regulations to reshape India’s EXIM compliance regime

By Aman Avinav, Phoenix Legal
8 July 2026
India data protection compliance

Protecting personal data in Indian MSMEs and startups

By Shantanu Sahay and Pratyush Acharya, Anand and Anand
8 July 2026

Impact of Middle East crisis on India’s energy supply

By Rahul Sinha and Mohd Shahan Ulla, DSK Legal
8 July 2026

Features

IBLJ Law Firm Awards, 2026

Setting the benchmark for legal excellence in India

29 June 2026
AI in Arbitration Services

AAA tools up with AI

As AAA turns 100, CEO Bridget McCormack discusses ICDR growth and responsible AI tools reshaping arbitration services globally

12 June 2026
Chennai Legal Market Overview

Chennai’s legal fabric

Chennai’s legal ecosystem goes beyond litigation as the port city has a high court legacy, specialised practices, local insight and relationship-driven advocacy

11 June 2026
Setting the benchmark for legal excellence in India
As AAA turns 100, CEO Bridget McCormack discusses ICDR growth and responsible AI tools reshaping arbitration services globally
Chennai’s legal ecosystem goes beyond litigation as the port city has a high court legacy, specialised practices, local insight and relationship-driven advocacy

Expert Briefings

Pune Legal Market Guide

Experts share insights on why Pune is the right destination for establishing or expanding your business, and on the finer details of setting up

2 July 2026
India GCC compliance frameworkvideo

Setting up a GCC in India

By Vikas Agarwal and Vivek Sadhale, LegaLogic Consulting
2 July 2026

Taking the Pune advantage

By Aanchal Lamba and Richa Joshi, Stride Legal
2 July 2026
Experts share insights on why Pune is the right destination for establishing or expanding your business, and on the finer details of setting up

Opinion

India Co-Lending Framework

Rebalancing bank-NBFC relationships

Co-lending needs greater parity amid heightened regulatory scrutiny, argues Nishant Kotak, head of legal at DSP Group

17 June 2026
Co-lending needs greater parity amid heightened regulatory scrutiny, argues Nishant Kotak, head of legal at DSP Group

Jobs

Counsel

8 June 2026
Sangare and Associates

Lawyer

24 November 2025
LAW.ASIA

Asia’s leader in legal intelligence

Law.asia is an award-winning portal providing news, analysis and expert advice on business law in Asia to in-house counsel, lawyers in private practice and other business and legal leaders. It features the proprietary editorial content and archives of our premium legal magazines – Asia Business Law Journal, China Business Law Journal and India Business Law Journal – along with videos, law firm listings, awards and much more. Produced by Law.asia Limited, an independent media company, Law.asia is multilingual, offering content in English, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. Find out more.
Follow Law.asia
Law firms Awards Events Legal jobs • Post a job
About us Archive Archive Archive Archive Subscribe Contact us
Please send any press releases, deal announcements, details of new hires, newsletters and any other news items to: news@law.asia
  • Policy on advertising & sponsorship
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms & conditions of use
  • Privacy Policy
© Copyright 2026 Law.asia Limited. All rights reserved.

Follow us on LinkedIn

Follow now