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MoForecast

MoForecast: Analyzing Recent Speeches Given by DOJ Leadership


In this episode of MoForecast, James Koukios, co-chair of Morrison & Foerster‘s Securities Litigation, Enforcement, and White Collar Defense and the FCPA + Global Anti-Corruption Practice Groups, speaks with fellow MoFo partners Brandon L. Van Grack, former chief of the U.S. Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) Unit, and Adam Braverman, former Associate Deputy Attorney General and U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of California, about key takeaways from recent speeches given by Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General John Carlin and Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco.

Morrison & Foerster LLP (MoFo) · MoForecast: Analyzing Recent Speeches Given by DOJ Leadership

The MoForecast podcast series, produced by global law firm Morrison & Foerster, examines policy changes and the evolving legal landscape under President Biden by leveraging the firm’s decades of private practice experience and insight from former government roles. Discover more MoForecast episodes.
About the Speakers
James Koukios is co-chair of Morrison & Foerster’s Securities Litigation, Enforcement, and White Collar Defense Group and serves as co-head of the FCPA + Global Anti-Corruption Practice. James represents companies and individuals in high‑stakes government enforcement actions and complex internal investigations. He previously served as a federal prosecutor at DOJ, where he was the lead prosecutor in two landmark FCPA related trials: United States v. Esquenazi and United States v. Duperval. While at DOJ, James also served as lead prosecutor in United States v. AEY Inc., a defense procurement fraud and export licensing case that served as the basis for the 2016 film War Dogs. He also previously served as Special Counsel to then-FBI Director Robert S. Mueller, III.
James is joined in this episode by:

  • Brandon Van Grack, partner in Morrison & Foerster’s Washington, D.C. office and former Chief of DOJ’s FARA Unit
  • Adam Braverman, partner in Morrison & Foerster’s San Diego office and former Associate Deputy Attorney General and previously served as the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of California

The Morrison & Foerster team is made up of talented defense lawyers, including many who once served as prosecutors and regulators. The team helps firm clients resolve their legal issues by immersing themselves in how their clients think and operate. Learn more about the firm’s Investigations + White Collar Defense, National Security, CFIUS, FARA, Sanctions + Export Controls, and Global Risk + Crisis Management Practice Groups.
 

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F*cking Argentina

The Cathartic Episode of F*CKING ARGENTINA


In the final episode of our series F*cking Argentina, we sat down with Gregg Greenberg and talked to him about writing the book that came out of the pandemic, his favorite stories and key themes, and why it’s worth getting yourself a copy to read or gift this for the holidays!
For anyone out there who says, “I don’t know if I can publish a book.” Gregg says, “Yes, you can!” What frustrated, irritated and exasperated him in real life served as a starting point for writing these unforgettable short stories.
Tune in to this hilarious and exasperating tale of F*CKING ARGENTINA with Gregg Greenberg and Tom Fox. ▶️
ABOUT THE BOOK
F*cking Argentina and 10 More Tales of Exasperation by Gregg Greenberg is a compilation of short stories that dive into the American phenomenon of being in a near-perpetual state of aggravation. Greenberg’s anthology brings together eleven original pieces of work, each with their own slice of independent and distinct plot lines but all converging on the universal theme of exasperation. They run the whole gamut of scenarios, from the titular story “F*cking Argentina” wherein the country is once again in bankruptcy and a polite game of tug o’ war plays out on a porch, to “A Journeyman Tennis Player’s Prayer” with a low ranking U.S. Open contender begging God for a comparable opponent. Both stories end with the superlative f-word, which showcases at some point in other stories, and a guaranteed chuckle from their readers. Buy the book here: http://fckingargentina.com/.
Do you have a podcast (or do you want to)? Join the only network dedicated to compliance, risk management, and business ethics, the Compliance Podcast Network. For more information, contact Tom Fox at tfox@tfoxlaw.com.

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Compliance Kitchen

DOJ settlement: Immigration and Employment Discrimination


DOJ – Gap, Inc. settlement: immigration and employment discrimination.

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Innovation in Compliance

Not Your Father’s Monitor-Part 3: Cristina Revelo on E&C Assessment and Internal Controls

In October, Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Lisa O. Monaco gave a Keynote Address at ABA’s 36th National Institute on White Collar Crime (Monaco Speech). Monaco’s remarks should be studied by every compliance professional as they portend a very large change in the way the DOJ will utilize monitors going forward.

Over this podcast series, sponsored by AMI we will consider why DAG Monaco’s remarks herald a new era for monitorships. We will consider Monaco’s remarks from a variety of perspectives. Bethany Hengsbach will consider this change in monitorships from the white-collar enforcement and defense perspective. Mikhail Reider Gordon will look at global aspects of the new DOJ monitor’s focus. Cristina Revelo will discuss how E&C assessments help drive More compliant companies. Jesse Caplan brings his views on the twin topics of antitrust and healthcare compliance. We will conclude our series with AMI founder Vin DiCianni who will look at where monitors monitorships are going in 2022 and beyond. In this Episode 3, Cristina Revelo brings her internal control expertise to analyze for E&C assessments, particularly with monitors and monitorships.

Highlights of this podcast include:

  1. Monitoring skills will be in demand as we see the rise of proactive monitorships / assessments
  2. Compliance and ethical culture are important considerations to review.
  3. E&C Assessments help companies get ahead of what is coming, mitigate risk, ensure compliance and address any gaps that might exist before a regulator comes knocking on their door.

Resources

Cristina Revelo

Affiliated Monitors Inc.

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The Hill Country Podcast

Don Frazier on The Texas Center at Schreiner University


Welcome to the 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 episode, I visit with Dr. Don Frazier, the Director of the Texas Center at Schreiner University. We talk about the Texas Center, its mission and take a deep dive into some Texas history. Some of the highlights include:

  1. What is the Texas Center? Why have a Texas Center?
  2. What is your role?
  3. How do you engage in educational outreach?
  4. What are some of the Texas Center’s current projects?
  5. What is your specific focus in the study and teaching of history at Schreiner?
  6. You were recently appointed the Governor’s 1836 Advisory Committee. What is the role of this Committee and what is your part?
  7. Your most recent book is Tempest Over Texas. What are some of the key highlights for the 1863-1864 Campaign in Texas?
  8. Why do you feel the role of the Texas Center is as much or more important than it has ever been?
  9. Why is it important that Texas history continue to be taught in Texas schools?

For more information on the Texas Center at Schreiner University, check out their website, here.

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Great Women in Compliance

Lisa Beth Lentini Walker – Raising Your Game

Welcome to the Great Women in Compliance Podcast, co-hosted by Lisa Fine and Mary Shirley.

As we are getting to the end of 2021, which has been a challenging year in many ways, we also have a lot of wonderful people and work in the ethics and compliance community to celebrate.  Lisa Beth Lentini Walker is one of those people.  Lisa F wanted to end the year with Lisa Beth to reflect on this year, some lessons she learned, but mostly to talk about Lisa Beth and Stef Tschida’s great book “Raise Your Game, Not Your Voice: How Listening, Communicating, and Storytelling Shape Compliance Program Influence” (CCI Press 2021), which is a great resource for compliance professionals and others about how to get your message out efficiently and collaboratively.

She also talks about the characteristics of being a scholar in your work, one of which is persistence, and how to balance keeping your message and voice while at the same time adapting to other viewpoints and what you will learn.  Lisa Beth shares questions from readers and clients about communications and some practical tips.

Lisa Beth also worked with Stef, who is a friend and colleague of hers for many years and talk about the importance of a good relationship with your co-writers for a book.  Lisa and Mary’s work together echoes what Lisa Beth says, as well as the importance of community.  On that note, they want to thank all of you for supporting the #gwicbook “Sending the Elevator Back Down: What We’ve Learned from Great Women in Compliance” (CCI Press 2020), and all of you, including Lisa Beth and her family, who voted for us and supported us in winning the Pulse The Magazine For The Culture Awards Non-Fiction Book of the Year.

If you’ve already read the booked and liked it, will you help out other women to make the decision to leverage off the tips and advice given by rating the book and giving it a glowing review on Amazon?

As always, we are so grateful for all of your support and if you have any feedback or suggestions for our line up or would just like to reach out and say hello, we always welcome hearing from our listeners.

You can subscribe to the Great Women in Compliance podcast on any podcast player by searching for it and we welcome new subscribers to our podcast.

Join the Great Women in Compliance community on LinkedIn here.

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Compliance Into the Weeds

Ransomware Attacks and Internal Controls


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. Today, Matt and Tom take a deep dive into the difference between a privacy breach and a ransomware attack.
Some of the issues we consider are:

  • Why are privacy breaches different from ransomware attacks?
  • What is an authenticated v. unauthenticated cyber-attack?
  • Why would the SEC get involved?
  • What are the internal controls need to prevent and detect a ransomware attack? How will they be audited?
  • How can a material weakness in internal controls around ransomware lead to a financial restatement?
  • What will the SEC look at from an enforcement angle?

Resources
Matt in Radical Compliance

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Daily Compliance News

December 8, 2021 the Real Estate Scrutiny Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Rohingya refugees sue FB for $150bn. (Reuters)
  • US will increase scrutiny of real estate transactions. (WSJ)
  • DoT to keep costs low for UBO reporting requirements. (WSJ)
  • To uphold democracy, US must fight corruption. (WaPo)
Categories
Blog

Not Your Father’s Monitor – Cristina Revelo, Using Assessments to Drive Compliance

In October, Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Lisa O. Monaco gave a Keynote Address at ABA’s 36th National Institute on White Collar Crime (Monaco Speech). Her remarks reframed a discussion about the uses of, reasons for and perceptions on independent monitors and monitorships. I asked Affiliated Monitors Inc. (AMI) founder Vin DiCianni for his thoughts around the remarks on monitors. He said, “For Affiliated Monitors this refreshed approach by DAG Monaco highlights the seriousness which businesses must place on the investment in their programs and in addressing what has for some been a negative experience with a monitor. For those who might be the subject of a monitorship, DAG Monaco recognized that the negativity that has sometimes surrounded monitorships as being punitive, should be seen in a different light bringing value, pointing a way forward and as a solution which has had great success in resolving matters.”
Monaco’s remarks should be studied by every compliance professional as they portend a very large change in the way the Department of Justice (DOJ) will utilize monitors going forward. Over this podcast series, sponsored by AMI, we will consider why DAG Monaco’s remarks herald a new era for monitorships. We will consider Monaco’s remarks from a variety of perspectives. Bethany Hengsbach will consider this change in monitorships from the white-collar enforcement and defense perspective. Mikhail Reider-Gordon will look at global aspects of the new DOJ monitor’s focus. Jesse Caplan brings his views on the twin topics of antitrust and healthcare compliance. We will conclude the series with Vin DiCianni who will look at where monitorships are going in 2022 and beyond. In Part 3, Cristina Revelo, Deputy Director, Corporate Monitoring and Compliance Services at AMI, discusses how ethics and compliance (E&C) assessments help drive more compliant companies.
Revelo has a different professional background than many compliance professionals, having earned both her Master of Science and Bachelor of Science in Accountancy. We began by exploring why a proactive monitorship can be such a valuable tool in a best practices compliance program. With this an independent monitor can help companies review their ethics and compliance programs. AMI’s vast experience in monitorships under different regulators and requirements gives them insights into what the regulators are looking for in this type of project. With this knowledge from prior monitorships AMI can facilitate a very practical assessment. It can highlight to a company what are some gaps within, for example, their anti-corruption program, ethics program, internal controls, or for their entire E&C program.
This type of approach allows AMI to provide recommendations based on what we think the regulars might be looking for. Revelo noted, “These are great because it helps companies get ahead of potential regulators coming, knocking on their door.” It also allows a company to demonstrate they have been proactively working on their E&C program and that they are seeking to close those gaps and enhance their programs.
We then turned to Revelo’s academic and professional background which gives a different perspective from a legally trained compliance professional. As more individuals with different backgrounds, especially with the auditing and forensic background, Revelo feels it really does help in these proactive assessments because she’s looking to “follow the gaps, follow the issues,  use the five whys, digging a little bit deeper as opposed to potentially just checking that there is a law and that we have complied with the law.” A forensic type will inevitably dig a little bit deeper to understand a company’s internal controls, how they implement their controls, whether those internal controls are manual or automated, where there could be a failure, essentially to walk through the entire process.
Revelo emphasized, “conducting a walkthrough of your entire internal controls process, sitting with different individuals, having interviews, really understanding, whoever is implementing that process. This allows you to really pick apart and identify the different failures that could come up throughout the different controls in the process.” It is really looking at things through a different lens. From there you can move to enhance or remediate as needed. These are the types of skills and analysis an accountant or forensic auditor could bring to a proactive E&C assessment.
Turning to a more commercial reason for proactive assessments, Revelo concluded with an observation about culture. In the ever-increasing race for talent acquisition and talent retention, culture has become one of the most critical factors for millennials as they make up most of the workforce now and will be above 50% of the workforce in a few years. Millennials want to have pride in a place they work, they want to be happy, and money is not the driving factors in their equation. Revelo noted, “they want to work for companies that are ethical, that are socially responsible, that are behind the right things that they care about.” As these areas fall directly within the area of E&C, Revelo said, “I think it’s really important for companies in order to attract the right talent and retain that talent because sometimes also you see millennials moving jobs very often. Those employees a company might want to retain are going to care about what you are behind, how ethical you are, how you treat your employees, and all of this has to do with a company culture and the ethical culture.”
Affiliated Monitors
Cristina Revelo