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directors criminal liability panama

Directors' Criminal Liability in Panama (2026): Immediate Steps, Defence & Negotiation Strategies for Executives

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: June 7, 2026

Directors’ criminal liability in Panama has entered a new and more perilous phase following two landmark regulatory developments in the first half of 2026. The Ley 517 amendments, effective April 15, 2026, significantly expanded prosecutorial asset-freezing and forfeiture powers, lowering evidentiary thresholds and broadening the scope of provisional seizures against individuals as well as entities. Barely six weeks later, economic-substance measures introduced on May 28, 2026, tightened beneficial-ownership reporting obligations and created new triggers for cross-border information exchange. For directors, general counsel, and high-net-worth executives with Panamanian corporate exposure, the practical effect is immediate: the window to preserve assets, secure privilege, and establish a defensible posture before prosecutors act has narrowed considerably.

If you are a director who has been contacted by prosecutors, received notice of a criminal inquiry, or been subject to an asset freeze in Panama, take these five steps now: (1) Engage experienced criminal counsel before responding to any authority. (2) Issue an immediate legal hold on all documents and electronic data. (3) Inventory and secure personal and corporate assets. (4) Cease non-essential external communications. (5) Convene an emergency board session to authorise a privileged internal investigation.

Immediate Steps for Directors, The 72-Hour Checklist

The first 72 hours after a director becomes aware of a criminal inquiry or asset-freezing order are decisive. Decisions made, or not made, during this window will shape every downstream defence option, from negotiation leverage to the viability of interlocutory challenges. The following step-by-step checklist addresses directors’ criminal liability in Panama at the most urgent and practical level.

Step 0, Safety and Jurisdictional Considerations

Before any legal or corporate action, assess your personal safety and jurisdictional position. If you are physically present in Panama and anticipate imminent arrest or detention, do not attempt to leave the country without counsel’s advice, doing so can trigger additional charges including obstruction or flight risk findings. If you are outside Panama, determine whether the investigation involves mutual legal assistance requests to your country of residence, as cross-border cooperation has intensified under the 2025–2026 enforcement trend.

Step 1, Secure Counsel and Establish Privilege

Engage Panamanian criminal defence counsel with specific experience in corporate penal responsibility. Confirm the retainer in writing and ensure all subsequent communications are routed through counsel to establish privilege from the outset. If in-house counsel is involved, separate the advisory function from any fact-witness role immediately.

Do: Contact counsel by phone (not email) for the initial conversation. Confirm the engagement letter within 24 hours.
Do not: Discuss the substance of the inquiry with colleagues, co-directors, or employees before counsel is in place.

Step 2, Evidence Preservation and Legal Holds

Issue a written legal hold notice to all relevant custodians, IT departments, corporate secretaries, finance teams, instructing them to preserve all documents, emails, messaging-app communications, and electronic records in their original format. Destruction or alteration of evidence after notice of an investigation can constitute a separate criminal offence under Panamanian law and will devastate any future defence or negotiation position.

  • Scope the hold broadly: Cover financial records, board minutes, corporate resolutions, bank correspondence, beneficial-ownership filings, and all communications with regulators.
  • Appoint a hold coordinator: Designate one individual (ideally outside counsel or a counsel-directed paralegal) to manage compliance with the hold.
  • Document everything: Maintain a contemporaneous log of hold issuance, acknowledgments received, and any preservation challenges.

Step 3, Asset Triage

Under the expanded asset-freezing regime introduced by Ley 517 Panama, prosecutors can now obtain provisional seizure orders on shorter notice and with reduced evidentiary burdens. Directors must immediately inventory all personal and corporate assets, bank accounts (domestic and offshore), real property, trust and nominee structures, investment portfolios, and vehicles, and share this inventory with counsel. The objective is not to move assets (which risks obstruction charges) but to understand what is exposed so counsel can prepare interlocutory defences and, where appropriate, offer security or bonds to challenge freeze orders.

Step 4, Communications and Media

Criminal inquiries involving directors frequently attract media attention, particularly in Panama’s concentrated business community. Impose an immediate communications lockdown: no statements to press, no social media commentary, no informal conversations with business associates about the inquiry. Designate a single point of contact (outside counsel or a crisis communications adviser working under counsel’s direction) for any necessary external communication.

Sample internal email (adapt with counsel): “A legal matter requiring confidentiality has arisen. All inquiries from external parties, including media, regulators, or law enforcement, must be directed to [outside counsel contact]. No employee should discuss this matter externally or in writing until further notice.”

Step 5, Board Protocols

Convene an emergency board meeting (or a meeting of the non-conflicted directors) to formally authorise the retention of outside counsel and the commencement of a privileged internal investigation. Document the board’s resolution carefully, it serves as the foundation for privilege claims over the investigation’s work product. If the director under investigation sits on the board, ensure proper conflict-management protocols are followed and that the director recuses from oversight of the investigation.

Panama Legal Framework: Personal Criminal Exposure vs the Corporate Veil

A foundational question for any executive facing a director liability Panama scenario is whether the corporate structure provides a shield against personal criminal charges. The short answer: it does not always protect you. Panamanian law distinguishes between corporate liability and personal liability, and prosecutors have well-established tools to pursue natural persons, including directors, officers, and de facto controllers, for conduct carried out through or on behalf of a legal entity.

Statutory Anchors, The Commercial Code and Beyond

Panama’s Commercial Code, particularly Article 444, establishes the duties of directors in the administration of a corporation and creates a framework for personal accountability when those duties are breached. Directors who act outside the scope of their authority, breach fiduciary obligations, or engage in fraudulent management can face both civil claims for damages and, where the conduct crosses criminal thresholds, prosecution under the Penal Code. Beyond the Commercial Code, specific offences, including money laundering, tax fraud, fraudulent insolvency, and violations of securities and banking regulations, target natural persons directly, irrespective of corporate form.

How Prosecutors Allege Individual Culpability

In practice, Panamanian prosecutors establish personal criminal exposure for executives through several evidentiary routes:

  • Consent or connivance: Evidence that the director authorised, participated in, or knowingly facilitated the criminal conduct.
  • Neglect: Proof that the director failed to exercise reasonable oversight, enabling the offence to occur, particularly relevant in AML compliance failures.
  • De facto control: Where a person exercises actual control over corporate decisions regardless of formal title, prosecutors can treat them as a director for liability purposes.
  • Fraudulent insolvency: Directors who mismanage corporate assets to the detriment of creditors face specific criminal provisions.

Civil vs Criminal Exposure

Directors should understand that civil and criminal proceedings can run in parallel. A civil suit for mismanagement or breach of fiduciary duty does not preclude, and may in fact trigger, a criminal investigation. Conversely, a criminal conviction can be used as the basis for civil asset-recovery actions. Industry observers expect that the 2026 legislative changes will accelerate this overlap, as expanded forfeiture powers under Ley 517 create additional civil-recovery pathways tied to criminal proceedings.

Ley 517 (April 15, 2026), Asset Freezing and Forfeiture Powers in Panama

The Ley 517 amendments, which took effect on April 15, 2026, represent the most significant expansion of asset-freezing powers in Panama in over a decade. For directors, the practical implications are immediate and far-reaching: the state can now restrain assets faster, on a broader basis, and with fewer procedural hurdles than under the prior regime.

What Changed, Expanded Scope and Lower Thresholds

Ley 517 Panama broadened the categories of assets subject to provisional seizure, extended freezing authority to assets held through nominee structures and trusts, and reduced the evidentiary standard that prosecutors must meet to obtain a freeze order. The likely practical effect is that prosecutors will be able to secure provisional restraint before formal charges are filed in a wider range of cases, particularly those involving allegations of money laundering, fraud, or economic crimes linked to corporate vehicles.

How Freezes Are Obtained

Under the amended framework, prosecutors file a motion before an investigative judge (Juez de Garantías) seeking a provisional asset-freezing order. Emergency freezes, obtained ex parte, without prior notice to the asset holder, remain available in cases where the prosecutor demonstrates a risk of asset dissipation. The judge’s order is enforceable immediately upon issuance and is communicated directly to banks, registries, and custodians.

Practical Steps to Challenge an Asset Freeze

Speed is essential. Directors and their counsel should take the following steps upon learning of an asset-freezing order:

  1. Obtain and review the order: Secure a certified copy of the freeze order and any supporting prosecutor motion. Identify the legal basis, scope, and any conditions.
  2. File an interlocutory challenge: Petition the court for a hearing to contest the freeze on grounds such as disproportionality, lack of evidentiary basis, or procedural irregularity.
  3. Offer security or a bond: In many cases, proposing a cash bond or bank guarantee as an alternative to a blanket freeze can persuade the court to release specific assets needed for living expenses, legal fees, or ongoing business operations.
  4. Request expedited hearing: Panamanian procedural rules allow parties to seek urgent hearings where freezes threaten irreparable harm, counsel should press for the earliest available date.
  5. Appeal: If the interlocutory challenge is denied, appeal to the superior tribunal. Preserve all arguments in writing for the appellate record.

If you only do one thing: Get a certified copy of the freeze order into counsel’s hands within 24 hours and file the interlocutory challenge immediately.

Economic-Substance and Cross-Border Enforcement (May 28, 2026)

The economic-substance measures that took effect on May 28, 2026, add a second layer of exposure for directors with Panamanian corporate interests. These rules tighten beneficial-ownership disclosure requirements and create new reporting triggers that feed directly into AML enforcement channels and cross-border information-sharing mechanisms.

Why This Increases Cross-Border Cooperation

Panama’s enhanced substance requirements align the jurisdiction more closely with FATF and OECD standards for transparency. Early indications suggest that foreign authorities, particularly in the United States, the European Union, and Latin American partner jurisdictions, are already leveraging the new data flows to identify beneficial owners, trace assets, and initiate mutual legal assistance requests. For directors who sit across multiple jurisdictions, this means that information disclosed under Panama’s economic-substance regime may surface in foreign investigations.

Practical Director Risks and Mitigation

The most immediate risk is that enhanced beneficial-ownership data will be used by prosecutors to pierce the corporate veil and establish personal criminal exposure for executives in Panama and beyond. Directors should work with counsel to:

  • Audit existing structures: Review all trust, nominee, and holding-company arrangements for compliance with the new substance requirements.
  • Update filings proactively: Ensure beneficial-ownership registrations are current and accurate, inaccuracies or omissions are themselves potential offences.
  • Exercise caution with restructuring: Any restructuring undertaken after the rules’ effective date will face heightened scrutiny; document the legitimate business purpose of every change.

Conducting and Managing Internal Investigations in Panama

When a director faces a criminal inquiry, the company itself must often conduct a parallel internal investigation, both to understand its own exposure and to prepare for potential cooperation or defence. Managing a Panama corporate investigation properly is critical to preserving privilege, controlling the narrative, and avoiding the creation of evidence that prosecutors can weaponise.

Preserving Privilege in Panama, Best Practices

  • Retain outside counsel to direct the investigation: All investigation activities, interviews, document review, forensic collection, should be conducted at the direction of and under the supervision of outside counsel to maximise privilege protection.
  • Label all work product: Mark documents, memos, and interview notes as “privileged and confidential, prepared at the direction of counsel.”
  • Limit distribution: Share investigation findings only on a strict need-to-know basis. Wider dissemination can waive privilege.
  • Separate fact-gathering from business decisions: Do not use investigation memos as the basis for operational decisions without counsel’s clearance, doing so risks characterising the memo as a business document rather than privileged work product.

Forensic Collection and Cross-Border ESI

Electronic evidence, emails, messaging-app data, cloud-stored documents, is frequently decisive in corporate criminal cases. Engage a forensic vendor experienced in Panamanian data-protection rules to create forensically defensible copies of all relevant data. Where data is stored across borders, assess applicable data-privacy and blocking-statute constraints before transferring any information. Host evidence in a jurisdiction and on infrastructure agreed with counsel to avoid inadvertent disclosure.

Defence Strategies, Negotiation and Cooperative Resolution in Panama

Once the immediate crisis is managed, directors must make a strategic decision that will define the remainder of the case: whether to cooperate with prosecutors, contest the charges aggressively, or pursue a negotiated resolution. The right approach depends on the strength of the evidence, the director’s personal exposure, the company’s position, and the available procedural tools. The ability to negotiate with prosecutors in Panama effectively requires a clear-eyed assessment of leverage on both sides.

Tactical Decision Matrix, When to Cooperate vs When to Fight

Factor Favours cooperation Favours contesting
Strength of evidence against the director Strong, well-documented evidence of personal involvement Weak or circumstantial evidence; prosecution theory relies on imputed liability
Asset-freeze exposure Broad freeze in place; cooperation may unlock partial release Narrow or challengeable freeze; interlocutory remedies likely to succeed
Cross-border dimensions Foreign authorities involved; coordinated resolution may prevent multiple proceedings No foreign interest; case is purely domestic and containable
Corporate vs personal alignment Company is cooperating; director’s interests are aligned Company’s interests diverge from director’s; cooperation may harm personal position
Reputational considerations Early resolution minimises public exposure Director’s reputation depends on full vindication

Negotiation Scripts and Sample Concession Language

Where the decision is made to pursue cooperative resolution in Panama, counsel should prepare structured proposals for the prosecutor’s office. The following frameworks should be adapted by local counsel to the specific case:

  • Voluntary disclosure opener: “Our client wishes to cooperate fully with the investigation and is prepared to provide [specified categories of documents/testimony] in exchange for [defined concessions regarding charges/asset release].”
  • Conditional cooperation framework: “Cooperation is offered on the understanding that the information provided will be used solely for [stated purposes] and that [specific protections, e.g., no use of disclosed information in parallel civil proceedings] will be guaranteed in writing.”
  • Mitigation narrative: “Our client’s role was limited to [specific, defined activities]. The following evidence demonstrates [remedial steps taken, compliance improvements implemented, restitution offered].”

Note: These templates are illustrative and must be adapted by qualified Panamanian counsel to the facts and procedural posture of each case. They do not constitute legal advice.

Practical Effects on Corporate vs Personal Exposure

A critical consideration in any cooperative resolution is how concessions at the corporate level affect the director personally, and vice versa. In practice, a company’s cooperation agreement may include provisions that release the entity from penalties while explicitly preserving the right to prosecute individual directors. Conversely, a director’s personal cooperation may provide the evidentiary basis for charges against the company. Counsel must map these interdependencies before any disclosure is made and negotiate protections for the client, whether corporate or individual, explicitly and in writing.

Practical Templates and Communications

The following templates are provided as starting frameworks only. Each must be adapted by qualified Panamanian counsel to the circumstances of the specific case.

(a) Director “Call Counsel” Script

“I have been contacted by [authority/investigator name] regarding [brief description]. I have not made any statements and have not provided any documents. I need to engage counsel immediately. Please advise on next steps, including evidence preservation, asset protection, and whether I should remain in/travel to Panama.”

(b) Board Resolution Template, Authorising Internal Investigation

“RESOLVED, that the Board of Directors of [Company Name] hereby authorises the retention of [Outside Counsel Firm] to conduct a privileged internal investigation into [defined scope]. All officers, directors, and employees are directed to cooperate with the investigation and to preserve all documents and communications as instructed. The investigation shall be conducted under the direction and supervision of outside counsel, and all work product shall be treated as privileged and confidential.”

(c) Petition Outline, Challenging an Asset-Freezing Order

Petition to [Court], Case No. [X]. The petitioner respectfully requests that the provisional asset-freezing order dated [date] be vacated or modified on the following grounds: [1] Disproportionality, the scope of the freeze exceeds what is necessary to protect the investigation’s objectives. [2] Lack of evidentiary basis, the prosecutor’s motion fails to meet the required standard. [3] The petitioner offers [bond/security] as an alternative to the blanket freeze. [4] The freeze causes irreparable harm to [the petitioner’s ability to fund legal defence / maintain business operations / meet family obligations].

Timeline of Key Legislative Dates for Directors’ Criminal Liability in Panama

Date Law / Rule Why It Matters for Directors
April 15, 2026 Ley 517, asset-freezing & forfeiture amendments Expanded provisional seizure powers and broader grounds for asset restraint; immediate practical effect on directors’ ability to move or shield assets.
May 28, 2026 Economic-substance measures (2026 update) Tightened reporting and beneficial-ownership rules, increasing cross-border information sharing and enforcement triggers.
2025–2026 (ongoing) Increased AML / prosecutorial cooperation Growing trend of cross-border cases and mutual legal assistance requests, increases prosecutorial leverage in negotiations.

Conclusion, Your 5-Step Urgent Action Plan

Directors’ criminal liability in Panama has never carried greater personal risk than it does in mid-2026. The combination of expanded asset-freezing powers, heightened beneficial-ownership scrutiny, and intensified cross-border cooperation means that the margin for error, and the window for protective action, is vanishingly small. Execute these five steps without delay:

  1. Engage experienced Panamanian criminal defence counsel before responding to any authority, investigator, or media inquiry.
  2. Issue an immediate legal hold on all documents, electronic data, and communications across every relevant custodian.
  3. Inventory and secure all personal and corporate assets, share the full picture with counsel so interlocutory defences can be prepared.
  4. Impose a communications lockdown, designate a single spokesperson and prohibit all informal discussions about the inquiry.
  5. Convene an emergency board session to authorise a privileged internal investigation under outside counsel’s direction.

This article provides general legal information and does not constitute legal advice. Directors and executives facing criminal exposure in Panama should seek immediate advice from qualified local counsel.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Pardini & Asociados, Directors liability in Panama
  2. Pacífica Legal, Shareholders’ & directors’ liability
  3. ARIFA, Corporate Governance guide
  4. Icaza, González-Ruiz & Alemán, Responsibility of directors
  5. Kraemer & Kraemer, Entities criminal responsibility
  6. Asamblea Nacional de Panamá, Official legislation portal
  7. Ministerio Público (Prosecutor’s Office) Panama
  8. FATF, Financial Action Task Force
  9. OECD, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

FAQs

What should a director do immediately after receiving a criminal investigation notice in Panama?
Call experienced criminal counsel, issue a legal hold on all documents and data, stop non-essential communications, inventory and secure assets, and make no voluntary statements until counsel is present and advising.
Not always. Prosecutors can pursue directors personally where evidence shows consent, connivance, neglect, or fraudulent conduct. The corporate veil does not automatically shield natural persons from criminal prosecution.
Freezes under Ley 517 can be provisional and remain in effect until lifted by court order. Challenge them by filing an interlocutory motion, offering security or a bond, and seeking an expedited hearing, act within 24 hours.
Options include voluntary disclosure, negotiated settlements, mitigation pleas, and formal cooperation agreements. Cooperating can reduce exposure but may require admissions, weigh corporate versus personal tradeoffs with counsel.
Yes, where evidence ties a natural person to the criminal acts. Prosecutors use beneficial-ownership data, board records, and communications to establish individual culpability, particularly in fraud and money-laundering cases.
Conduct the investigation under outside counsel’s direction, label all work product as privileged and confidential, limit distribution strictly, and use counsel-directed notes for all witness interviews and document review.
Avoid all asset transfers once an inquiry is known or anticipated. Moving assets during an active investigation risks criminal charges for obstruction or concealment. Seek counsel’s advice before any financial transaction.

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Directors' Criminal Liability in Panama (2026): Immediate Steps, Defence & Negotiation Strategies for Executives

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