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Jamming with Jason

You Will Not Break Me with Jeffrey L Edwards

What would you do when you watch your father die in front of you, realize your childhood is over, and get recruited to a life of gangs and drugs? You turn to music as your sanctuary and escape into writing and listening to music and create an alter ego that helps you create the life you want.

In this #jammingwithjason #podcast I am joined by Detroit-based musician and fabulous human being, Jeffrey L Edwards where we discuss his latest album “JLE World,” listen and discuss a couple of tracks from the album, hear his amazing story, and realize You Will Not Break Me and Trouble Waters don’t last for long and make you strong.

FOR FULL SHOW NOTES AND LINKS VISIT:

E308 You Will Not Break Me with Jeffrey L Edwards

Download and listen to Jeffrey’s latest album JLE World at: https://music.apple.com/us/album/jle-world/1626763176 and listen to his Middle Group with JLE podcast at: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/middle-ground-with-jle/id1560636813

DO YOU LOVE MUSIC LIKE ME?

If so, learn how you can use it to intentionally heal and change your emotions as well as use it for entertainment at: https://bit.ly/MeffordMusic

LIKE THE PODCAST?

If you’re the kind of person who likes to help others, then share this with your friends and family. If you find value, they will too. Please leave a review [https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/jamming-with-jason-mefford/id1456660699] on Apple Podcasts so we can reach more people.

Join my Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/beinguniquely

OTHER RESOURCES YOU MAY ENJOY:

My YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/c/jasonleemefford] and make sure to subscribe

My Facebook page [https://www.facebook.com/jammingwithjasonmefford]

My LinkedIn page [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonmefford/]

My website [https://jasonmefford.com]

STAY UP TO DATE WITH NEW CONTENT:

It can be difficult to find information on social media and the internet, but you get treated like a VIP and have one convenient list of new content delivered to your inbox each week when you subscribe to Jason’s VIP Lounge at: https://jasonmefford.com/vip/ plus; that way, you can communicate with me through email.

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EMBARGOED!

EMBARGOED! Episode 58: Price Caps! On Both Sides of the Atlantic

Host Tim O’Toole is joined by Stephenson Harwood’s Sue Millar to discuss the relatively new price caps on Russian crude oil and the coming price caps on petroleum products in both the U.S. and the U.K.

Subscribe * Apple Podcasts Spotify *  Amazon Music  * Google Podcasts * Stitcher

Questions? Contact us at podcasts@milchev.com.

EMBARGOED! is not intended and cannot be relied on as legal advice; the content only reflects the thoughts and opinions of its hosts.

***Stay sanctions free.***

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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

One Month to More Effective Internal Controls – What Are Internal Controls?

What specifically are internal controls in a compliance program? Internal controls are not only the foundation of a company but are also the foundation of any effective anti-corruption compliance program. Internal controls expert Joe Howell has said that internal controls are systematic measures, such as reviews, checks and balances, methods, and procedures instituted by an organization that performs several different functions. Howell also notes that for compliance purposes, controls are those measures specifically to provide reasonable assurance any assets or resources of a company cannot be used to pay a bribe. This definition includes the diversion of company assets, such as by unauthorized sales discounts or receivables write-offs, as well as the distribution of assets.

Three key takeaways:

  1. Effective internal controls are required under the FCPA.
  2. Internal controls are a critical part of any best practices compliance program.
  3. There are multiple FCPA enforcement actions that demonstrate the enforcement spotlight on internal controls.
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Career Can D0

Living Your Abundant Life with Elle Ballard

In this episode of Career Can Do, Mary Ann Faremouth chats with returning guest Elle Ballard, international best-selling author, speaker, Abundance mentor, and Founder of the Women of the World Network (WOTWN). Elle helps multinational women achieve abundance in their personal and professional world while helping them uncover and focus on their uniqueness. Elle shares her story as she discusses how WOTWN is accomplishing their mission to bring out their members’ potential.

Motivated by a desire to see more women live their dream lives, their “abundant” lives, Elle founded Women of the World Network. She hoped that she would provide more opportunities for women to create that abundance for themselves. Women often busy themselves with their families and put their dreams on the back burner. Elle wanted to make a platform where they would be able to pursue both if they so wished.

 

WOTWN is a community of multinational women entrepreneurs whose mission is to help other women achieve success in their businesses. They have multiple membership levels and host events that even non-members can attend. WOTWN offers members much exposure, marketability, professional expansion, and growth.

 

Resources

Faremouth.com

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Blog

The World Has Changed: McDonald’s and the Oversight Duty of Officers-Part 3

This week, we are exploring a shift in the duties of care owed by corporate officers to the corporation. This shift is coming through the Chancery Court of Delaware in the case of McDonald’s Corporation and its former Executive Vice President and Global Chief People Officer of McDonald’s Corporation, David Fairhurst and his part in the creation of an absolute toxic atmosphere of sexual harassment at the very highest levels of the organization. The case is styled In re McDonald’s Corporation Stockholder Derivative Litigation, and in it, the court formally recognizes the oversight duties of officers of Delaware corporations. Today we discuss the role of the Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) in both the reasoning for the decision and what it means for CCOs going forward.

Perhaps one of the most interesting parts of the court’s opinion is that it draws from the US Sentencing Guidelines and their creation of the Chief Compliance Officer position as both reasons for the decision and as a guide to how the CCO position will be impacted by this ruling. The judge pointed to the US Sentencing Guidelines as a key basis for the creation of the original Caremark Doctrine. The court stated that a key reason for “recognizing the board’s duty of oversight was the importance of having compliance systems in place so the corporation could receive credit under the federal Organizational Sentencing Guidelines.” However, the Guidelines did not stop at the board level. The US Sentencing Guidelines mandated the creation of the CCO position.

Specifically, the “Guidelines state that “[h]igh- level personnel of the organization shall ensure that the organization has an effective compliance and ethics program” and such senior person(s) “be assigned overall responsibility for the compliance and ethics program.” The Guidelines went on to define an organization’s “high-level personnel” as “individuals who have substantial control over the organization or who have a substantial role in the making of policy within the organization,” which includes “a director; an executive officer; an individual in charge of a major business or functional unit of the organization, such as sales, administration, or finance; and an individual with a substantial ownership interest.”

The court somewhat dryly concluded “It would seem hard to argue that, simply by virtue of being an officer, the Chief Compliance Officer could not owe a duty of oversight. That, however, is the logical implication of Fairhurst’s position that only directors can owe a duty of oversight.”

The responsibilities of the CCO are wide and sometimes varied. Here the court stated, ““[s]pecific individual(s) within the organization shall be delegated day-to-day operational responsibility for the compliance and ethics program. Individual(s) with operational responsibility shall report periodically to high-level personnel and, as appropriate, to the governing authority, or an appropriate subgroup of the governing authority, on the effectiveness of the compliance and ethics program.” But the Delaware court also provided CCOs with some additional ammunition in their quest for true influence in a corporation by stating that “to carry out such operational responsibility, such individual(s) shall be given adequate resources, appropriate authority, and direct access to the governing authority or an appropriate subgroup of the governing authority.”

Finally, the CCO has a broad scope within an organization. Indeed the court noted, that only the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) has as broad a remit, stating “Although the CEO and Chief Compliance Officer likely will have company-wide oversight portfolios, other officers generally have a more constrained area of authority. With a constrained area of responsibility comes a constrained version of the duty that supports an Information-Systems Claim.”

Yet the breadth of this portfolio does not mean a CCO can be liable for every corporate failure, even those directly in culture or compliance. Here the standard of liability for the CCO is critical and standard is breach of the duty of loyalty through bad faith. The court noted, that in the decision of Stone v. Ritter, upholding the original Caremark decision, “the Delaware Supreme Court adopted the Guttman formulation and stated that a breach of the duty of loyalty, such as acting in bad faith, was a “necessary condition to liability.” After Stone, then-Vice Chancellor Strine acknowledged that Caremark duties carried overtones of care, but explained that “to hold directors liable for a failure in monitoring, the directors have to have acted with a state of mind consistent with a conscious decision to breach their duty of care.”

Rarely, if ever do you see a CCO engage in bad faith. There have been some instances but I can think or only one or two that rise to the level of bad faith. The good news for CCOs is that while there may be a new cause of action against them for a duty of oversight; if there is a compliance program in place and if that compliance program detects wrongdoing which is reported up to the Board; a CCO has most probably met their duty under this decision.

Please join me tomorrow as I explore how this court decision, together with the CCO certification mandate by the Department of Justice, the Monaco Memo and the new Corporate Enforcement Policy will all change the relationships and dynamics of Chief Compliance Officers in the corporate world.

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Great Women in Compliance

Ellen Hunt with the 2023 Hunt Report

If CEOs have Larry Fink’s Annual Letter to CEOs, then Lisa has Ellen Hunt’s “Hunt Report.”  Ellen is Principal Consultant Advisor at Spark Compliance and is well known as a mentor and advocate to many in the E&C community.

Ellen has finished her first year as a “Sparkie,” and will update us on how that is going and what she is seeing and learning through her work.  For the past few years, Lisa and Ellen have talked about retaliation and what we can do better to protect people who raise concerns and those who are witnesses in investigations.  While we have seen some improvements, there is still a long way to go.  They also look at this in light of organizational justice and our workplaces.

They also continue the discussions of the past few weeks about kindness, fairness and equality, and how these impact our programs.  This can impact how we collaborate with DEI and ESG teams, to ensure ethical workplaces.

One other way you can improve your workplace is with employee recognition, and Mary’s “Living Your Best Compliance Life” column at Corporate Compliance Insights can provide some great insights on the benefits of doing so and some ideas that can brighten someone’s day.

The Great Women in Compliance Podcast is on the Compliance Podcast Network with a selection of other Compliance related offerings to listen in to.  If you are enjoying this episode, please rate it on your preferred podcast player to help other likeminded Ethics and Compliance professionals find it.  If you have a moment to leave a review at the same time, Mary and Lisa would be so grateful.  You can also find the GWIC podcast on Corporate Compliance Insights where Lisa and Mary have a landing page with additional information about them and the story of the podcast.  Corporate Compliance Insights is a much-appreciated sponsor and supporter of GWIC, including affiliate organization CCI Press publishing the related book; “Sending the Elevator Back Down, What We’ve Learned from Great Women in Compliance” (CCI Press, 2020).

If you enjoyed the book, the GWIC team would be very grateful if you would consider rating it on Goodreads and Amazon and leaving a short review.  Don’t forget to send the elevator back down by passing on your copy to someone who you think might enjoy reading it when you’re done, or if you can’t bear parting with your copy, consider it as a holiday or appreciation gift for someone in Compliance who deserves a treat.

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

McDonald’s and Duty of Corporate Officer Oversight

The award-winning, Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast that takes a deep dive into a compliance-related topic, literally going into the weeds to explore a subject more fully. In this episode, Matt and I dive deep into a recent decision by the Delaware Court of Chancery in the McDonald’s case, creating a duty of oversight for corporate officers.

Some of the highlights include:

·      Why can bad facts make bad laws?

·      The sordid facts of David Fairhurst during his tenure at McDonald’s.

·      The legal rationale.

·      What is Caremark, and how did it influence this decision?

·      What does it mean for CCOs?

·      How does this decision intertwine with the Monaco Doctrine, CCO certification, and the new Corporate Enforcement Policy?

 Resources

Tom with a multipart series on the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog

Matt Kelly with two posts in Radical Compliance

Categories
Daily Compliance News

February 1, 2023 – The Most Corrupt in Europe Edition

Welcome to the Daily Compliance News. Each day, Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, brings you compliance-related stories to start your day. Sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee, and listen to the Daily Compliance News. All from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day we consider four stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest for the compliance professional.

Stories we are following in today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Allianz employee claims prosecutors and his lawyers ‘set him up.’ (WSJ)
  • More fraud in the crypto world. (WSJ)
  • Tesla’s self-driving claims are under criminal investigation. (Reuters)
  • Hungary is the most corrupt country in the EU. (Politico)