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Jamming with Jason

Fire and Earth Monday: It’s A Practice, Not a Perfect with Holly Duckworth


Today we are being visited by Holly Duckworth to discuss bringing mindfulness into the workplace.
Holly has been dedicated to making mindfulness a much more accepted practice in the world of business and promoting a message of being the “you, you know.”
Reach out to Holly on LinkedIn and at: https://hollyduckworth.com/
FOR FULL SHOW NOTES AND LINKS, VISIT: https://www.jasonmefford.com/jammingwithjason266/
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Compliance Kitchen

SAR Filing Trend from 2021


2021 SAR Filing Trend Data Now Available on FinCEN’s Website.

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Blog

Roger Ng Trial Goes to the Jury

The Roger Ng Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) trial has now concluded its testimony phase, the parties have closed and the decision on freedom or not for Ng rests with the jury. The closing arguments highlighted the strengths and weaknesses of both parties’ positions in the trial. As reported by Patricia Hurtado, writing in Bloomberg, the prosecution’s closing assailed Ng’s defense based upon the testimony of Ng’s wife, Hwee Bin Lim, who testified that a “$35.1 million infusion of capital into a shell company she controlled was not a kickback for her husband in the 1MDB scheme, but was from an unrelated, legitimate business transaction.” Luc Cohen, writing in Reuters, said that “Ng’s wife, Hwee Bin Lim, later testified for the defense that the business venture was, in fact, legitimate. She said she invested $6 million in the mid-2000s in a Chinese company owned by the family of Leissner’s wife at the time, and the $35 million was her return on that investment.”
The biggest problem for the prosecution was its star witness Timothy Leissner. From his innocuous “lying a lot” admission, the government had to both depend on Leissner’s testimony and distance itself from it, largely at the same time. In the former category, Cohen wrote that “Leissner said the men (he and Ng) agreed to tell banks a “cover story” that the money was from a legitimate business venture between their wives and that Alixandra Smith, a prosecutor, said in her closing argument that other evidence backed up Leissner’s testimony.”
In the latter category, Matthew Goldstein, writing in the New York Times, said “A federal prosecutor told jurors on Monday that they had received enough evidence to convict a former Goldman Sachs banker for his role in one of the biggest international money laundering and bribery schemes even without the testimony of the government’s star witness.” He went on to note that the prosecutor claimed Leissner had selected moments of truthful testimony, writing “Mr. Leissner did not lie when he testified in federal court in Brooklyn to the key facts of the scheme, which was funded by a series of bond offerings that Goldman arranged for the 1MDB fund.”
The defense assailed Leissner and his testimony in their grueling 6-day cross examination, where Leissner “admitted to lying a lot in life. He was forced to admit to initially lying to federal agents, to his fellow partners at Goldman and to his wives and girlfriends.” At closing, Ng’s attorney “said Mr. Leissner was a man who “will lie if it suits his interest.” He said that, despite what the prosecution had said, without Mr. Leissner’s testimony the government could not connect Mr. Ng to the conspiracy to steal billions from the 1MDB fund. There is no evidence that connects Roger. There is not a dirty email. Not a bad text message.”
Interestingly, in the prosecution’s rebuttal, another prosecutor, Drew Rolle appeared to change tactics to defend and rehabilitate Leissner. Stewart Bishop, writing in Law360 said “Rolle also mounted a last-ditch defense of Leissner. Tim Leissner came in here, took the stand and told you the unvarnished truth,” Rolle said. “It was painful, but that’s what has to happen, because it’s the truth.” When you must try and rehabilitate your story witness on rebuttal, it is never a good sign.
Finally in an interesting twist, Hurtado reported that “The jury in the 1MDB conspiracy case against former Goldman Sachs banker Roger Ng has asked to review testimony from his wife that the defense says is key to its case. After seven weeks of testimony in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, the jurors deciding the fate of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s former head of investment banking in Malaysia made the request soon after they began their deliberations on Tuesday afternoon.” Trial lawyers and trial watchers are continually trying to read signs from the jury. It seems to me that this request means that the jury took Ng’s defense to heart through the testimony of his wife about the source of the family’s funds.
We all now have to sit back and wait for the jury to return with its verdict. If the jury comes back with a guilty verdict, it will bolster the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) attempts to hold individual actors culpable for their actions in engaging in FCPA violations and other white collar crime involving corporations. If the jury comes back with a not guilty verdict in the wake of the largest corporate FCPA fine and penalty, against Ng’s former employer Goldman Sachs, it could bode poorly for DOJ attempts to hold individuals accountable in similar cases or even other cases of fraud cases going forward. If there is a not guilty verdict in the Ng and you couple it with the recent not guilty verdict in the prosecution of Mark Forkner, the former chief technical pilot at Boeing responsible for the 737 Max, it may well point to the difficulties of trying to hold employees at large corporations responsible.
Mike Volkov said of the Forkner verdict, “Juries often bring justice to deliberations and verdicts.  In the Boeing case, the jurors saw through the government’s lack of fairness – Boeing officials were not charged – only a chief technical pilot was held accountable.  The fundamental flaw in this approach is that even assuming that Forkner engaged in misconduct, his actions or failures to act occurred in the context of an organization with colleagues, supervisors and other senior officials ultimately responsible for Boeing’s actions.” He concluded “Forkner’s defense attorney argued to the jury, “This was a massive corporate failure, and Boeing simply needed  someone to pin it on.” The jury agreed.”

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The Hill Country Podcast

Jody Dyer – Courthouse Coffee Roaster

Welcome to 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 Jody Dyer, who with his wife Martina founded Courthouse Coffee Roasters. If you love coffee this is the episode for you.

Some of the highlights include:
·      Why did the Dyers found Courthouse Coffee Roasters?
·      How and why dry roasting coffee allowed his wife, to continue her enjoyment of coffee.
·      Being ESG compliant in the coffee production space.
·      Dyer gives a lesson in Coffee 101.
·      Why did Jody and Martina move to The Hill Country.
Resources
Courthouse Coffee Roasters

Categories
Greetings and Felicitations

John Champion and MissionLogPodcast.com, Part 1-The Journey Begins

Welcome to the Greetings and Felicitations, a podcast where I explore topics which might not seem to be directly related to compliance but clearly influence our profession. In this episode, I begin a two-part series with John Champion, one of the founders of MissionLogPodcast.com. John’s original mission was to do a podcast on every episode of Star Trek, beginning with TOS, TAS, the movies, TNG, DS9, Voyager and beyond. It began as a 14-year odyssey and has only grown in length. In this Part 1, we take up the founding of  MissionLogPodcast.com and John’s work with his original co-host Ken Ray to explore the morals, messages and meanings of Star Trek up to TNG. Highlights include:

1. The vision of Rod Roddenberry and Roddenberry Entertainment for Mission Log, a Roddenberry Star Trek Podcast.
2. Start of the podcast and working through TOS.
3. Some of the hidden gems in TAS.
4. The movies.
5. The work of Dorothy (DC) Fontana
6. The David Gerrold interview.
Resources
MissionLogPodcast.com
Roddenberry Entertainment

Categories
Great Women in Compliance

Ellen Hunt – Organizational Justice


Welcome to the Great Women in Compliance Podcast, co-hosted by Lisa Fine and Mary Shirley.
In today’s episode, Lisa speaks with one of the “OG GWICs,” and one of the first interviewees, Ellen Hunt.  Ellen joined Spark Compliance in 2021, and is always a supporter for women in compliance, and in compliance as a whole.  Today, we follow up on her 2021 podcast, where Lisa and Ellen discussed how the E&C profession is addressing retaliation, and the importance of anti-retaliation as part of speaking up.
The main discussion is about organizational justice, and particularly aspects of procedural justice, as this is one where compliance professionals can have a huge impact.  They discuss the concept of consistent discipline and fairness, and what that can mean.   They also discuss when Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the Oscars telecast from an organizational justice standpoint, and how similar issues play out in corporations.
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.

Categories
Compliance Into the Weeds

Company Size and State of Their Compliance Programs

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 look at the recent ECI report on the Differences Between Small, Medium And Large Enterprises E&C Programs. Highlights include:

·      Where did this ECI report derive its data?

·      Why are middle sized companies in such bad condition regarding compliance program?

·      Why are middle sized companies having the most issues?

·       When is the time for compliance SME at a company?

·      When should a company institute robust internal controls?

Resources 
Matt in Radical Compliance
ECI Report – Differences Between Small, Medium And Large Enterprises E&C Programs

Categories
Daily Compliance News

April 6, 2022 the Will He Reinstate Trump Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
·      Elon Musk joins Twitter BOD. (WSJ)
·      PCAOB fines former KPMG audit head. (WSJ)
·      EU funding to Hungary at risk due to corruption.  (FT)
·      Closing arguments in Roger Ng trial.  (Law360)