Reciprocity requires corporations to accept criminal responsibility for crimes against society in exchange for the benefits society grants to those corporations. Corporations are legal entities, like persons, that have rights such as freedom of expression and freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures. Allowing corporations to be viewed as artificial entities causes concern because they lack the conscience of a human mind. The proposed solution is to make corporations liable for criminal activities in the same way that a human person would be held liable. Reciprocity has its roots in biology and is evidenced in several instances in nature. A reciprocal relationship is complex-even more so in humans-and is dependent on several factors such as how close the individuals are and what type of activity is being reciprocated. Communities are strongest when individuals feel a high sense of reciprocity toward society. If corporations are to be treated as legal entities, they should also have reciprocal relationships with society. When a corporation criminally acts against society, it must be held liable for its actions. Society can impose this liability on corporations based on the benefits granted to those corporations; a reciprocal relationship between the two is only fair.