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Re: [Full-disclosure] Fwd: NDA & SOX?
- To: ald2003@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- To: "'Christoph Gruber'" <grisu@xxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [Full-disclosure] Fwd: NDA & SOX?
- From: "Jason Coombs" <jasonc@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 13 Mar 2005 04:24:49 +0000 GMT
Aditya Deshmukh wrote:
>>You've signed an NDA.
>>
>>What do you do?
>
>Revel all the info anonymously ?
Revealing all of the confidential information would be unethical.
Confidences must be protected, and secrets must be kept. And not out of fear of
civil liability or personal bankruptcy, but because honor and integrity are
essential ingredients in a healthy society.
The greater good is always served when individuals are free to decide for
themselves, free from duress, what the right thing to do is in their unique
situation.
Doing nothing would be immoral, and could place you in the position of being an
accomplice to violations of SOX through your inactions.
SOX includes whistleblower protections, and a judge or jury ultimately has the
power to affirm or reject the correctness of your actions or inactions in
real-world situations.
Taking action may result in civil liability for your mistakes. Taking no action
may result in criminal liability and the greater harm to all. Which is the more
substantial risk? Which is more likely to be the correct decision? It is easy
to see that all good men must assume civil liability in order to prevent
criminal acts.
One of the key elements of the answer to the original poster's question is the
necessity for the individual to decide which risk is the better risk for them
to take according to their own beliefs and circumstances.
We have legislation like SOX for the express reason that our peers and our
government wish each of us to take more seriously our role in complex white
collar financial crimes.
SOX helps to tip the scales in favor of full disclosure. Its very existence
should cause people who are wrestling with the conflict of having civil
obligations and liabilities under contract, versus their equally-important
ethical and moral obligations to help create the greater good for all, resolve
this conflict in favor of taking action rather than taking no action.
Legislators and courts can, and will, provide greater clarification for us on
these very questions in the future.
For now, the rule is to do what you believe is right, and get advice from legal
counsel but don't forget that they are just making an educated guess about how
a jury or a judge will respond, or interpret the law. Your attorney is not you,
and it is not their decision to make in the end.
Sincerely,
Jason Coombs
jasonc@xxxxxxxxxxx
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