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Panama corporate criminal liability 2026 has moved to the top of the boardroom agenda as a wave of legislative and prosecutorial reforms reshapes the risk landscape for every company operating in or through the jurisdiction. The country’s Ministry of Economy and Finance (MEF) initiated an involuntary dissolution process for legal entities reported on 6 February 2026, while expanded asset-recovery powers, strengthened cross-border cooperation mechanisms and accelerated criminal procedures have given prosecutors new tools to target corporate financial crime. For general counsel, compliance officers and directors, the practical question is no longer whether Panama will enforce these measures but how quickly, and what internal controls must change now to avoid exposure.
The following bullet points capture the most important developments and recommended actions for boards and senior leadership teams. Each point is expanded in the detailed sections below.
Corporate criminal liability in Panama arises when a legal entity is implicated in a criminal offence, either directly through its operations or indirectly through the acts or omissions of its directors, officers, employees or agents acting within the scope of their duties. Panama’s legislative framework against financial crime has been progressively strengthened, creating multiple pathways through which corporate penal responsibility can be established. Unlike purely common-law systems that may require a specific “identification doctrine,” Panamanian law allows prosecution where the offence was committed for the entity’s benefit or where the entity failed to implement adequate preventive controls.
| Offence category | Examples | Key legal basis |
|---|---|---|
| Money laundering | Layering proceeds through Panamanian accounts or shell entities | Panama Penal Code; AML/CFT statutes |
| Bribery and corruption | Payments to public officials, facilitation payments | Penal Code anti-corruption provisions |
| Tax fraud | Evasion of fiscal obligations, fraudulent declarations | Tax Code; MEF administrative enforcement |
| Environmental offences | Illegal dumping, permit violations | Environmental regulatory framework |
| Corporate administrative breaches | Failure to maintain registered agent, failure to file beneficial-ownership declarations | Commercial Code; MEF dissolution powers |
| Financial crime / fraud | Securities fraud, embezzlement, forgery | Penal Code; securities regulations |
Prosecutors must generally demonstrate that the offence was committed within the framework of the entity’s activities and that a natural person acting on behalf of the entity participated in or facilitated the conduct. Where a company lacked adequate internal controls, for instance, no anti-money-laundering programme or no compliance officer, that organisational deficiency itself can serve as evidence of corporate fault. The standard of proof remains “beyond reasonable doubt” for criminal convictions, but the administrative-dissolution pathway operated by the MEF applies a lower threshold, making it a faster enforcement lever for the authorities.
The 2025–2026 reform cycle represents the most significant overhaul of Panama’s corporate enforcement toolkit in over a decade. The reforms tighten both criminal-procedure mechanisms and the administrative powers available to the MEF and the Ministerio Público. Below is a chronological quick-reference table summarising the key changes and the immediate action each demands from companies.
| Reform date | Reform / enforcement tool | Immediate action for companies |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 (legislative cycle) | Strengthened provisions for prosecuting financial crimes, including broader definitions of proceeds of crime and expanded predicate offences for money laundering | Update AML risk assessments to reflect wider scope of predicate offences; brief compliance teams |
| 2025–2026 | Expanded prosecutorial asset-recovery and forfeiture powers, enabling faster judicial freezing of corporate assets linked to suspected criminal activity | Establish freeze-response protocol; pre-identify emergency counsel and banking contacts |
| 6 February 2026 | MEF initiates involuntary dissolution process for legal entities failing to meet statutory obligations | Audit corporate records immediately; confirm registered-agent status, tax filings and beneficial-ownership declarations within 14 days |
| 2026 (ongoing) | Strengthened cross-border cooperation and evidence-sharing frameworks with foreign prosecutorial authorities | Review transborder data-access agreements; update legal-hold policies for multi-jurisdictional scenarios |
| 2026 (ongoing) | Accelerated criminal-procedure timelines for financial-crime cases, reducing pre-trial delays | Ensure defence counsel is on retainer; internal-investigation SOPs must allow rapid fact-gathering |
Beyond the legislative text, regional investigative trends indicate that Latin American prosecutors are prioritising corporate misconduct cases involving multi-jurisdictional money flows, especially those touching Panama’s financial-services sector. The Ministerio Público has signalled increased collaboration with counterparts in the United States, Colombia and the European Union, and industry observers expect the number of formal investigations opened against legal entities to rise materially through the remainder of 2026.
Understanding which authorities are involved and what powers they hold is essential for any Panama corporate criminal liability 2026 compliance programme. Multiple institutions now share enforcement responsibility, each with distinct tools that can be deployed, sometimes simultaneously, against a corporate target.
Panama’s enforcement framework now explicitly facilitates joint investigations and simultaneous evidence-gathering with foreign authorities. According to Chambers Practice Guides, the jurisdiction’s litigation environment is evolving toward greater procedural efficiency and transparency. For companies, the practical risk is that an investigation originating overseas, for example, a US Department of Justice inquiry or an EU anti-money-laundering probe, can rapidly translate into Panamanian prosecutorial action through formal cooperation channels. Freezing orders can be imposed on Panamanian bank accounts within days of a foreign request.
Director liability in Panama extends beyond the entity itself. Natural persons who direct, authorise, participate in or fail to prevent corporate criminal conduct can face individual prosecution, imprisonment and personal asset forfeiture. The 2025–2026 reforms have reinforced prosecutors’ ability to reach individuals hiding behind corporate structures, making personal criminal exposure a concrete, not theoretical, risk for directors and senior executives.
While specific case names are subject to judicial confidentiality, the pattern emerging from recent enforcement actions across Latin America, including those documented by Global Investigations Review, highlights recurring red flags: directors who approve payments without documented business justification, boards that fail to minute compliance discussions, and officers who override internal-control alerts. Companies should ensure that board minutes record compliance deliberations, that D&O insurance is reviewed annually, and that escalation protocols require written sign-off at every stage.
The expanded asset-recovery framework in Panama distinguishes between criminal forfeiture, where assets are seized following a conviction or as part of criminal proceedings, and civil recovery mechanisms that can operate independently of a criminal prosecution. The 2025–2026 reforms have shortened the timelines for obtaining freezing orders, broadened the categories of assets that can be targeted and improved the coordination between Panamanian authorities and their international counterparts.
| Measure | Who issues it | Immediate company action |
|---|---|---|
| Precautionary asset freeze | Judge (on prosecutor’s application) | Contact counsel immediately; do not move or dissipate frozen assets; notify insurers and banking partners |
| Criminal forfeiture order | Criminal court (post-conviction or by agreement) | Challenge scope through defence counsel; document legitimate asset origin proactively |
| Administrative dissolution / strike-off | MEF | Audit corporate records for compliance gaps; file remedial documents before dissolution deadline |
Panama AML compliance is under more intense scrutiny than at any point in the past decade. Regulatory expectations now require companies, not just banks and financial institutions, to maintain robust anti-money-laundering controls proportionate to their risk profile. The likely practical effect of the 2025–2026 reforms will be that prosecutors treat the absence of a documented AML programme as an aggravating factor in any corporate criminal investigation.
The following 30/60/90-day remediation roadmap provides a structured approach:
Third-party relationships, agents, intermediaries, joint-venture partners and vendors, represent one of the highest-risk vectors for corporate criminal liability in Panama. Every onboarding process should include verification of the counterparty’s beneficial ownership, screening against sanctions and politically exposed persons lists, a documented risk assessment, and contractual clauses reserving audit rights and requiring compliance representations. Where the counterparty operates in a higher-risk sector (such as crypto-asset services), enhanced due diligence is mandatory from the outset.
When a company receives notice of a criminal investigation, a subpoena or an unannounced raid, the first hours are decisive. A disorganised response can inadvertently destroy evidence, waive legal privilege or escalate the matter from a preliminary inquiry into formal charges. The timeline below sets out the recommended corporate criminal defense Panama response framework.
Panama does not yet operate a formal statutory self-reporting regime equivalent to those found in the United States or the United Kingdom. However, early indications suggest that prosecutors and regulators view proactive cooperation favourably when determining charges and penalties. Industry observers expect cooperation credit, reduced fines, avoidance of dissolution proceedings or deferred prosecution arrangements, to become a more formalised feature of the enforcement landscape as the reforms mature. Any decision to self-report must be taken only after thorough legal analysis and on the advice of specialist criminal-law counsel.
Once an investigation has progressed, companies facing potential corporate criminal liability in Panama have several strategic options. Defence counsel may challenge the legal basis of the prosecution, the admissibility of evidence, the scope of freezing or forfeiture orders, or the sufficiency of proof of corporate fault. Where the evidence is strong, negotiated resolutions, including remediation agreements, compliance undertakings and monitored probationary periods, may offer a path to resolving the matter without a full trial.
Globally, jurisdictions are increasingly adopting deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) and corporate integrity agreements as alternatives to conviction. The CMS international update on corporate criminal liability notes that the trend toward negotiated corporate outcomes continues to accelerate across civil- and common-law systems alike. While Panama’s framework is still developing in this area, the direction of travel is clear: companies that demonstrate genuine remediation, cooperate with investigators and invest in compliance infrastructure are better positioned to secure favourable outcomes than those that adopt a purely adversarial posture.
The following actions can be implemented immediately to reduce your company’s exposure to the reformed enforcement environment:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mijail Castillo Rivera at JMC & Asociados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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