Categories
Compliance Kitchen

Braskem Ex-CEO Sentenced


The DOJ issued a press release of a sentencing of a Brazilian national who is the ex-CEO of Braskem S.A.  The Kitchen stopped by for more detail on this. Meanwhile, the Treasury Department issued a list of countries that may require boycott participation. Tune in for more.

Categories
The Ethics Experts

Episode 090 – Lisa Beth Lentini Walker & Stef Tschida

In this episode of The Ethics Experts, Nick welcomes Lisa Beth Lentini Walker, ethics, governance and risk strategist, and Stef Tschida, strategic communications consultant, to the show.

Categories
The Hill Country The Hill Country Podcast

Kathy Ragsdale and Camp Stewart


Welcome to the inaugural edition of the Hill Country Podcast. The Texas Hill Country is one of the most beautiful places on earth. In this podcast, recent Hill Country resident Tom Fox visits with the people and organizations that make this the most unique areas of Texas. Join Tom as he explores the people, places and their activities of the Texas Hill Country.  In this first episode, I visit with Kathy Ragsdale, matriarch of Camp Stewart, the longest running continually operated boys camp in the Texas Hill Country. We talk about how she and her late husband Si came to purchase Camp Stewart, the history and prior owners of Camp Stewart, what the early days of their ownership was like, boys’ camping in the 21stcentury, the upcoming centennial of Camp Stewart in 2023. Most importantly why the Camp Stewart motto of “Don’t wait until you are a man to be great, be a great boy” is as important today as it was when I was a camper at Stewart. Some of the highlights include:

  1. What are the origins of Camp Stewart?
  2. What can you tell us about Uncle Bill?
  3. What do you remember about Si’s camping experience?
  4. What led to you and Si to purchase Camp Stewart?
  5. What was it like to move from Denton to Hunt Texas in 1967?
  6. How did you select the Counselors?
  7. What were some of your biggest challenges in the first 5 years?
  8. Why is the campfire such a part of the Camp Stewart experience?
  9. How did camping and Camp Stewart change in the 80s, 90s and 00s?
  10. The Ragsdale Family has now run Camp Stewart for over 50 years. What are the challenges you face in running Camp Stewart in the 2020s?
  11. 2024 Will be the 100th anniversary of Camp Stewart. What plans do you have to celebrate?

For more information on Camp Stewart, check out their website, here.

Categories
Content Coalition

The Content Coalition Episode 005: Podcasting Strategies from the Man Who’s Interviewed Over 185 Podcast Personalities

 
In this episode of The Content Coalition, we interview Harry Duran – Founder of FullCast, a full-service, done-for-you podcast production and marketing consultancy.
As Host of the popular Podcast Junkies on iTunes since 2014, Harry has had conversations with over 185 interesting and engaging podcast personalities including Pat Flynn (host of Smart Passive Income), Cliff Ravenscraft, Lea Thau (host of Strangers), and Jordan Harbinger, (host of The Art of Charm), just to name a few.
Tune in and prepare to take notes as Harry shares simple but really important strategies to make your podcast stand out along with the most impactful piece of content that you should pull out from your episodes to gain more listeners.
Get more great The Content Coalition episodes over on Repurpose House, or watch the interview on YouTube!

What You’ll Learn

  • [01:22] What does FullCast do
  • [03:52] Harry’s thoughts on Alexa Skills and it’s impact on podcasts
  • [08:29] The most effective piece of content to pull out from your episodes
  • [09:50] Harry’s current favorite podcasts
  • [10:19] 1 actionable thing to implement within the next 48 hours

Connect with Dan

Resources Mentioned

Categories
Career Can D0

Sharing Your Story with Deepak Sharma


 
In this episode of Career Can Do, Mary Ann Faremouth chats with Deepak Sharma, a professional life coach, and certified world class speaking coach. He is also the author of the Amazon bestseller, Move Mountains: One Story at a Time.
 

 
Deepak talks about how he overcame his aversion to storytelling and transformed it into something he now teaches to others. Everyone has a story, he says. It doesn’t have to be sensational, all it has to be is sincere. He now helps entrepreneurs use storytelling to empower their vendors, teams, and individuals in their organizations. 
 
Deepak shares advice he was given when he was struggling with effective communication. Not long ago, mastering English was a challenge for him, and he even struggled with communicating in his native language, Hindi. He grew frustrated, but his mentor shared a gem of wisdom that motivated him to persevere. “Every master was a disaster before he became a master,” he was told. This encouraged him to not dwell on his failures but instead learn from them.
 
Resources
Deepak Sharma | YouTube | Email
Your Story Your Glory Podcast
 
Faremouth.com
 

Categories
Compliance Into the Weeds

Compliance and AI


Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast which takes a deep dive into a compliance related topic, literally going into the weeds to more fully explore a subject. This week Matt and Tom take a deep dive into the issue of compliance and artificial intelligence. Some of the issues we consider are:

  • What are the AI risks for compliance?
  • What guidance does the COSO Framework provide?
  • What are some of the top areas of AI failure?
  • Are we governing AI in the right manner?
  • What about the audit of AI tools?
  • Compliance, governance, ethics and AI.

 Resources
Matt in Radical Compliance
Thoughts on AI From the Audit Perspective
Grappling With Artificial Intelligence
 Tom in the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog
Compliance Communications: Using an AI Marketing Strategy – Part 1
Compliance Communications: Using an AI Marketing Strategy – Part 2

Categories
Daily Compliance News

October 20, 2021 the Credit Suisse Settles (again) edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • GE to require employee vaccinations.(NYT)
  • Boardroom diversity. (Bloomberg)
  • Credit Suisse settles Mozambique bribery case. (FCPA Blog)
  • More Theranos fraud. (WSJ)
Categories
Blog

Expanding Compliance Obligations of the Board – Part 3: Hughes v. Hu

The next case on the Board’s obligations regarding compliance oversight is Hughes v. Hu. In this case, the plaintiffs’ claimed that the director defendants consciously failed to establish a system of oversight for financial statements and related-party transactions, “choosing instead to rely blindly on management while devoting patently inadequate time to the necessary tasks.” According to the plaintiffs’ assertions the defendants “breached their fiduciary duties by willfully failing to maintain an adequate system of oversight, disclosure controls and procedures, and internal controls over financial reporting.” Additionally, “The board of a Delaware corporation has a fiduciary obligation to adopt internal information and reporting systems that are ‘reasonably designed to provide to senior management and to the board itself timely, accurate information sufficient to allow management and the board, each within its scope, to reach informed judgments concerning both the corporation’s compliance with law and its business performance’.”
The audit committee failed to meet often as required and when they met, the meetings were short and failed to devote adequate time and attention to the issues, especially in light of the known internal control issues. In addition, the audit committee frequently acted through written consent as opposed to addressing issues during in-person meetings. The outside auditor failed to report on key issues and when it did so, the audit committee failed to respond or follow up.
The court noted, “directors face a substantial threat of liability under Caremark if “(a) the directors utterly failed to implement any reporting or information system or controls; or (b) having implemented such a system or controls, consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operations thus disabling themselves from being informed of risks or problems requiring their attention.” For both potential sources, “a showing of bad faith conduct . . . is essential to establish director oversight liability.” A plaintiff establishes bad faith by “showing that the directors knew that they were not discharging their fiduciary obligations. Generally where a claim of directorial liability for corporate loss is predicated upon ignorance of liability creating activities within the corporation . . . only a sustained or systemic failure of the board to exercise oversight . . . will establish the lack of good faith that is a necessary condition to liability.” [citations omitted]
Moreover, “a director may be held liable if she acts in bad faith in the sense that she made no good faith effort to ensure that the company had in place any ‘system of controls.’” Significantly directors must “design context- and industry-specific approaches tailored to their companies’ businesses and resources.” Caremark also mandates “a bottom-line requirement that is important: the board must make a good faith effort—i.e., try—to put in place a reasonable board-level system of monitoring and reporting.” Finally, a Caremark claim can be stated by alleging that “an audit committee that met only sporadically and devoted patently inadequate time to its work, or that the audit committee had clear notice of serious accounting irregularities and simply chose to ignore them or, even worse, to encourage their continuation.”
What the court found was that the Company’s Audit Committee met sporadically, devoted inadequate time to its work, “had clear notice of irregularities, and consciously turned a blind eye to their continuation. As detailed in the Factual Background, the Company suffered from pervasive problems with its internal controls, which the Company acknowledged in March 2014 and pledged to correct. Yet after making that commitment, the Audit Committee continued to meet only when prompted by the requirements of the federal securities laws. When it did meet, its meetings were short and regularly overlooked important issues.”
For example, in May 2014, the Audit Committee convened for the first time after disclosing two months earlier that its “disclosure controls and procedures were not effective as of December 31, 2013, due to a material weakness.” The meeting lasted just forty-five minutes. During that time, the Audit Committee purportedly reviewed new agreements governing the Company’s related-party transactions with Kandi USA. Neither the agreements nor the review procedures were produced in response to the plaintiff’s demand for books and records, supporting a reasonable inference that they either did not exist or did not impose meaningful restrictions on the Company’s insiders. Three weeks later, the Audit Committee purportedly reviewed and approved a new policy that management had prepared governing related-party transactions. The Company also did not produce this policy in response to the plaintiff’s demand for books and records, supporting a reasonable inference that it too either did not exist or did not impose meaningful restrictions on the Company’s insiders.
After 2014, the Audit Committee did not meet again for almost an entire year. The committee next convened in March 2015, “spurred by the need to review the Company’s financial results for purposes of the 2014 10-K. The meeting lasted only fifty minutes. During this time, the Audit Committee ostensibly discussed the financial results and purportedly approved a new policy that management had prepared to govern related-party transactions involving the Joint Venture. It is reasonable to infer that the policy did not place meaningful restrictions on management and that the Audit Committee failed to establish its own monitoring system for related-party transactions. It is also reasonable to infer that during this fifty-minute meeting, the Audit Committee could not have fulfilled its responsibilities under the Audit Committee Charter for purposes of nearly a year’s worth of transactions.” The Audit Committee again did not meet for almost an entire year, not meeting until March 2016, again spurred by the need to review the Company’s financial results for purposes of the 2015 10-K. This meeting lasted just thirty minutes.
These chronic deficiencies support a reasonable inference that the Company’s Board of Directors, acting through its Audit Committee, failed to provide meaningful oversight over the Company’s financial statements and system of financial controls. Despite identifying Yu and Lewin as Audit Committee Financial Experts in 2015, the Company later disclosed in the 2016 10-K that it lacked personnel with sufficient expertise on US GAAP and SEC disclosure requirements for equity investments and related-party transactions. The directors charged with implementing a system to oversee the Company’s financial reporting thus lacked the expertise necessary to do so all along. Instead, the Audit Committee deferred to management, which dictated the policies and procedures for reviewing related-party transactions and hired and fired the Company’s auditor, even though management’s actions suggested that it was either incapable of accurately reporting on related-party transactions or actively evading board-level oversight.
The defendants alleged that the Company had the trappings of oversight, “including an Audit Committee, a Chief Financial Officer, an internal audit department, a code of ethics, and an independent auditor.” A plaintiff cannot meet its Caremark burden by pleading that board-level monitoring systems existed but that they should have been more effective. The Court found the plaintiffs’ allegations supported inferences that the Board members did not make a good faith effort to do their jobs. The Court stated, “The Audit Committee only met when spurred by the requirements of the federal securities laws. Their abbreviated meetings suggest that they devoted patently inadequate time to their work. Their pattern of behavior indicates that they followed management blindly, even after management had demonstrated an inability to report accurately.”
An Audit Committee can rely in good faith upon reports by management and other experts. In doing its job, the members of an Audit Committee will necessarily rely on management. But Caremark envisions some degree of board-level monitoring system, not blind deference to and complete dependence on management. The board is obligated to establish information and reporting systems that “allow management and the board, each within its own scope, to reach informed judgments concerning both the corporation’s compliance with law and its business performance.”
Finally, the Board never established its own reasonable system of monitoring and reporting, choosing instead to rely entirely on management. There were no Board meeting minutes to support the company’s rebuttals. As the Court noted, “The absence of those documents is telling because “[i]t is more reasonable to infer that exculpatory documents would be provided than to believe the opposite: that such documents existed and yet were inexplicably withheld.”” The documents that the Company produced indicated that the Audit Committee never met for longer than one hour and typically only once per year. Each time they purported to cover multiple agenda items that included a review of the Company’s financial performance in addition to reviewing its related-party transactions. On at least two occasions, they missed important issues that they then had to address through action by written consent. Clearly, the Board was not fulfilling its oversight duties.
The Hughes Court further delineated a Board’s obligations under Caremark. It cannot simply have the trappings of oversight, it must do the serious work required and have evidence of that work (Document, Document, and Document). Marchand required Boards to manage the risks their organizations face. Clovis Oncology requires ongoing monitoring by the Board. Hughes stands for the proposition that have the structures, policies and procedures in place is not enough. The Board must fully engage in oversight of a compliance program.