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Great Women in Compliance: Karen Woody on The Voice of Victims in Negotiated Plea Agreements

The recent Boeing plea agreement has led to many discussions about the role of victims in negotiated settlements, and today we have one of the top academic experts on the SEC and financial securities regulation, Karen Woody.  Karen is an associate professor at Washington & Lee School of Law. Karen and Lisa discuss why the Boeing case is a good example of who the victims are because the victims suffered a tragedy.  However, many other white-collar cases (we hope) are not as clear, especially in the FCPA bribery context, and what avenues of relief that others have, particularly in the international context.

Lisa and Karen also follow on the prior episode’s discussion of internal controls, particularly in light of the Solarwinds case. They talk about whether internal controls are the appropriate way for the SEC to pursue certain claims, such as cybersecurity or in a bribery case, and whether they should be limited to accounting provisions and whether other controls would be more appropriate, and if they don’t exist, should they?

Karen also shares her journey into academia and gives some practical tips for those who are interested in teaching and how to be resilient when one hits roadblocks. #GWIC is proud to announce that it has been nominated for the WomenInPodcastAwards. This is a people’s choice award and whether you vote for #GWIC or other nominees, we ask that you send the elevator back down by voting. Voting opens August 1, 2024, and details can be found on the #GWIC Linkedin page at http://www.linkedin.com/groups/12156164

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