Is FCPA Enforcement Back? Part 2 – What Compliance Professionals Should Do

After months of speculation and a noticeable lull in FCPA enforcement, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has made a significant announcement with a new policy statement. In a recently released memorandum titled Guidelines for Investigations and Enforcement of the FCPA (FCPA Memo), Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Todd Blanche has sent a clear message that FCPA enforcement is still alive under the Trump Administration. However, it will now focus on new areas, including cartel disruption, national security, US business development, and leveling the global playing field for U.S. companies.

This two-part blog post series delves deeply into the FCPA Memo. Yesterday, in Part 1, we examined the key compliance takeaways from this significant policy shift. Today, in Part 2, we provide practical insights into how you, the compliance professional, should respond.

1. Reassess your FCPA risk profile—especially in high-risk geographies and industries now under the national security spotlight.

Following the FCPA Memo, compliance professionals must reassess their FCPA risk profiles, particularly in high-risk geographies and industries that are increasingly scrutinized due to national security concerns. The FCPA Memo signaled that corruption-related activities, especially those intertwined with national security interests, are receiving enhanced scrutiny. This includes critical infrastructure sectors, technology industries, energy companies, pharmaceutical enterprises, and defense contractors. It also applies particularly to businesses operating in emerging or high-corruption-risk markets such as Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and Russia, among others.

Companies should move to update their geographic and sector-specific risk assessments. A robust reassessment involves reviewing recent enforcement actions, analyzing geopolitical developments, and carefully monitoring regulatory guidance that identifies new enforcement priorities. It means conducting thorough due diligence on third-party intermediaries, scrutinizing joint venture partnerships, and proactively understanding local business practices that could expose the organization to corruption risks.

Furthermore, compliance leaders should engage senior executives and board members in understanding how heightened national security risks intersect with anti-corruption compliance. This awareness ensures leadership commitment and alignment, enabling resources to be strategically allocated to address emerging risks comprehensively. The current enforcement climate mandates increased vigilance around political contributions, lobbying activities, dealings with foreign government-owned entities, and managing interactions with politically exposed persons (PEPs).

Finally, integrate scenario planning and predictive analytics into your risk assessment procedures to proactively anticipate potential compliance vulnerabilities. By considering worst-case scenarios and conducting regular tabletop exercises, compliance teams can identify possible gaps and vulnerabilities before enforcement authorities do. This forward-looking approach ensures that your FCPA compliance framework remains agile, responsive, and attuned to the evolving global enforcement landscape, providing a robust defense should regulators or investigators come calling.

2. Stress-test your investigation protocols to ensure you can respond quickly and comprehensively when issues arise. Speed now matters more than ever.

The DOJ’s recent pronouncements underscore a critical message for compliance professionals: investigative agility is now paramount. Authorities are increasingly emphasizing the need for rapid and comprehensive responses to allegations or evidence of misconduct. Companies struggle to quickly mobilize internal investigations in response to heightened scrutiny, potential penalties, and reputational damage. Therefore, it is essential to regularly stress-test your internal investigative protocols, ensuring readiness to launch effective and thorough inquiries when allegations surface swiftly.

Begin by evaluating your investigative playbook, checking for clearly defined roles, immediate escalation procedures, and robust communication plans. Conduct scenario-based drills involving different departments—legal, compliance, audit, HR, and senior management—to gauge response times and coordination effectiveness. These exercises help reveal procedural gaps, unclear accountabilities, or bottlenecks that slow down your response capabilities.

Critically test your protocols’ effectiveness in preserving and collecting evidence, managing chain-of-custody requirements, and handling electronically stored information (ESI). Time is your enemy when evidence could be lost, altered, or destroyed. Ensure your team has immediate access to necessary forensic and technical resources, enabling rapid and precise data extraction and preservation. Likewise, train your squad extensively on conducting compelling witness interviews, crafting proper documentation, and swiftly reporting initial findings to internal stakeholders and, if necessary, external regulators.

Additionally, proactively assess your external support networks, including law firms, forensic accountants, and crisis management specialists, and pre-negotiate engagement terms to ensure a seamless process. Having your external investigative partners pre-vetted and standing by will significantly expedite your investigative response. Prompt internal investigations demonstrate organizational integrity, cooperation, and seriousness to regulators, significantly influencing potential penalties or remedial expectations.

Ultimately, speed and thoroughness in investigations are essential not only to meet DOJ expectations but also to mitigate reputational risks, reduce financial exposure, and maintain internal employee confidence in the integrity of the compliance program. Comprehensive and efficient investigations demonstrate proactive, ethical leadership, reassure stakeholders, and position your organization as credible and transparent under regulatory scrutiny.

3. Refocus your compliance program on detecting and preventing serious misconduct, not just paperwork violations. The DOJ isn’t interested in minor slips—it wants meaningful enforcement with real-world impact.

Historically, compliance programs have sometimes overly emphasized procedural compliance, focusing on checking boxes, ensuring policies are signed, and conducting routine training without verifying the actual behavioral impact. However, recent enforcement trends and DOJ guidance unequivocally indicate a shift toward substantive compliance outcomes over procedural adherence. Authorities are explicitly uninterested in minor technical infractions; their priority is detecting meaningful misconduct, preventing real-world harm, and demonstrating a genuine organizational commitment to integrity.

Therefore, compliance leaders must pivot their approach to prioritize detecting and deterring serious wrongdoing, including bribery, fraud, financial misstatements, money laundering, and other forms of criminal conduct. This involves investing in sophisticated monitoring technologies, predictive analytics, and behavioral data analysis to proactively identify anomalies or indicators of serious misconduct. Traditional periodic audits and passive whistleblower hotlines alone are no longer sufficient; compliance programs must evolve into proactive, data-driven risk detection systems capable of identifying misconduct early and intervening decisively.

Tailor your compliance training to address real-world scenarios relevant to your employees’ actual work environments. Interactive, scenario-based training that actively engages employees in solving compliance dilemmas provides deeper learning, reinforces ethical behaviors, and fosters an organizational culture that is sensitive to misconduct red flags. Employees who understand the practical implications of ethical failures are better equipped to identify and escalate serious issues early, providing compliance teams a critical window for intervention.

Moreover, refine compliance incentives and disciplinary systems to reward genuine integrity and ethical behavior rather than mere policy adherence. Incorporate ethics and compliance objectives into performance reviews, leadership promotions, and recognition programs. Conversely, demonstrate a firm stance against serious misconduct through consistent and publicized enforcement actions. Employees must recognize that the organization’s ethical stance is authentic, actionable, and carries consequences.

By refocusing compliance programs on substantive misconduct, organizations send a clear and powerful message to employees, stakeholders, and regulators alike: compliance is not an administrative exercise but a fundamental component of the business’s integrity, sustainability, and long-term success. Such a program meets DOJ expectations for effective compliance, mitigates regulatory exposure, and safeguards the organization’s reputation, credibility, and value.

This FCPA memo was not simply a policy update. It was a strategic reset. And for the compliance community, it’s a call to action.

The bottom line is that the FCPA is here to stay. It may be entering one of its most aggressive and geopolitically consequential phases yet. For compliance professionals, that means redoubling your efforts, not out of fear, but with clarity, purpose, and a seat at the strategic table. As always, effective compliance is not—and never has been—about checklists. Instead, it is about protecting your business and enabling it to compete ethically, globally, and with confidence.

And even if this administration does not follow its own FCPA memo and brings no enforcement actions, the FCPA will still be the law under the next administration.

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