Answer:
Yes corporations, and the corporate directors should be held liable for their criminal actions.
Step-by-step explanation:
The question of imposing criminal liability to a corporation for criminal offences committed by directors, managers, officers and other employees of the corporation while conducting corporate affairs has gained a lot of importance in the jurisprudence of criminal law. The very basis for the possibility of imposing criminal liability to a corporation is its independent legal personality.
The traditional view was that a corporation could not be guilty of a crime, because criminal guilt required intent and a corporation not having a mind could form no intent. In addition, a corporation had no body that could be imprisoned. So courts are likely to impose criminal liability on a corporation when the criminal act is requested, authorized, or performed by the board of directors, an officer or another person having responsibility for formulating company policy or high level administrator having supervisory responsibility over the subject matter of the offence and acting within the scope of his employment. This is in accordance with the agency theory.
Are corporations persons? As per US supreme court, they are, for some purposes. It ruled that corporations have the right to spend money in candidate elections, and that some for-profit corporations may, on religious grounds, refuse to comply with a federal mandate to cover birth control in their employee health plans. These are personal rights accorded to corporations. The dictionary defines "corporation" as "a number of persons united in one body for a purpose."
Yes, Corporate person as well as the directors can be held responsible. also corporate as an individuality has the right to sue or be sued.