A business prohibition is a prohibition issued by a court that prohibits an individual from holding a position of responsibility in a corporation.[1] Business prohibitions are given as punishments and as preemptive measures following aggravated offences while in office, such as false accounting, or gross neglect of duties. The objective is to ascertain public trust in corporations: if the offender's actions are liable to damage the trust of debtors, partners or other parties of contracts, a business prohibition is issued.

An individual with a business prohibition may not found or run any sort of a corporation, be in a corporate executive board, be employed as a CEO or even use one's powers as a stock owner, even by proxy. If a proxy agrees to circumvent the prohibition, he may be convicted as an accessory to a crime.

References

  1. "Definition from BusinessDictionary". Archived from the original on 6 July 2008. Retrieved 26 February 2010.
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