[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 45, Volume 1]

[Revised as of October 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 45CFR73.735-1003]



[Page 192-193]

 

                        TITLE 45--PUBLIC WELFARE

 

                    SUBTITLE A--DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

                           AND HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 73_STANDARDS OF CONDUCT--Table of Contents

 

   Subpart J_Provisions Relating to Experts, Consultants and Advisory 

                            Committee Members

 

Sec.  73.735-1003  Conflicts of interest statutes.



    (a) Each consultant should acquaint himself or herself with sections 

203, 205, 207 and 208 of title 18, United States Code, all of which 

carry criminal penalties related to conflicts of interest. The 

restraints imposed by the four criminal sections are summarized in 

paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.

    (b) 18 U.S.C. 203 and 205.

    (1) These two sections in general operate to preclude a person who 

works for the Government, except in the discharge of his or her official 

duties, from representing anyone else before a court or Government 

agency in a matter in which the United States is a party or has a direct 

and substantial interest. The prohibition applies whether or not 

compensation is received for the representation. However, if the 

individual is a special Government employee, this restriction applies 

only if:

    (i) The representation involves a matter in which the individual has 

at any time participated personally and substantially in the course of 

his or her Government employment; or

    (ii) The individual has served the Department for more than 60 days 

in the immediately preceding period of 365 days, and the matter is one 

which is pending before the Department. This second restraint applies 

whether or not the matter is one in which the individual participated 

personally and substantially in his or her Government employment. These 

two provisions apply to a special Government employee on days when he or 

she does not serve the Government as well as on the days when services 

are rendered, and they apply to both paid and unpaid representation.

    (2) To a considerable extent the prohibitions of sections 203 and 

205 are aimed at the sale of influence to gain special favors for 

private businesses and other organizations and at the misuse of 

governmental position or information. In accordance with these aims, a 

consultant, even when not compelled to do so by sections 203 and 205, 

should make every effort in his or her private work to avoid any 

personal contact with respect to negotiations for contracts or grants 

with the component of the department in which he or she is serving, if 

the subject matter is related to the subject matter of his or her 

consultancy or other service. This will not always be possible to 

achieve where, for example, a consultant has an executive position with 

his or her regular employer which requires him or her to participate 

personally in contract negotiations with the department or agency he or 

she is advising. Whenever this is the case, the consultant should 

participate in the negotiations for his or her employer only after 

advising the responsible Government official of his or her involvement 

in other matters in the Department. In other instances an occasional 

consultant may have technical knowledge which is indispensable to his or 

her regular employer in his efforts to formulate a research and 

development contract or a research grant, and for the same reason, it is 

in the interest of the Government that the consultant should take part 

in negotiations for his or her private employer. Again, the individual 

should participate only after advising the responsible Government 

official of the relevant facts.

    (3) Section 205 permits both the Government and the private employer 

of a special Government employee to benefit, in certain cases, from his 

or her performance of work under a grant or contract for which he or she 

would otherwise be disqualified because of having participated in the 

matter for the Government or because it is pending in a component in 

which the consultant had served more than 60 days in the past year. This 

provision gives the head of a department the authority, notwithstanding 

any prohibition in either section 203 or 205, to allow a special 

Government employee to represent before such department or agency either 

his or her regular employer or another person or organization in the 

performance of work under a grant or contract. As a basis for this 

action, the Secretary must first make a certification in writing, 

published in the Federal Register, that it is required by the national 

interest.



[[Page 193]]



    (4) Section 205 contains two other exemptive provisions, which apply 

to both special and regular Government employees. See Sec.  73.735-702.

    (c) 18 U.S.C. 207 applies to individuals who have left Government 

service. See Subpart N of these regulations.

    (d) 18 U.S.C. 208 bears on the activities of Government personnel, 

including special Government employees, in the course of their official 

duties. In general, it prevents a Government employee from participating 

as such in a particular matter in which, to his or her knowledge, he or 

she, his or her spouse, minor child, partner, or a profit or non-profit 

enterprise with which he or she is connected has a financial interest. 

However, the section permits an employee's agency to grant him or her an 

ad hoc exemption if the interest is not so substantial as to affect the 

integrity of his or her services. Insignificant interests may also be 

waived by a general rule or regulation. The matters in which special 

Government employees are disqualified by section 208 are not limited to 

those involving a specific party or parties in which the United States 

is a party or has an interest, as in the case of sections 203, 205 and 

207. Section 208 therefore extends to matters in addition to contracts, 

grants, judicial and quasi-judicial proceedings, and other matters of an 

adversary nature. Accordingly, a special Government employee, like all 

government employees, should in general be disqualified from 

participating as such in a matter of any type the outcome of which will 

have a direct and predictable effect upon the financial interests 

covered by the section.



However, the power of exemption may be exercised in this situation if 

the special Government employee renders advice of a general nature from 

which no preference or advantage over others might be gained by any 

particular person or organization. The power of exemption may also be 

exercised where the financial interests involved are minimal in value.