On May 11, the European Union published Directive 2026/1021, which brought about a fundamental change in European corporate governance: if an executive commits an act of corruption on behalf of the company, that individual is no longer the only one held liable. The organization is also held liable.
Until now, hiring the wrong executive was typically just a performance issue or a reputational risk. With this directive now in effect, it can also become a source of direct criminal liability for the company that hired that executive.
The regulation establishes a common criminal law framework across the European Union to define and prosecute acts of corruption in both the public and private sectors. It replaces previous legislation that had become obsolete and expands the scope of earlier directives on fraud affecting the EU’s financial interests.
What is particularly relevant for any executive committee or board of directors is this specific point: liability no longer rests exclusively with the individual who commits the act. The organization may be held criminally liable for acts of corruption committed on its behalf, with penalties that, in the most serious cases, can be calculated based on the company’s global turnover.
Here is the nuance that should matter most to any company with a complex management structure: if the organization had a robust compliance program in place (including controls over payments to third parties, documented training for executives, and pre-hire verification processes), that program can serve as a mitigating factor or even exempt the organization from corporate liability.
To put it more bluntly: the difference between a severe penalty and a mitigated one may lie in whether or not a vetting process existed before that executive signed their contract.
Now is the time to review this before the next hire with strategic decision-making authority.
For years, executive background checks have been presented primarily as a tool for protecting a company’s reputation: to avoid hiring someone with a falsified resume or a problematic history that, if exposed, could damage the company’s image. That reason remains valid, but it is no longer the most pressing one.
With the new directive, the nature of the risk landscape is changing. What a year ago was a hiring mistake that damaged the company’s reputation can now, in certain scenarios, result in direct criminal liability for the organization. And what was previously merely a recommended practice—a well-documented pre-employment screening —can now serve as evidence to support a defense in court.
Not all background check processes hold the same value under this regulatory framework.
Before the next executive hire—especially for positions with decision-making authority over contracts, suppliers, or relationships with public authorities—the question a board of directors should ask is no longer just whether that person has the right profile. It is also whether, if something goes wrong, the company can demonstrate that it conducted due diligence before hiring them.
At Servitalent, we’ve been advocating for executive background checks as a key component of corporate governance for years—long before this directive. It protects the company’s reputation, yes, but from now on, it also protects the company’s legal position. Pre-employment screening is no longer just a matter of prudence; it has become a strategic obligation.