Today's guest blog is by Duncan Jepson, he is a writer, filmmaker and lawyer. Emperors Once More is the first in a new crime series set in Hong Kong.
I have been a regional corporate lawyer
across Asia for over a decade and have been involved in a number of
investigations relating to fraud, insider dealing and market manipulation. These
often begin dramatically but develop slowly. Here I describe how a dawn raid on a suspect
might take place.
The day has barely begun, the lift opens
and out stride ten or so law enforcement officers. A dawn raid. The unsuspecting
individual at the reception desk is shocked and confused at the sudden appearance
of a number of uniformed and plain clothed officers with empty boxes. Too
anxious to check the search warrant as they’re innocently laying out the
morning papers for what should have been yet another long day directing suits
to meeting rooms?
After being allowed to enter, the officers
take computers, files and suspects. The first reactions for colleagues sitting
at the nearby cubicles as the officers appear, the rough intimacy of open-plan
offices, is surprise, then quickly caution and soon solidarity.
Within a few minutes, corporate counsel
is alerted and for them there is an immediate problem. They are paid to ensure
the company follows the law and the law in this situation is, as everyone knows,
innocent until proven guilty. The suspect, suddenly taken away for interview
downtown, should be presumed innocent. And yet what if he or she isn’t? What if
they are guilty and because let’s face it, it’s what’shisor hername who was always playing it fast and loose,
talking cheap, cutting it close, so then perhaps it’s not that surprising. Maybe
it’s actually surprising it took so long for the officers to come. But personal
observations and perspectives aside, the counsel knows the law, and that as an
innocent employee, they must be represented. For the moment anyway.
Yet, there’s a problem, while Mr X or Ms
Y are now sitting uncomfortably and being asked all sorts of inconvenient
questions, the corporate counsel is also paid to protect the company and must
act accordingly. An internal investigation must begin. The computer has gone
but everything, emails, text messages, documents, spreadsheets, rubbish
cartoons and dodgy photos are all stored in the corporate cloud. The enforcement
agency will want some of these in time. So a law firm is hired to go downtown
to represent the company and, perhaps temporarily, the employee. The charges
are identified and investigation begins – people misuse their company phone and
computer.
Mr X or Ms Y, bright and shiny at their
desk the day before, exits the interviews and is understandably quite unnerved.
They go home, still under contract – a holiday or perhaps for “much needed
rest” – but must still be available for internal interviews which start soon
afterward. Friends and colleagues become irate, covering for the suspect’s work
and responsibilities, but also increasingly concerned they might be involved –
even though they know aren’t. Self-doubt sets in, despite reality. And colleagues
want to know what has happened but also in disbelief they defend their
companion, after all he or she has been with them everyday of the week, at
least eight hours a day for years. Weeks pass, the individual is still missing
but less missed as colleagues, also the counsel’s colleagues, feel betrayed for
some of them too must be now interviewed.
You can find out more about Duncan Jepson and his work on his website. He can also be found on Facebook and you can also follow him on Twitter @DuncanJepson.
Emperors Once More is out now (£16.99,
Quercus).
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