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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: February 16, 2026, The Doom Loop Edition

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest addition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI to start your day. Sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee, and listen in to the AI Today In 5. All, from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, we consider five stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest about AI.

Top AI stories include:

  1. Staying ahead of AI regs in housing. (HousingWire)
  2. UN sets up panel on AI impact. (YahooNews)
  3. KPMG examines PE and AI. (CrowdFundInsider)
  4. Continuous learning to scale healthcare. (FilMoGaz)
  5. Everything stock AI touches in ‘Doom Loop’? (Bloomberg)

For more information on the use of AI in Compliance programs, my new book, Upping Your Game, is available. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report – Navigating Compliance in 2026: Trends and Transformations

Welcome to the award-winning FCPA Compliance Report, the longest-running podcast in compliance. In this episode, we replay a recent webinar Tom Fox participated in, hosted by EQS. The panel moderator was Steph Holmes, and the panelists were Tom Fox, Mary Shirley, and Matt Kelly.

The session focuses on six key 2026 trends for ethics and compliance programs:

(1) AI moving from experimentation to operational use, emphasizing deliberate scaling, human-in-the-loop oversight, governance frameworks, monitoring, and managing “shadow AI,” with practical use cases such as policy chatbots, gift/travel/entertainment reviews, and AI-enabled third-party risk lifecycle management;

(2) enforcement “volatility” and unpredictable regulatory signals, with emphasis on returning to fundamentals such as documenting program inputs and outcomes, and noting continued activity, including record FCA resolutions and a DOJ whistleblower program award leading to a rapid antitrust settlement;

(3) shifting employer–employee dynamics, including Gartner survey findings that 40% of employees would intentionally miss a compliance requirement to harm their organization, discussion of trust, employee sentiment, multi-generational communication differences, and the need to partner with HR while staying within organizational lanes;

(4) heightened third-party and supply chain risk expectations, including cybersecurity, tariffs/tariff evasion, export controls, and the need to unify siloed risk views into a holistic third-party risk assessment;

(5) anticipated increases in whistleblowing and investigation demands amid volatility, highlighting the importance of preventing retaliation, keeping reporters feeling heard through responsive communications, triage protocols, and anonymized case examples to build trust; and

(6) measuring program effectiveness through a shift from outputs to outcomes, including reviewing KPIs and key risk indicators, peer review of investigations, hotline “mystery shopping,” and gap analyses against the DOJ’s ECCP and compliance program hallmarks, with special emphasis on third-party documentation and ongoing monitoring.

Resources:

Mary Shirley on LinkedIn

Steph Holmes on LinkedIn

Matt Kelly at Radical Compliance

EQS

Tom Fox

Instagram

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

LinkedIn

Returning to Venezuela on Amazon.com

Categories
Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: February 16, 2026, The Never Forget Blankee(t) 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 in 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.

Top stories include:

  • DHS Secretary fired pilot over forgetting her Blankee(t). (WSJ)
  • Trump tells Utah GOP to gut the state AI safety bill, then drop it. (FT)
  • Ukrainian authorities arrest former Minister of Energy over corruption. (Reuters)
  • What CEOs are most worried about. (NYT)
Categories
Blog

The Hobson FCPA Trial: Commissions, Coded Cash, and the Compliance Risk Indicators

The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) trial of a former coal company executive offers a real-time reminder that FCPA cases are rarely about a single payment. They are about systems;  how third parties are engaged, how commissions are justified, how money moves, and how people communicate when they think no one is watching. The trial of former Corsa Coal executive Charles Hunter Hobson has featured opening statements from both sides, testimony from a cooperating former colleague, testimony from an FBI agent who reviewed messages and bank records, and expert testimony on the status of the foreign counterparty and the legality of bribery under Egyptian law.

Prosecutors have advanced a bribery theory based on inflated commissions paid to a sales agent, with kickbacks allegedly returning to the executive. Defense counsel has argued a lack of knowledge, a lack of control over the agent’s downstream conduct, and challenges around whether the foreign buyer qualifies as a state-owned enterprise for FCPA purposes. At this point, the defense has not presented its Case-in-Chief, so it is unknown if the defendant will testify. The value for compliance professionals lies in seeing how ordinary-seeming commercial mechanics are translated into an FCPA narrative before a jury.

The Prosecution Narrative: High Commissions, Bribes to “the Team,” and Business Won

In opening arguments, prosecutors told jurors that the company’s Egypt-based agent received higher-than-normal commissions and used a portion of those payments to bribe officials connected to the buyer, Al Nasr, in exchange for coal purchase contracts valued at roughly $143 million. Prosecutors further alleged that the agent paid $4.8 million to individuals described as government employees or employees of a state-owned business, and that the executive received approximately $200,000 in kickbacks.

In the government’s telling, this was not incidental. It was purposeful: pay the agent more than market, allow the agent to distribute those funds to secure business, and then share the proceeds back to the executive. The business obtained through the relationship and the revenue tied to those contracts form the “benefit” side of the alleged corruption equation. The alleged bribe payments and kickbacks form the “means.”

For compliance professionals, the risk indicator is not merely “third party in a high-risk market.” It is the combination of (1) pricing and award dynamics, (2) commission pressure, (3) coded communications, and (4) money movement patterns that appear designed to avoid normal transparency.

The Defense Narrative: No Direction to Bribe, No Control After Payment, and Disputed Knowledge

The defense has pressed a different story: that the executive did not hire the broker, did not personally pay him, and did not direct bribery; that once commissions were paid, the company did not control what the agent did with his earnings; and that the executive did not know or believe the buyer was government-affiliated at the relevant time.

Defense counsel also highlighted practical gaps a jury may notice: the absence of testimony from the foreign agent and foreign officials, and the difficulty of proving what happened abroad when the investigation is largely built on U.S.-available records. This posture is familiar in many FCPA matters: the defense seeks to separate commission payments from corrupt intent and to isolate the alleged misconduct to a third party’s independent actions.

The risk indicator here is the argument itself: organizations routinely assume that once a third party is paid, the risk transfers. However, that is not true in compliance or under the FCPA. Most certainly, such a willful blindness approach will not sit well with the DOJ when there is evidence suggesting knowledge, willful blindness, or coded coordination.

Third-Party Risk: Onboarding, Commission Benchmarking, and Relationship Ownership

Across the testimony elicited to date, the third-party storyline turns on three governance pressure points: how the agent was onboarded, how commission levels were justified, and who “owned” the relationship operationally. A cooperating former colleague of the defendant testified that the commissions were unusually high compared to industry norms and described communications he interpreted as references to individuals who needed to be “taken care of,” including discussions about keeping commissions high to support pricing and approvals. That is the heart of third-party compliance risk: when the commission structure becomes the economic channel through which influence is allegedly purchased, the company’s controls on justification, approvals, and monitoring become central to how the story is told to a jury.

State-Owned Enterprise and Egyptian Law: Why It Matters and What the Jury Heard

A key FCPA element is whether the recipients are “foreign officials,” which can include employees of state-owned enterprises. The DOJ presented expert testimony that the buyer was a public entity under Egyptian law and that bribery involving public officials is illegal under the Egyptian Penal Code. The defense challenged the expert’s treatment of Egyptian corporate structure and attempted to undermine the legal framing by citing academic discussions of corruption as socially prevalent, an approach the court rejected while allowing limited exploration of the distinction between written law and real-world practice. For compliance professionals, the risk indicator is straightforward. If your counterparty’s status as state-owned is ambiguous, you must assume that ambiguity will be litigated, and prosecutors will use foreign-law testimony to make the entity’s status legible to a U.S. jury.

The Money Trail: How the Government Says Funds Moved and Why It Matters

The most operationally revealing testimony described in coverage to date comes from the FBI agent who reviewed communications and financial records. The government presented a picture of commerce and payments operating in parallel:

  1. Commercial negotiation and commission splitting. Messages allegedly mixed coal pricing discussions with references to commission allocations associated with initials that the agent said corresponded to individuals at the foreign buyer and to the two principals themselves. The government’s point was not merely that commissions were paid; it was that commissions were structured and discussed in a manner consistent with the intended distribution.
  2. Coded references to cash and timing pressure. The phrase “Mr. Yen” was presented as a coded term for money, with messages allegedly asking for “Mr. Yen” by a certain day and asking whether it would be in U.S. dollars. In the government’s narrative, the coding supports consciousness of wrongdoing and intent to conceal.
  3. Use of informal transfer mechanisms and offshore touchpoints. Testimony referenced Western Union transfer records and a Dubai-based company, with messages and timing tied to travel and financial activity. The government described the executive receiving money through these channels, including activity linked to a Dubai entity and subsequent movement of funds to a U.S. entity sharing the executive’s address.
  4. Invoice construction to facilitate payment. The jury heard about exchanges in which an invoice was drafted for a substantial payment (described as $150,000), including efforts to create documentation, such as a business seal, and then a wire to the Dubai entity, followed by the transfer of a large portion of the funds.

The compliance relevance of this money trail is not that every company has Dubai entities or international wires. The relevance is that prosecutors can take a set of operational steps that may be individually explainable and argue that, taken together, they show an intent to route funds in ways that obscure purpose and beneficiaries. In a trial context, the story is built from the alignment of sequencing, communications, and financial records.

Conclusion

The Hobson trial, at this point, is a live demonstration of how an FCPA case can be built from a combination of commission economics, business obtained, communications, and money movement. Prosecutors say inflated commissions funded bribes and that kickbacks flowed back to the executive; the defense says the executive did not direct bribery, did not control the agent’s conduct after payment, and did not know the buyer’s alleged government affiliation at the time.

For the readers of this Blog, the value is not in sensational details. The value is in the compliance risk indicators that a jury is now being asked to interpret: what was said, what was paid, how it was routed, and what business it helped secure. That is the terrain where compliance programs either demonstrate discipline or discover, far too late, that “commissions” can become the government’s favorite word for “bribery.”

Resources

All Law360 articles written by Matthew Santoni. Unfortunately, a subscription is required to access the articles.

Coal Exec Used ‘Mr… Yen’ To Talk Kickbacks, FBI Testifies

Egypt’s ‘Social Law’ Doesn’t Endorse Bribery, Jury Told

Coal Exec’s Co-Worker Says Emails Hinted At Egypt Bribes

Coal Exec Knew Egyptian Broker Paid Bribes, Jury Told