[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to defend white collar crime

How to Defend White Collar Crime Charges in Poland (2026): Counsel Timing, Settlements & Executive Protection

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Knowing how to defend white collar crime charges in Poland has become a more urgent concern for directors, CFOs and in-house counsel since the Polish Penal Code amendments that took effect on 29 January 2026. Those reforms expanded the scope of directors’ criminal liability for economic offences, tightened sentencing ranges for certain corporate fraud categories and, critically, reshaped the settlement and cooperation mechanisms available during prosecution. This guide provides a step-by-step defensive playbook, from the first 24 hours of an investigation through to post-resolution remediation, built specifically for executives operating in, or overseeing subsidiaries within, the Polish jurisdiction.

Every section is designed to be immediately actionable, with checklists, decision trees and comparison tables that strip away academic generality and focus on what to do now.

Quick Summary and Immediate Three-Step Checklist

If your company or a senior officer has just been notified of a criminal investigation, search warrant or arrest, the following three actions should be taken before anything else.

  • Step 1, Retain specialist criminal defence counsel immediately. Do not rely on corporate or commercial lawyers for criminal procedure. Engage a defence advocate (adwokat) with documented white-collar trial experience within hours, not days.
  • Step 2, Issue a litigation hold and preserve all documents. Instruct IT, finance and HR to suspend any routine document-destruction schedules. Circulate a written hold notice to all potentially relevant custodians. Destroying evidence, even inadvertently, can create separate criminal exposure under the Polish Penal Code.
  • Step 3, Limit employee statements to law enforcement. No employee should provide a substantive statement to police or prosecutors without first consulting with defence counsel. The right to counsel attaches from the moment of detention or formal suspect notification.

This article covers what happens next: how to scope the investigation internally, when and how to engage different types of advisers, how settlement mechanisms work under the revised criminal procedure, and how to defend directors in Poland against personal liability.

What Counts as White-Collar Crime in Poland

Typical Offences Under Polish Law

White-collar crime Poland prosecutions most commonly involve offences codified across the Penal Code (Kodeks karny), the Fiscal Penal Code (Kodeks karny skarbowy) and sector-specific legislation. The principal categories that trigger investigations against executives include fraud (Article 286 of the Penal Code), embezzlement and misappropriation of corporate assets (Article 284), bribery of public officials (Articles 228–230a), insider trading and market manipulation under the Act on Trading in Financial Instruments, and tax fraud offences under the Fiscal Penal Code. Money laundering (Article 299) has also seen increased prosecutorial focus since 2024.

Who Is at Risk, Directors, Supervisory Boards, CFOs

Directors’ criminal liability extends well beyond the management board (zarząd). Supervisory board members (rada nadzorcza), chief financial officers, compliance officers and even mid-level managers who hold delegated authority may face personal exposure. The 2026 amendments widened the definition of a “person responsible for corporate affairs” in economic offence provisions, capturing anyone who exercises actual decision-making power, regardless of formal title.

Offence category Typical investigative triggers Usual prosecuting authority
Fraud / embezzlement (Arts 284, 286 KK) Whistleblower reports, audit discrepancies, creditor complaints District Prosecutor’s Office (Prokuratura Rejonowa)
Bribery / corruption (Arts 228–230a KK) CBA (Central Anti-Corruption Bureau) intelligence, tender irregularities Regional or National Prosecutor’s Office
Tax fraud (Fiscal Penal Code) KAS (National Revenue Administration) audits, VAT carousel flags Fiscal Prosecutor / KAS criminal unit
Insider trading / market manipulation KNF (Financial Supervision Authority) surveillance alerts Regional Prosecutor’s Office with KNF referral
Money laundering (Art 299 KK) GIIF (General Inspector of Financial Information) STR analysis Regional or National Prosecutor’s Office

Key Changes in the Polish Penal Code Effective 29 January 2026

The Polish Penal Code 2026 amendments, published in the Dziennik Ustaw (Official Journal of Laws) and entering into force on 29 January 2026, represent the most significant overhaul of economic-offence provisions since the 2023 reform wave. Understanding these changes is essential for any executive or counsel attempting to defend white collar crime charges under the new framework.

The headline amendments affecting corporate and economic offences include the following:

  • Expanded definition of persons bearing criminal responsibility. The amendments broadened the category of individuals who may be held personally liable for corporate economic offences to include any person exercising “actual management authority” (faktyczny zarząd), not only formally registered board members. This captures shadow directors, delegated CFOs and senior compliance officers.
  • Increased penalty ranges for aggravated economic fraud. For fraud involving significant property damage (over PLN 200,000), the upper sentencing range was increased. The amendments also introduced mandatory forfeiture of proceeds for certain corruption-related offences.
  • Revised settlement and cooperation framework. The amendments to the Code of Criminal Procedure (effective the same date) clarified and expanded the scope of consensual case resolution under Articles 335 and 387. Prosecutors now have explicit statutory authority to recommend reduced sentences where a suspect provides “substantial cooperation”, including voluntary disclosure of co-offenders, return of proceeds and implementation of verified remediation measures.
  • New mandatory compliance-programme considerations. Courts may now take into account the existence and effectiveness of a corporate compliance programme when determining the sentence of an executive. While this does not create a formal “compliance defence,” it provides a statutory mitigating factor that did not previously exist in the Penal Code.
  • Strengthened whistleblower protections. Aligned with EU Directive 2019/1937 transposition refinements, the amendments reinforced protections for internal and external reporters, increasing the practical likelihood that investigations will be triggered by employee reports.

Practical Impact on Executives and Corporate Procedures

The likely practical effect of these changes will be threefold. First, prosecutors will cast a wider net when identifying individual suspects in corporate investigations, formal title alone no longer determines exposure. Second, defence strategies must now proactively document compliance efforts before any investigation begins, because the new compliance-programme mitigating factor is only useful if the programme was genuinely operational. Third, settlement mechanisms criminal procedure Poland now offer more predictable outcomes, meaning early engagement with prosecutors through counsel becomes a tactically stronger option than it was before 29 January 2026.

How to Defend White Collar Crime: Immediate Steps When Facing an Investigation

First 0–24 Hours: Counsel, Custody and Search-and-Seizure Protocol

How long can police hold you in Poland without charges? Under Article 248 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Kodeks postępowania karnego), police detention in Poland is limited to 48 hours. Within that period, the detained person must either be released or brought before a court with a prosecutor’s motion for pre-trial detention (tymczasowe aresztowanie). Judicial authorisation is required for any extension.

What happens if you get arrested in Poland? You must be informed of the grounds for detention, you have the right to contact a defence lawyer immediately, and you have the right to refuse to provide statements. The critical rule: do not make any substantive statements to police or prosecutors without your defence counsel present.

If your premises are subject to a search warrant, demand to see the written warrant, note the scope of authorised seizure, and have a company representative present throughout. Insist that a detailed protocol (protokół przeszukania) is prepared and request a copy.

24–72 Hours: Internal Evidence Preservation and Notification

Once immediate custody issues are resolved, the focus shifts to internal controls. Issue a formal litigation-hold notice to all employees who may hold relevant documents, electronic communications, financial records or contracts. A sample hold notice should contain the following elements:

  • Clear identification of the matter (without disclosing privileged strategy)
  • Instruction to preserve all potentially relevant documents, paper and electronic
  • Prohibition on deleting emails, chat messages, financial files or backup data
  • Named contact person for questions (typically in-house counsel)
  • Statement that non-compliance may result in disciplinary action and personal legal exposure

Notify the supervisory board chair and, where applicable, the parent company’s general counsel. Limit the circle of informed individuals to those who genuinely need to know; premature disclosure risks leaks, market impact and witness contamination.

72 Hours to Two Weeks: Scoping the Internal Investigation

Within the first two weeks, in-house counsel should scope a preliminary internal investigation in Poland. The objectives at this stage are to understand the factual landscape, identify the most exposed individuals and documents, assess whether the company itself may face liability, and determine whether early cooperation with prosecutors is strategically advisable. Engage external counsel for this scoping exercise if internal resources lack criminal-law expertise. Document all scoping decisions in writing, these records may later evidence the company’s good-faith response.

When and How to Hire Counsel, A Decision Tree for Executives

Timing the engagement of defence counsel can determine the trajectory of an entire case. Industry observers note that executives who retain specialist criminal counsel before their first formal interview consistently achieve better outcomes than those who delay. The following decision triggers should each prompt immediate counsel engagement:

  • Arrest or detention of any company officer, engage a criminal defence adwokat within hours
  • Search warrant executed on company premises or a director’s residence
  • Formal suspect notification (postanowienie o przedstawieniu zarzutów) received
  • Subpoena or request for documents from a prosecutor’s office
  • Whistleblower complaint received internally that alleges criminal conduct
  • Regulatory inquiry from KNF, KAS or CBA with potential criminal referral

A typical defence team for a serious white-collar matter in Poland will include a lead criminal defence advocate, a forensic accountant, and, in cross-border cases, coordinating counsel in each relevant jurisdiction. Brief your counsel using a structured intake covering: the timeline of events, all known suspects, seized or at-risk documents, regulatory history, insurance coverage (D&O), and any prior internal audit findings.

Choosing Cross-Border Counsel Where Needed

Where the investigation involves a Polish subsidiary of a multinational group, or where evidence, witnesses or co-suspects are located in multiple jurisdictions, appoint a lead jurisdiction coordinator from the outset. Privilege rules differ materially between Poland and common-law jurisdictions, a communication that is privileged in London may not be protected in Warsaw. Coordinating counsel must map privilege across all relevant jurisdictions before any documents are shared with prosecutors.

Running an Internal Investigation in Poland

Scoping and Investigatory Protocol

An effective internal investigation requires a written protocol that defines scope, team composition, reporting lines and document-handling procedures. The protocol should be approved by the supervisory board or audit committee, not by the management board members who may themselves be subjects of the investigation. Establish clear boundaries: the investigation should address factual findings, not pre-judge legal conclusions.

Privilege, Confidentiality and Protecting Legal Privilege in Poland

Legal professional privilege (tajemnica adwokacka) is strongly protected under Polish law, an advocate cannot be compelled to testify about matters communicated in confidence by a client. However, Polish law does not recognise a general “corporate legal privilege” equivalent to common-law attorney-client privilege for in-house counsel in the same way. Communications with in-house lawyers (radca prawny) are protected under the Act on Legal Advisers, but the scope of protection during criminal proceedings is narrower and subject to ongoing judicial interpretation. Early indications suggest that post-2026 courts may apply a more restrictive approach where in-house counsel simultaneously served a compliance or management function.

Practical step: route all investigation-related communications through external defence counsel to maximise privilege protection. Label documents as “privileged, prepared for the purpose of legal advice” and maintain a privilege log from day one.

Evidence Collection, Forensic Preservation and Chain of Custody

Use forensic-standard imaging for all electronic evidence. Maintain chain-of-custody documentation for every item collected. Where the internal investigation may generate evidence later shared with prosecutors (for cooperation credit), the integrity of the collection process directly affects its evidentiary value.

Task Best actor Key legal note
Scope definition and investigation mandate Supervisory board / audit committee Must be independent of management board suspects
Witness interviews External defence counsel Privilege maximised; avoid co-interviewing with in-house counsel who may be a witness
Forensic data imaging Independent forensic IT provider Chain-of-custody documentation critical for later prosecutorial use
Document review and privilege screening External counsel with support from forensic accountant Maintain privilege log; flag documents with mixed privileged/non-privileged content
Interim reporting to board Lead external counsel Oral reports reduce risk of discoverable written summaries; written reports should be clearly marked privileged

Settlement Mechanisms and Mitigation Options Under Polish Criminal Procedure

Can companies settle criminally in Poland? The answer, following the 29 January 2026 reforms, is more nuanced than a simple yes or no. Poland’s Code of Criminal Procedure provides several consensual and mitigating pathways that function as practical equivalents to settlement, even though they differ structurally from plea bargaining in common-law systems. The settlement mechanisms criminal procedure Poland offers have become more accessible and more predictable under the 2026 framework.

The principal mechanisms are as follows:

  • Voluntary submission to penalty (Article 387 KPK). A defendant may, at the opening of trial, request that the court impose a specified penalty without conducting a full evidentiary hearing. The prosecutor and the victim must consent. Post-2026, courts are directed to consider cooperation, remediation and return of proceeds when evaluating such requests.
  • Conditional discontinuance (Article 66 KK). Where the offence carries a penalty of up to five years’ imprisonment and the circumstances and character of the offender justify it, the court may conditionally discontinue proceedings for a probationary period of one to three years. The defendant must repair the damage caused.
  • Prosecutor-proposed sentence without trial (Article 335 KPK). The prosecutor may, with the suspect’s consent, submit the case to court with a proposed sentence without conducting a trial. This mechanism is available for offences punishable by up to 10 years’ imprisonment and requires the suspect’s acknowledgement of facts.
  • Cooperation credit, the “small crown witness” (Article 60 §3 KK). A suspect who provides substantial information about co-offenders or other offences to prosecutors may benefit from an extraordinary mitigation of sentence. The 2026 amendments clarified the evidentiary standards required to qualify, providing greater certainty for defence counsel advising on cooperation strategy.
Mechanism When available Effect on directors Typical timeline
Voluntary submission to penalty (Art 387) At trial opening; prosecutor and victim consent required Reduced sentence; avoids full public trial Weeks to months (depends on court schedule)
Conditional discontinuance (Art 66) Offences ≤5 years; damage repaired; first-time or low-recidivism offender No conviction recorded if probation completed successfully 3–12 months to resolution
Prosecutor-proposed sentence (Art 335) Offences ≤10 years; suspect consents and acknowledges facts Agreed sentence; faster resolution; limited appeal options 2–6 months
Cooperation credit / small crown witness (Art 60 §3) Suspect provides substantial cooperation on co-offenders or other offences Extraordinary sentence reduction; potential below-minimum sentencing Variable, tied to investigation timeline

A critical strategic consideration: accepting any settlement or cooperation mechanism will interact with parallel civil and regulatory liability. A director who acknowledges facts under Article 335 may find those admissions used against them in subsequent civil damages claims or regulatory proceedings. Defence counsel must map all parallel exposures before recommending any consensual resolution pathway.

Defending Directors and Executives, Tailored Strategies to Defend White Collar Crime

Director-Specific Defences

To defend directors Poland cases effectively, counsel should build the defence around three pillars. First, documented good governance: board minutes, compliance committee reports and internal audit records that demonstrate the director actively exercised oversight, asked probing questions and acted on red flags. Second, proper delegation: evidence that the director lawfully delegated specific operational functions to competent subordinates with appropriate supervision, delegation does not eliminate liability, but it can demonstrate absence of direct involvement. Third, absence of criminal intent (zamiar): most white-collar offences under the Polish Penal Code require proof of intent (direct or conditional); demonstrating that the director acted in good faith, relied on professional advice and lacked knowledge of the unlawful conduct is a powerful defence.

Sample board minutes that could evidence governance oversight should record: the matters discussed, the questions raised by individual directors, the professional advice relied upon (with source identified), the risk factors considered, and the decision reached with a recorded vote. These minutes become critical exhibits if prosecution proceeds.

Insurance, D&O and Indemnity Realities Post-2026

Directors’ and officers’ (D&O) insurance policies in Poland typically cover defence costs for criminal proceedings but exclude coverage for criminal fines, penalties and intentional conduct. Post-2026, industry observers expect insurers to scrutinise policy triggers more carefully in light of expanded liability definitions. Directors should review their D&O policies now, before any investigation, to confirm coverage scope, notification requirements (most policies require notification within a specified period of becoming aware of a potential claim) and any conduct exclusions. Indemnification by the company is permissible for defence costs under Polish commercial law, but indemnification for criminal fines is void as against public policy.

Corporate Crisis Management and Communications

Effective corporate crisis management Poland requires coordination across legal, communications, board governance and regulatory functions from the first hour. The cardinal rule: all external communications must be reviewed by defence counsel before release. A poorly worded press statement can become a prosecutorial exhibit.

Who must be informed (checklist):

  • Supervisory board chair, immediately
  • D&O insurer, per policy notification deadlines (typically 30 days, but check the wording)
  • Parent company general counsel, if subsidiary
  • Market regulator (KNF), if listed company and the matter is material / inside information
  • Data protection officer, if the investigation involves personal data seizure
  • Employees, only a carefully worded internal statement, avoiding speculation about individuals

Suggested safe language for any public statement: “The company is aware of the investigation, is cooperating fully with the authorities and has retained independent counsel. It would be inappropriate to comment further at this stage.” Avoid any language that could be interpreted as an admission, a denial of facts not yet established, or an attempt to influence witnesses.

After the Investigation, Remediation, Compliance Fixes and Board Reporting

Post-resolution remediation is not optional, it is both a practical necessity and, under the 2026 amendments, a factor courts may consider in future sentencing of related individuals. A remediation plan should address the following:

  • Root-cause analysis: identify the systemic failures that permitted the misconduct, weak controls, inadequate oversight, insufficient training or cultural deficiencies
  • Compliance programme enhancement: update policies, implement new controls, appoint or strengthen the compliance function, and introduce regular testing
  • Board reporting: present findings and remediation steps to the supervisory board in a formal session; record acceptance of recommendations and assign accountability for implementation
  • Self-reporting assessment: evaluate whether voluntary disclosure of additional findings to prosecutors supports a cooperation-credit strategy or exposes the company to further liability, this is a judgment call requiring experienced defence counsel
  • Stakeholder remediation: where victims (creditors, investors, employees) suffered harm, consider proactive compensation, this supports conditional-discontinuance applications and reduces civil-litigation exposure

Reporting Obligations and Likely Outcomes by Entity Type

The reporting obligations and likely outcomes of a white-collar crime Poland prosecution vary significantly depending on the entity type involved. The following comparison reflects the post-2026 enforcement landscape.

Entity type Reporting obligations Likely outcomes (post-2026)
Public company (listed) Immediate disclosure to market per MAR obligations; cooperate with prosecutors; KNF notification mandatory for inside information Higher chance of regulatory fines and reputational sanctions; criminal exposure for directors pursued more vigorously; parallel KNF proceedings
Private company Internal reporting to supervisory board; prosecutors notified on evidence of serious fraud or corruption; no mandatory market disclosure Fines, corporate settlements where available; directors prosecuted depending on evidence of intent and personal involvement
Subsidiary of foreign group Cross-border disclosure obligations to parent; potential parallel investigations in other jurisdictions; FCPA/UK Bribery Act considerations Parallel civil and regulatory actions; settlements complicated by group-level implications and multi-jurisdictional privilege conflicts

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

Knowing how to defend white collar crime charges in Poland after the 29 January 2026 Penal Code reforms requires preparation that begins long before any investigation materialises. The following five-point action plan provides a starting framework for executives and in-house counsel:

  1. Audit your compliance programme now, under the 2026 amendments, its existence and effectiveness are a statutory mitigating factor.
  2. Identify and pre-vet specialist criminal defence counsel, do not wait for an arrest or search warrant to begin this process.
  3. Review D&O insurance coverage, confirm notification deadlines, scope of criminal-defence-cost cover and conduct exclusions.
  4. Prepare a crisis-response protocol, including litigation-hold templates, communication scripts and a “who must be informed” list.
  5. Document governance actively, board minutes, compliance reports and delegation records are your most powerful defensive evidence.

This article provides general information on Polish criminal law and procedure as of May 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Readers should obtain tailored legal advice from qualified Polish defence counsel before acting on any of the matters discussed.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maciej Zaborowski at Kopeć & Zaborowski Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Global Law Experts, Detention in Poland: Procedure and Rights of Foreign Nationals
  2. Global Law Experts, White-Collar Crime: Characteristics, Investigation Techniques and Computer Forensics
  3. Global Law Experts, Crypto Licence in Poland: MiCA 2026 Requirements, Costs and Process
  4. Global Law Experts, Corporate Investigations: General Context, Key Principles and Hot Topics

FAQs

How can white-collar crime be reduced?
Strong internal controls, a top-down compliance culture, robust vendor and counterparty due diligence and rapid internal investigations are the most effective preventive measures. Under the 2026 Penal Code amendments, maintaining an effective compliance programme is now a statutory mitigating factor, giving companies a direct incentive to invest in prevention before problems arise.
Fines and suspended prison sentences are the most common outcomes for first-time offenders in economic cases. Custodial sentences are imposed for aggravated fraud, large-scale bribery and serious tax evasion, particularly where the damage exceeds PLN 200,000. The 2026 amendments increased upper sentencing ranges for certain aggravated economic offences.
Under Article 248 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, police may detain a person for a maximum of 48 hours. Within that period, the detainee must be either released or brought before a court with a prosecutor’s application for pre-trial detention. Any extension beyond 48 hours requires judicial authorisation.
You must be informed of the grounds for your detention and of your rights, including the right to contact a defence lawyer immediately. You are not obliged to make any statement and should not do so without your lawyer present. A detailed arrest protocol must be prepared, and you are entitled to a copy.
Poland does not have a formal corporate plea-bargaining system identical to the US model, but the 2026 reforms clarified and expanded consensual resolution mechanisms. These include prosecutor-proposed sentencing without trial (Article 335), voluntary submission to penalty (Article 387) and cooperation credit (Article 60 §3). Defence counsel can now negotiate more predictable outcomes, particularly where the company demonstrates remediation and return of proceeds.
Yes. Board minutes are admissible documentary evidence in Polish criminal proceedings and can serve as powerful proof that directors exercised proper oversight, asked appropriate questions and acted on professional advice. Conversely, poorly drafted or absent minutes can undermine a governance-based defence. Minutes should be detailed, contemporaneous and accurately reflect discussions and decisions.
The 2026 amendments strengthened whistleblower protections in line with EU Directive 2019/1937. A whistleblower report that triggers a prosecution does not, by itself, create criminal liability for an executive, liability depends on the underlying conduct. However, companies that retaliate against whistleblowers or fail to maintain compliant reporting channels now face additional regulatory sanctions, and the suppression of a whistleblower report can itself become evidence of obstruction or cover-up.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 1 hour ago

By Cem Arda Tepe

posted 3 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Defend White Collar Crime Charges in Poland (2026): Counsel Timing, Settlements & Executive Protection

Send welcome message

Custom Message