Categories
The Compliance Life

Joe Burke-Looking Down the Road for Compliance

The Compliance Life details the journey to and in the role of a Chief Compliance Officer. How does one come to sit in the CCO chair? What are some of the skills a CCO needs to success navigate the compliance waters in any company? What are some of the top challenges CCOs have faced and how did they meet them? These questions and many others will be explored in this new podcast series. Over four episodes each month on The Compliance Life, I visit with one current or former CCO to explore their journey to the CCO chair. This month, my guest is Joe Burke, most recently the Chief Ethics & Compliance Officer and Employment Counsel, Quest Software Inc.

In this concluding episode, Burke looks down the road for compliance in the following areas. Data privacy and trade compliance take center stage. How the new ownership model provided by Private Equity provides challenges and opportunities. The long, slow march to ethics and tone.

How do we inspire through influence through the teaching of compliance?

Resources

Joe Burke LinkedIn Profile

Categories
The Corruption Files

How Corruption Happens in Tech

Thomas Fox and Michael DeBernardis discuss the inner workings of bribery in the tech industry, specifically cases involving HP, Microsoft, and Panasonic, the DOJ and SEC driving home the benefits of voluntary disclosure and their response to future cases, and how companies can practice due diligence even within internal controls.

Key points discussed in the episode:

✔️ Thomas Fox gives a brief background on the cases involving HP, Microsoft, and Panasonic.

✔️ Michael DeBernardis lays out the DOJ and SEC’s investigative process, with a focus on the benefits of voluntary disclosure. Data analytics has also been tossed in the forefront as Microsoft pioneered the transparency of looking into their distributor models and has now been added to compliance guidelines.

✔️ Petty cash has been proven to be an aspect worth examining as HP’s bribery case revolved around the lack of controls. HP’s schemes in Germany and Mexico also emphasized why training your team – whether contractual or full-time – should be trained to handle high-risk situations.

✔️ Internal and compliance controls must be interconnected. Otherwise, wrongdoers will find loopholes and take advantage of them. Making sales to a foreign government also means putting a target on your back.

✔️ Thomas Fox goes into detail about Panasonic’s case regarding corrupt agents, Microsoft’s move towards transaction monitoring, and HP’s suspicious commission discounts coinciding with the Parker Drilling case.

✔️ The DOJ has now provided clear guidance for compliance. Companies are now encouraged to fully disclose their transactions to benefit them in terms of credibility and reduced total penalties.

✔️ Greatly improving their responses, the DOJ has understood the value of cooperation and voluntary disclosure and widened its body of FCPA cases, making it easier for lawyers to counsel companies in preventing future issues from happening.

—————————————————————————-

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.

Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Ethisphere’s The Sphere with Erica Salmon Byrne

 

Erica Salmon Byrne is the President of Ethisphere and Chair of the Business Ethics Leadership Alliance. Ethisphere is a company that believes that companies that focus on building a sustainable business will outperform their peers that do not. Tom Fox welcomes her to this week’s show to talk about Ethisphere’s innovative new service called The Sphere. 

 

 

What is The Sphere?

Tom asks Erica to describe The Sphere and why she is so excited about the launch. For more than 15 years, Ethisphere has been collecting data on the programmatic practices of the world’s most ethical companies through their questionnaire, called the Ethics Quotient, Erica explains. They realized a demand for solid benchmarking within the compliance space, and decided to democratize their data access. This was the birth of The Sphere – a subscription-based service that allows you to select the topic you are interested in getting data on and gain access to a multitude of resources. 

 

Peer Data: A Powerful Tool

Tom asks Erica what makes peer data so important and powerful for a CCO. Whenever you’re going to make a business proposition, she replies, the first question you will be asked is ‘What are other people doing?’. Businesses want to compare their practices and progress to their peers’. This is to avoid being dubbed “a weak antelope” – you don’t necessarily want to be ahead of the pack, you just want to ensure that you have a functioning practice compared to your competitors. So how to determine you’re in that comfortable middle position of the pack? The answer is data analysis. When you present the relevant data to your CFO or compliance team, they tend to believe in your leadership and vision more.

 

Resources

Erica Salmon Byrne | LinkedIn | Twitter

Ethisphere | The Sphere

 

Categories
Daily Compliance News

July 26, 2022 the Extradition edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

Categories
Blog

Biotronik Anti-Kickback Enforcement Action: Bribery Schemes and Lessons Learned

Today we conclude our series on a Federal Anti-Kickback enforcement action which was announced last week, involving the Oregon based medical device manufacturer Biotronik Inc. (Biotronik). Today, I want to consider the corruption schemes and the lessons learned for the compliance professional. As stated in the Settlement Agreement, Biotronik “knowingly caused the submission of false claims for payment to federal healthcare programs by providing remuneration to physicians to induce them to use Biotronik’s CRM devices in violation of the Anti-Kickback Statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b(b).”

I. The Bribery Schemes

 a. Abuse of Training Programs

The Settlement Agreement alleges “Biotronik knowingly paid excessive payments to physicians with a purpose of inducing and rewarding their use of Biotronik’s pacemakers, defibrillators, and other cardiac devices. One of ways the company did so was through “its new employee training program (“Training Program”) by knowingly paying some of its physician customers (“Training Physicians”) to provide excessive employee trainings.” Under this scheme, the Training Physicians were to be paid a fixed fee of approximately $400.00 each time a Biotronik employee trainee received training during one of the Training Physician’s CRM implant procedures. For instance, under the Training Program implant procedure, the “Training Physician was supposed to educate the employee trainee on Biotronik’s devices and teach how to assist a physician during an implant procedure.”

However, it was the sales team which set up these training programs. Biotronik’s compliance and training functions warned that “Biotronik’s salespeople had too much influence in the selection of Training Physicians, that the Training program and resulting payments were being over- utilized, and that the goal of educating Biotronik employees could be achieved without paying Training Physicians.” However, “Biotronik permitted trainees to attend an excessive number of training procedures for which Training Physicians received payment from Biotronik without first conducting an adequate assessment of the trainee’s need for additional training.”

To further line the pockets of the Training Physicians, “salespeople, including managers, intentionally prevented otherwise qualified trainees from successfully completing the Training Program, not because they needed additional training, but rather as a means of ensuring that the trainee could attend more trainings, thereby purportedly justifying additional payments to Training Physicians.” Biotronik also knowingly paid Training Physicians for some trainings that either never occurred or was of little or no value to trainees. This included paying one “Training Physician for certain trainings for which there was no trainee physically present to observe the implant procedure.”

b.  Lavish Entertainment

The Settlement Agreement also alleged that “Biotronik knowingly paid for lavish meals, entertainment, and travel for certain physicians who are known to Biotronik and the United States (hereinafter the “Subject Physicians”) with a purpose of inducing and rewarding their use of Biotronik’s pacemakers, defibrillators, and other cardiac devices.” The company “did not require sign in sheets for lavish meals with physicians and did not use adequate methods to verify the number or identity of attendees or to confirm whether the meals were for a legitimate business purpose.”

This led to  some Biotronik employees falsifying “receipts and participant lists, making it possible to exceed the company’s compliance spending limit per attendee.” These meals and outings often included little or no legitimate business discussion. There was also the amount of the entertainment expense, which included “winery tours, annual office holiday parties, and lavish meals with certain Subject Physicians and their guests at high-end restaurants.” Yet another example of spending far too much on entertainment was “one Subject Physician’s international business class airfare and honoraria in the thousands of dollars for a short, 30-minute talk at an international conference.”

II. Biotronik Remediation

No doubt one of the reasons Biotronik did receive the settlement amount was that, at some point, it recognized the issues and instituted remediation. With the training programs “beginning in 2017, Biotronik added new compliance measures and oversight of the Training Program, limited the number of Training Program events, and reduced payments made in connection with such Training Program events.” In April 2021, Biotronik hired a new Vice President of Compliance and was able to get the lavish entertainment under control by adding “new compliance measures related to the provision of meals and travel to healthcare providers which provided additional employee training, imposed new restrictions, and improved oversight to identify and prevent meal and travel policy violations.”

III. Lessons Learned

There are multiple lessons here for the compliance professional outside the laws under which Biotronik ran afoul. Perhaps the clearest and foremost is that compliance not only needs visibility into areas of risk about also some modicum of control. In the area of Physician Training, the Settlement Agreement specifically noted that the Biotronik compliance function “warned that Biotronik’s salespeople had too much influence in the selection of Training Physicians, that the Training program and resulting payments were being over-utilized, and that the goal of educating Biotronik employees could be achieved without paying Training Physicians.” Here a control should have been put in place which required compliance approval before payments and reimbursements were made for the training. This is similar to a compliance oversight and control of expenses paid or reimbursed to foreign government officials in a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) compliance program.

Interestingly, the Department of Justice (DOJ) also discussed a more nuanced approach to determining if the Physician’s Training is both initially warranted and then continues to be warranted. This is ongoing monitoring. Obviously for Biotronik, one of their risks was when the company paid for training provided by doctors who could also prescribe the company’s products and services. The risk to the company is similar to the risk of an internationally focused company doing business with foreign governments or state-owned enterprises, under the FCPA. If you are paying out monies for training and that puts you in a high-risk category, you need to make sure those receiving the training are required to receive it or even need it.

Under the lavish spending on entertainment and travel, the same type of analysis can apply. The key is both “reasonable spending and business purpose.” The amount spent must be reasonable for the time, locale and participants. There should also be an articulated business purpose for the dinner or other event.

Under the FCPA, there is no threshold that a Company can establish a value for business entertainment. However, I believe there are clear guidelines which should be incorporated into your business expenditure policy, which should include the following:

  • A reasonable balance must exist for bona fide business entertainment during an official business trip.
  • All business entertainment expenses must be reasonable.
  • The business entertainment expense must be commensurate with local custom and practice.
  • The business entertainment expense must avoid the appearance of impropriety.
  • The business entertainment expense must be supported by appropriate documentation and properly recorded on the company’s book and records.

The incorporation of these concepts into a compliance policy is a good first step towards preventing potential violations from arising, but it must be emphasized that they are only a first step. There must be procedures to implement these policies. At a minimum, you must require a business justification from the business representative requesting to provide the gift or business entertainment. Next it should be reviewed and approved by a front-line compliance professional. Then, depending on the amount and nature of the request, it may need Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) approval. Finally, if there is a Compliance Committee it should go to that Committee for a final check to make sure everything is in order.

These guidelines must be coupled with active training of all personnel, not only on a company’s compliance policy, but also on the corporate and individual consequences for violation of the policy. Lastly, it is imperative that all such business entertainment be properly recorded, as required by the books and records component of the FCPA.

And, as always, do not forget the gut check test.