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When a Finnish board discovers credible evidence of corporate wrongdoing, fraud, bribery, a sanctions breach, environmental crime, it faces a binary fork: self‑report to police or prosecutors now (Option A), or run an internal investigation first and defer external disclosure (Option B). The choice between self‑report vs internal investigation in Finland in 2026 carries materially higher stakes than it did even two years ago, because recent Criminal Code amendments and sanctions‑enforcement reforms have expanded corporate liability, raised maximum fines, and sharpened prosecutorial expectations around cooperation.
This guide provides the board‑level decision matrix that no other Finland‑specific resource currently offers, dimension by dimension, with concrete counsel‑call triggers, so that directors, GCs, CFOs and compliance officers can act decisively within the first 72 hours of discovery.
Self‑reporting corporate crime in Finland means the company, acting through its board or authorised representative, voluntarily notifies the police or prosecutor that it has discovered (or reasonably suspects) criminal conduct within the organisation. The practical steps are straightforward but sequencing matters:
An internal investigation means the company examines the suspected wrongdoing itself, typically through external counsel and forensic specialists, before deciding whether, when and how to report externally. For the investigation to be defensible if later scrutinised by authorities, it must meet several conditions:
The following table is the centrepiece of this analysis. Each dimension answers one question: what changes materially depending on whether the board reports or investigates internally?
| Dimension | Self‑Report to Police / Prosecutor (Option A) | Internal Investigation Only (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| When to use | Misconduct is material, criminal in nature, likely to be discovered, or cooperation credit is strategically important. | Facts are preliminary, possibly non‑criminal, or privilege and containment are essential while evidence is gathered. |
| Immediate actions | Board resolution; evidence preservation; engage criminal counsel; notify insurers; prepare public statement. | Isolate personnel/systems; appoint independent external investigator; preserve evidence; restrict access to need‑to‑know. |
| Confidentiality & privilege | Limited, materials enter criminal file; notes and evidence may become accessible to all parties. | Better prospect if structured through external counsel, but Finnish privilege is narrow; careful distribution controls required. |
| Evidence handling | Formal chain of custody; immediate disclosure on authority request; risk of subpoenas. | Forensic integrity can be established before any external disclosure; remediation steps identified first. |
| Timing to resolution | Triggers official criminal process; timeline controlled by prosecutor (months to years). | Faster internal fact‑finding (weeks to months); delays external exposure but risk of later discovery. |
| Direct costs | Criminal counsel + forensics + potential fines (see cost table below). | Investigation costs (counsel, forensics, HR); potential higher fines later if no cooperation credit. |
| Financial penalties | 2026 reforms increase corporate exposure; early cooperation may reduce penalty outcome. | Same eventual exposure if wrongdoing surfaces; mitigation credit substantially reduced or unavailable. |
| Director / officer exposure | Cooperation may reduce individual sanctions; however, reporting may trigger direct investigation of board members. | May limit immediate personal exposure if remediation occurs; but later disclosure may not prevent prosecution. |
| Insurance & D&O | Prompt notification satisfies policy terms; insurer consent clauses engaged early. | Investigation costs may be covered; ultimate D&O exposure depends on final enforcement outcome. |
| Reputational risk | Public reporting draws media and regulator attention. | Lower initial visibility; risk of far larger reputational damage if later perceived as cover‑up. |
Key takeaways from the comparison:
Each dimension below unpacks what changes, for the company, the board and individual officers, depending on whether you report to police or handle the matter internally.
Under Chapter 9 of the Finnish Criminal Code (Rikoslaki), a legal person (corporation, foundation, association) can be sentenced to a corporate fine when an offence has been committed in its operations. The 2026 legislative landscape significantly increases the stakes. In the sanctions‑violation context specifically, commentary from leading Finnish firms notes that the maximum corporate fine has been set at five percent of the entity’s turnover, with a minimum of EUR 850,000 and a substantially higher maximum ceiling. These figures reflect the trend toward turnover‑based penalties aligned with EU enforcement standards.
Mitigation through self‑report matters here. Prosecutors retain discretion to weigh the company’s cooperation, the speed and completeness of disclosure, and the effectiveness of remediation when recommending penalties. Early, truthful cooperation does not guarantee a lower fine, but it is the single most controllable variable the board has.
| Cost item | Self‑Report (Option A) | Internal Investigation (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| External counsel & forensics | Required from day one; costs escalate if prosecution widens scope. | Same initial outlay; may be higher if parallel criminal investigation later forces duplication. |
| Corporate fines (sanctions context) | Up to 5% of turnover (minimum EUR 850,000); cooperation may reduce outcome. | Same statutory exposure; mitigation credit reduced or unavailable if discovery is involuntary. |
| D&O / insurance recovery | Prompt notification supports coverage; insurer consent clauses engaged early. | Investigation costs often covered; late notification risks policy‑term breach and denial of coverage. |
| Opportunity cost & disruption | Public scrutiny disrupts operations; management time diverted to authority engagement. | Investigation disrupts internally; lower external disruption unless matter surfaces later. |
Finland does not recognise a broad attorney–client privilege over internal investigation reports in the way common‑law jurisdictions do. The practical protections available are narrow:
The practical implication: if privilege preservation is a priority, structure the investigation through external counsel from the outset and consider a phased disclosure strategy rather than a wholesale document dump to police.
Filing a police report triggers the official criminal process. The police will assess whether to commence a pre‑trial investigation, which can take months or years to complete. The company has limited control over the timeline once the report is filed.
An internal investigation can typically produce preliminary findings within weeks. The board then chooses whether and when to notify prosecutors, but the window for earning cooperation credit narrows with every passing week. Industry observers expect that, under the 2026 enforcement posture, authorities will scrutinise the gap between discovery and disclosure more closely than in prior years.
In regulated sectors, financial services, energy, pharmaceuticals, self‑reporting corporate crime to police does not discharge the separate obligation to notify the sectoral regulator (FIN‑FSA, Tukes, Fimea or equivalent). Boards must run parallel notification tracks. Failure to notify a sectoral regulator can trigger independent administrative sanctions.
D&O insurers require notification of circumstances that may give rise to a claim. Most policies contain consent clauses that prohibit the insured from admitting liability or settling without insurer approval. Self‑reporting to police without first engaging the insurer can jeopardise coverage. The sequence should always be: engage counsel → notify insurer → report to police.
Reputationally, early voluntary disclosure is generally viewed more favourably by markets and regulators than a forced revelation. The reputational calculus has shifted in 2026: with higher fines and broader corporate liability, a company that is discovered to have concealed wrongdoing faces not just legal penalties but sustained public trust damage.
The 2026 Criminal Code amendments and related sanctions‑violation regulations have materially altered the decision calculus for boards weighing self‑report vs internal investigation in Finland. Three changes matter most:
The net effect: the cost of inaction, or of delayed reporting, has increased. Boards should engage criminal counsel earlier, preserve evidence more rigorously, and default toward structured disclosure rather than indefinite internal containment.
Use the triggers below as a practical board decision matrix for reporting suspected corporate crime in Finland.
Choose self‑report (Option A) when:
Choose internal investigation first (Option B) when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Rapid remediation and confidentiality | Internal investigation (Option B) |
| Limiting criminal penalties and securing cooperation credit | Self‑report (Option A) |
| Protecting evidence while obtaining counsel | Start internal investigation with criminal counsel; plan timed voluntary disclosure |
| Meeting insurer notification obligations | Engage insurer immediately, then decide reporting path with criminal counsel |
Certain triggers require immediate engagement of criminal counsel, before the board takes any external action. Contact a criminal lawyer in Finland when any of the following apply:
Recommended counsel roles: criminal counsel for exposure assessment and authority engagement; employment counsel for disciplinary action and dismissals; external forensic specialists for evidence preservation; PR / crisis communications counsel for stakeholder management.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Annastiina Latvasaho at Salingre Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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