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Greetings and Felicitations

Winnie the Pooh Explains Compliance: Part 4 – Piglet and Finance

This week I am exploring a five-part series on compliance as seen through the lens of Winnie the Pooh and the characters who live in the Hundred Acre Woods. Today I discuss Pooh’s best friend, Piglet, and use Piglet to consider the role of finance in a compliance program.

Piglet has some great adventures (or sometimes misadventures), such as giving Eeyore a birthday balloon that pops or getting lost in the Hundred Acre Wood mist and helping to rescue Pooh and Owl after they are trapped in Owl’s fallen house. My favorite Piglet tale is when Eeyore mistakenly offers Piglet’s house as a new home for Owl after his house has blown down. Piglet nobly agrees to let Owl have the house, at which point Pooh asks Piglet to live with him, and Piglet accepts. This poignant story shows the true meaning of friendship and any Pooh story I know.

I cannot think of any character more able to illustrate the role of finance in compliance than Piglet. He is obsessed with keeping things neat and tidy and sometimes has an inferiority complex, although his friends think highly of him. Sort of like finance.

Finance has roles in the prevention, detection and remediates prongs of any compliance program. In the prevent prong, this is most particularly true around offshore payments, generally defined as payments made to a location other than the home domicile of the payee or the location where the services were delivered. If a Tunisian agent who performs services in Dubai asks for payment in a location other than Dubai or Tunisia, that will qualify as an offshore payment. If you train people in finance on this issue, they may well pick up the phone and notify compliance when they see a request for payment in a geographic location separate from one of the two standard payment venues. When properly documented, those types of communications demonstrate that your compliance program is operationalized into the fabric of the organization.

The bottom line is that not only can finance be one of the compliance function’s strongest corporate allies but that the role of finance, by its nature, works to operationalize compliance. This is because to implement the appropriate internal controls around compliance, finance must know the specific requirements of compliance know what kinds of issues are likely to come up that might create a risk of bribery and corruption, all leading to an understanding of the appropriate compliance internal controls to implement around payments.

Join me tomorrow when I conclude with Winnie the Pooh and his influence on the Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer (CECO) role.

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Hidden Traffic Podcast

More About the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act with Virginia Newman

 

Virginia Newman is a trade and white-collar compliance attorney, and counsel in the international department at Miller & Chevalier. She advises on Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), anti-money laundering (AML), securities laws, anti-forced labor laws, and other human rights-related issues. Virginia also specializes in investigations and litigation. She joins host Gwen Hassan to explore key points in the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act.

 

 

There has been a debate around which comes first: mapping your supply chain or doing a risk assessment. Rather than making it a chicken or the egg scenario, Virginia believes mapping your supply chain is a part of a risk assessment and due diligence. The first step in performing a risk assessment is discussing your products with your product team, she shares: figuring out which products have high-risk inputs, and which ones you should focus on mapping first.

 

This is especially important for large companies that import and distribute countless products. There may be too many products to have a fully mapped and detailed supply chain for every one of them. Taking it one input at a time breaks down the line item list to a more manageable level.

 

Resources

Virginia Newman on LinkedIn

 

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Presidential Leadership Lessons for the Business Executive

Leadership Lessons from the Presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes

This episode begins a short series on Gilded Age Presidents, now largely forgotten. In this episode, we take up Rutherford B. Hayes and try to mine the issues he faced for some leadership lessons for the 21st-century business executive. Some of the problems we consider include:

1. Hayes Educational and Professional Background

2. The Disputed Election of 1876 and Compromise-(1)Election Commission; (2) Terms of the Compromise, and (3) Was it necessary?

3. Hayes’ Presidency-(1) Reconstruction ends-was it inevitable? (2) Civil Service Reform; (3) Cabinet Selections; (4) Port of New York; and (5) the Post Office.

a. Foreign Policy-(1) Paraguay War settlement; (2) Mexican border crisis; and (3) Immigration issues.

b. Great RR Strike of 1877, the Great Western Tour, his Indian Policy and Lemonade Lucy

4. Hayes Leadership Issues-

(1)“He serves his party best, who serves his country best.”;

(2) Rutherford the Rover;

(3) Use of veto and

(4) Conflicts with Congress over Congressional v. Executive Power.

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Daily Compliance News

August 4, 2022 the Bain Barred edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • What’s the cost of a data breach? (Third-Party Trust)
  • AG to investigate companies that evaluate ESG. (Reuters)
  • Bain was barred from working for the UK government. (FT)
  • Former Mexico President under investigation for money laundering. (France24)
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Blog

Would You Buy a New Car From Them? Part 2 – Lessons for Compliance

Over this series, I am reviewing the corruption enforcement action Involving the company formerly known as Chrysler Group LLC, now FCA US LLC (Chrysler or the company herein) which was criminally sentenced to pay a fine of over $96 million and a forfeiture money judgment over $203 million. These amounts were above a previous civil penalty of $310 million. All of this was for designing a vehicle emissions system for the company’s Jeep Grand Cherokee and Ram 1500 that would evade federal emissions standards for diesel vehicles and then lying about it to federal authorities. It was a different type of corruption from a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement action but corruption, nonetheless. Today, I want to consider some of the lessons for the anti-corruption compliance professional.

The actions by the company are instructive for what not to do in any corruption investigation. The Plea Agreement specified that the company did not receive credit for self-disclosure as it did not self-disclose its criminal conduct or fraud. The company did receive some cooperation credit for cooperating during the scope of the investigation but did not receive any credit for failures in both taking timely remedial action and for failing to discipline senior executives who were involved in or had knowledge of the criminal action and fraud. (Recall that one executive involved directly in the fraud was with the company until 2020.)

All these actions were very costly to the company in terms of how it was evaluated under the US Sentencing Guidelines. Under Section 8(C)2.5(g)(2) a company can receive credit of up to five (5) points for cooperating in the investigation and affirmatively accepting responsibility for it’s conduct. The company only received a two (2) point discount. Since the Plea Agreement specified the company did cooperate in the investigation, it clearly did not accept responsibility for its conduct. The lack of those three points in discount cost the company somewhere in the estimated range of $20 to $30 million in additional fines and penalties.

The Plea Agreement also specified for the first time the Monaco Doctrine of evaluating past conduct as a part of the overall evaluation of the company. The Plea Agreement detailed that the company had a prior criminal conviction for bribery and corruption under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) for bribing union officials. However, it is not clear how that worked into the overall fine and penalty except to note that the company paid the maximum under the US Sentencing Guidelines, after credit for the civil penalty.

Additionally, while there is no requirement for a monitor in this resolution of the criminal action, there was a such a requirement in the Consent Decree from the civil action. It mandated an Independent Compliance Auditor for a period of three years from the resolution of the civil matter, which was May 2019.

Lessons Learned

There are multiple lessons for the anti-corruption compliance professional from this enforcement action. Obviously, the need to engage in robust remediation for the matter at issue and your compliance program is critical. Moreover, and once again the Department of Justice (DOJ) criticized a company for tardiness in disciplining those who were involved in the fraud or those who were aware of it. As I noted in Part 1, multiple former company employees were criminally indicted for their conduct in this sordid affair. Yet some of them were with the company until 2019 and 2020 and not all were terminated, some left the company in voluntary separations, which sounds suspiciously like retirements. Such actions could save your organization literally millions of dollars.

One of the clearest, which was not stated in any of the resolution documents, was that every Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) needs to read the newspapers and stay abreast of current events in their industry. It was September 2015 that the Volkswagen (VW) emissions-testing scandal became public. It was by far the largest scandal in emissions-testing and cost VW billions in investigative and remediation costs, fines, penalties, buy-backs, market share loss and reputational damages. To say that anyone at the company was not aware of it is to simply defy belief.

Beyond just the CCO, every Board member was no doubt aware of the VW emissions-testing scandal. Under the current state of the Caremark Doctrine, there may well be a duty to make an inquiry by the Board of auto manufacturers to senior management to investigate if they have been involved in similar conduct. Here we do not know how the scandal got to the attention of the DOJ, but it was clear from the Plea Agreement, it was not from self-disclosure. CCOs and Boards need to be much more proactive when competitors get into trouble about investigating similar products or services which could lead to criminal and civil fines and penalties.

This matter warrants consideration by every CCO in every US public and private company. Every CCO can also use the case as instruction and training for both senior management and their company Board of Directors.

Resources

DOJ Press Release

Information

Plea Agreement

Consent Decree from the civil action