The Justice Department is cracking down on white-collar crime by giving federal prosecutors new tools to bust corporate crooks.

The department said Wednesday that companies would be required to turn over evidence against individuals if they want credit for cooperation.

The policies were detailed in a memo written by Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates, who will detail the changes in an NYU Law School speech Thursday.

“Americans should never believe, even incorrectly, that one’s criminal activity will go unpunished simply because it was committed on behalf of a corporation,” Yates said.

The Justice Department has secured multi billion-dollar civil settlements against several banks in recent years, but it’s been criticized for not being tougher on Wall Street executives after the financial collapse.