[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 17, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 17CFR205.3]

[Page 234-236]
 
              TITLE 17--COMMODITY AND SECURITIES EXCHANGES
 
             CHAPTER II--SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
 
PART 205_STANDARDS OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT FOR ATTORNEYS APPEARING AND 
 
Sec. 205.3  Issuer as client.

    (a) Representing an issuer. An attorney appearing and practicing 
before the Commission in the representation of an issuer owes his or her 
professional and ethical duties to the issuer as an organization. That 
the attorney may work with and advise the issuer's officers, directors, 
or employees in the course of representing the issuer does not make such 
individuals the attorney's clients.
    (b) Duty to report evidence of a material violation. (1) If an 
attorney, appearing and practicing before the Commission in the 
representation of an issuer, becomes aware of evidence of a material 
violation by the issuer or by any officer, director, employee, or agent 
of the issuer, the attorney shall report such evidence to the issuer's 
chief legal officer (or the equivalent thereof) or to both the issuer's 
chief legal officer and its chief executive officer (or the equivalents 
thereof) forthwith. By communicating such information to the issuer's 
officers or directors, an attorney does not reveal client confidences or 
secrets or privileged or otherwise protected information related to the 
attorney's representation of an issuer.
    (2) The chief legal officer (or the equivalent thereof) shall cause 
such inquiry into the evidence of a material violation as he or she 
reasonably believes is appropriate to determine whether the material 
violation described in the report has occurred, is ongoing, or is about 
to occur. If the chief legal officer (or the equivalent thereof) 
determines no material violation has occurred, is ongoing, or is about 
to occur, he or she shall notify the reporting attorney and advise the 
reporting attorney of the basis for such determination. Unless the chief 
legal officer (or the equivalent thereof) reasonably believes that no 
material violation has occurred, is ongoing, or is about to occur, he or 
she shall take all reasonable steps to cause the issuer to adopt an 
appropriate response, and shall advise the reporting attorney thereof. 
In lieu of causing an inquiry under this paragraph (b), a chief legal 
officer (or the equivalent thereof) may refer a report of evidence of a 
material violation to a qualified legal compliance committee under 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section if the issuer has duly established a 
qualified legal compliance committee prior to the report of evidence of 
a material violation.
    (3) Unless an attorney who has made a report under paragraph (b)(1) 
of this section reasonably believes that the chief legal officer or the 
chief executive officer of the issuer (or the equivalent thereof) has 
provided an appropriate response within a reasonable time, the attorney 
shall report the evidence of a material violation to:
    (i) The audit committee of the issuer's board of directors;
    (ii) Another committee of the issuer's board of directors consisting 
solely of directors who are not employed, directly or indirectly, by the 
issuer and are not, in the case of a registered investment company, 
``interested persons'' as defined in section 2(a)(19) of the Investment 
Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(19)) (if the issuer's board of 
directors has no audit committee); or
    (iii) The issuer's board of directors (if the issuer's board of 
directors has no committee consisting solely of directors who are not 
employed, directly or indirectly, by the issuer and are not, in the case 
of a registered investment company, ``interested persons'' as defined in 
section 2(a)(19) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a-
2(a)(19))).

[[Page 235]]

    (4) If an attorney reasonably believes that it would be futile to 
report evidence of a material violation to the issuer's chief legal 
officer and chief executive officer (or the equivalents thereof) under 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the attorney may report such evidence 
as provided under paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
    (5) An attorney retained or directed by an issuer to investigate 
evidence of a material violation reported under paragraph (b)(1), 
(b)(3), or (b)(4) of this section shall be deemed to be appearing and 
practicing before the Commission. Directing or retaining an attorney to 
investigate reported evidence of a material violation does not relieve 
an officer or director of the issuer to whom such evidence has been 
reported under paragraph (b)(1), (b)(3), or (b)(4) of this section from 
a duty to respond to the reporting attorney.
    (6) An attorney shall not have any obligation to report evidence of 
a material violation under this paragraph (b) if:
    (i) The attorney was retained or directed by the issuer's chief 
legal officer (or the equivalent thereof) to investigate such evidence 
of a material violation and:
    (A) The attorney reports the results of such investigation to the 
chief legal officer (or the equivalent thereof); and
    (B) Except where the attorney and the chief legal officer (or the 
equivalent thereof) each reasonably believes that no material violation 
has occurred, is ongoing, or is about to occur, the chief legal officer 
(or the equivalent thereof) reports the results of the investigation to 
the issuer's board of directors, a committee thereof to whom a report 
could be made pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of this section, or a 
qualified legal compliance committee; or
    (ii) The attorney was retained or directed by the chief legal 
officer (or the equivalent thereof) to assert, consistent with his or 
her professional obligations, a colorable defense on behalf of the 
issuer (or the issuer's officer, director, employee, or agent, as the 
case may be) in any investigation or judicial or administrative 
proceeding relating to such evidence of a material violation, and the 
chief legal officer (or the equivalent thereof) provides reasonable and 
timely reports on the progress and outcome of such proceeding to the 
issuer's board of directors, a committee thereof to whom a report could 
be made pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of this section, or a qualified 
legal compliance committee.
    (7) An attorney shall not have any obligation to report evidence of 
a material violation under this paragraph (b) if such attorney was 
retained or directed by a qualified legal compliance committee:
    (i) To investigate such evidence of a material violation; or
    (ii) To assert, consistent with his or her professional obligations, 
a colorable defense on behalf of the issuer (or the issuer's officer, 
director, employee, or agent, as the case may be) in any investigation 
or judicial or administrative proceeding relating to such evidence of a 
material violation.
    (8) An attorney who receives what he or she reasonably believes is 
an appropriate and timely response to a report he or she has made 
pursuant to paragraph (b)(1), (b)(3), or (b)(4) of this section need do 
nothing more under this section with respect to his or her report.
    (9) An attorney who does not reasonably believe that the issuer has 
made an appropriate response within a reasonable time to the report or 
reports made pursuant to paragraph (b)(1), (b)(3), or (b)(4) of this 
section shall explain his or her reasons therefor to the chief legal 
officer (or the equivalent thereof), the chief executive officer (or the 
equivalent thereof), and directors to whom the attorney reported the 
evidence of a material violation pursuant to paragraph (b)(1), (b)(3), 
or (b)(4) of this section.
    (10) An attorney formerly employed or retained by an issuer who has 
reported evidence of a material violation under this part and reasonably 
believes that he or she has been discharged for so doing may notify the 
issuer's board of directors or any committee thereof that he or she 
believes that he or she has been discharged for reporting evidence of a 
material violation under this section.
    (c) Alternative reporting procedures for attorneys retained or 
employed by an

[[Page 236]]

issuer that has established a qualified legal compliance committee. (1) 
If an attorney, appearing and practicing before the Commission in the 
representation of an issuer, becomes aware of evidence of a material 
violation by the issuer or by any officer, director, employee, or agent 
of the issuer, the attorney may, as an alternative to the reporting 
requirements of paragraph (b) of this section, report such evidence to a 
qualified legal compliance committee, if the issuer has previously 
formed such a committee. An attorney who reports evidence of a material 
violation to such a qualified legal compliance committee has satisfied 
his or her obligation to report such evidence and is not required to 
assess the issuer's response to the reported evidence of a material 
violation.
    (2) A chief legal officer (or the equivalent thereof) may refer a 
report of evidence of a material violation to a previously established 
qualified legal compliance committee in lieu of causing an inquiry to be 
conducted under paragraph (b)(2) of this section. The chief legal 
officer (or the equivalent thereof) shall inform the reporting attorney 
that the report has been referred to a qualified legal compliance 
committee. Thereafter, pursuant to the requirements under Sec. 
205.2(k), the qualified legal compliance committee shall be responsible 
for responding to the evidence of a material violation reported to it 
under this paragraph (c).
    (d) Issuer confidences. (1) Any report under this section (or the 
contemporaneous record thereof) or any response thereto (or the 
contemporaneous record thereof) may be used by an attorney in connection 
with any investigation, proceeding, or litigation in which the 
attorney's compliance with this part is in issue.
    (2) An attorney appearing and practicing before the Commission in 
the representation of an issuer may reveal to the Commission, without 
the issuer's consent, confidential information related to the 
representation to the extent the attorney reasonably believes necessary:
    (i) To prevent the issuer from committing a material violation that 
is likely to cause substantial injury to the financial interest or 
property of the issuer or investors;
    (ii) To prevent the issuer, in a Commission investigation or 
administrative proceeding from committing perjury, proscribed in 18 
U.S.C. 1621; suborning perjury, proscribed in 18 U.S.C. 1622; or 
committing any act proscribed in 18 U.S.C. 1001 that is likely to 
perpetrate a fraud upon the Commission; or
    (iii) To rectify the consequences of a material violation by the 
issuer that caused, or may cause, substantial injury to the financial 
interest or property of the issuer or investors in the furtherance of 
which the attorney's services were used.