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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: May 23, 2025, The Gutless Wonders 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:

  • UK freezes asset of son of former Bangladeshi PM. (FT)
  • Boeing’s compliance plan is to create a hotline. (WSJ)
  • EY is negligent in missing $3bn fraud, the court said. (Reuters)
  • CEOs are afraid to discuss tariffs and garner Trump’s ire. (NYT)
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Creativity and Compliance

Creativity and Compliance – Overcoming Conservatism in Compliance Education with Creativity

Where does creativity fit into compliance? In more places than you think. Problem-solving, accountability, communication, and connection – they all take creativity. Join Tom Fox and Ronnie Feldman on Creativity and Compliance, part of the award-winning Compliance Podcast Network.

Ronnie’s company, Learnings and Entertainment, utilizes the entertainment devices people use to consume information in their everyday, non-work lives and applies it to important topics around compliance and ethics. It is not only about being funny. It is about changing the tone of your compliance communications and messaging to make your compliance program, policies, and resources more accessible.

In this episode of Creativity and Compliance, Tom Fox and Ronnie Feldman tackle the challenge of integrating creative, engaging methods into compliance training within conservative institutions. Drawing examples from financial giants, they discuss how these organizations have successfully implemented entertaining and effective training strategies. Addressing common concerns such as risk aversion, cost, and effectiveness, the hosts advocate for shorter, more frequent, and varied training formats. They highlight that creativity in compliance training not only captures attention but also enhances engagement and memory retention. The episode concludes with a call to action for compliance professionals to consider what they have to lose by trying new approaches.

Key highlights:

  • Overcoming Conservatism in Creative Compliance
  • Addressing Risk-Averse Concerns
  • Short, Fun, and Frequent Training
  • Variety in Compliance Training
  • User Experience and Engagement

Resources: 

Ronnie

  • Compliance Confessionsinspired by “Mean Tweets,” these 90-second commercials address misconceptions and excuses to promote speak-up culture and the E&C team as positive and helpful.
  • E&C Training Jams – a soulful singer banters about ethics & compliance, explaining policies, sharing examples, and debunking excuses. 
  • Tales from the Hotline – Real speak-up-themed stories about workplace behavior gone wrong.
  • Workplace Tonight Show! E&C meets SNL Weekend Update to explain corporate risk topics and why employees should care.
  • 60-Second Communication & Awareness Shorts – A variety of short, customizable, music and multimedia, quick-hitter “commercials” promoting integrity, compliance, speaking up, and the E&C team as helpful advisors and coaches.
  • Custom Live & Digital Programing – Custom creative programming that balances the seriousness of the subject matter with a more engaging delivery. After all, you can’t bore people into learning.

 Tom

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Creativity and Compliance was recently honored as one of the Top 35 Podcasts on Creativity by Feedspot.

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Blog

Sherlock Holmes and the Business of Compliance: Top Five Lessons from A Study in Scarlet

In a new season of Adventures in Compliance, we have journeyed through the ethical, investigative, and leadership lessons in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s foundational Sherlock Holmes novel, A Study in Scarlet. Today, I wanted to look at the novel from another perspective, exploring the novel for its compelling insights into critical business practices. Sherlock Holmes is not simply the world’s greatest fictional detective; he is also an insightful instructor in the art of business. Here are five top business lessons from Holmes’ first novel and how compliance professionals can incorporate these lessons into best-practice compliance programs.

Lessons Learned

1. Cultivating Diversified Skill Sets to Foster Innovation

When Dr. John Watson meets Sherlock Holmes, we see the convergence of two dramatically different skill sets. Practical and grounded, Watson complements Holmes’s exceptional analytical acumen and eccentric genius. This pairing is significant; Holmes benefits greatly from Watson’s structured and methodical approach, which developed from Watson’s training as a medical professional and his disciplined experience as a soldier.

In business compliance, it is essential to recognize the power of multidisciplinary teams. Just as Watson’s medical insights were crucial to Holmes’ understanding of crime, a strong compliance function requires input from various corporate functions such as legal, finance, HR, and operations. Encouraging collaboration across different departments brings about innovative compliance solutions that one-dimensional thinking can’t match.

Compliance Best Practice: Build cross-functional compliance teams and create environments where open dialogue between various business units becomes standard operating procedure.

2. Trust Encourages Risk-Taking and Innovation

A cornerstone of Holmes’s partnership with Watson was their mutual trust. Watson’s unwavering trust in Holmes gave Holmes the liberty to experiment boldly, occasionally taking unconventional paths toward solutions. This trusted partnership allowed Holmes to embrace creative risk-taking, essential to solving complex problems. In compliance programs, trust similarly fuels innovation. A company culture emphasizing trust will empower employees to bring forth concerns or innovative ideas without fear of reprisal. A trust-based compliance culture is a fertile ground for employee engagement, proactive problem-solving, and thoughtful risk-taking.

Compliance Best Practice: Foster a speak-up culture by actively demonstrating management’s responsiveness to employee concerns. Compliance officers must reinforce trust at all organizational levels.

3. Objective Feedback Sharpens Analytical Capabilities

Sherlock Holmes, despite his brilliance, greatly valued Watson’s objective insights. Holmes knew that an external perspective could identify blind spots he might overlook. Watson often provided straightforward observations that sharpened Holmes’ analysis, effectively guiding Holmes toward the solution by challenging his assumptions. In compliance, objective and candid feedback mechanisms are equally critical. Regular audits, external compliance reviews, and independent assessments act as the compliance function’s “Dr. Watson.” They help organizations identify areas needing improvement and provide a comprehensive understanding of compliance health.

Compliance Best Practice: Implement structured, objective compliance audits and reviews, ideally conducted by independent parties, to ensure the continuous refinement of compliance strategies.

4. Emotional Intelligence Enhances Decision-Making

While Holmes is famed for his detached logic, Watson’s emotional intelligence often balanced their investigative endeavors. Watson’s sensitivity towards human behavior complemented Holmes’ sharp logic and brought depth to their investigative methods. This integration of emotional intelligence and logical rigor proved pivotal in understanding suspects and witnesses.

Likewise, compliance is not merely about adhering to rules. It is about understanding and managing human behavior within the organizational context. Compliance officers who understand employee motivations and organizational psychology can effectively tailor compliance programs, addressing root behavioral drivers of misconduct rather than superficial symptoms alone.

Compliance Best Practice: Incorporate emotional intelligence training for compliance officers and team members. Ensure compliance communication demonstrates empathy and understanding, increasing employee acceptance and effectiveness.

5. Structured Communication Optimizes Organizational Clarity

Sherlock Holmes’ partnership with Watson was not simply effective because of their complementary skills but also exceptionally productive due to clear and structured communication. Holmes, meticulous and precise, effectively communicated his deductions, theories, and investigative approaches, thus providing Watson with clarity and alignment on strategy.

Structured communication in corporate compliance is similarly crucial. Clear, concise, and frequent communication from compliance teams ensures that every organizational member understands their responsibilities, obligations, and the reasoning behind compliance initiatives. Transparency and clarity can significantly reduce missteps caused by misunderstandings and ambiguity.

Compliance Best Practice: Develop a structured communication plan with regular compliance updates, clear policy documentation, accessible training materials, and transparent reporting channels.

6. Integrating Sherlock’s Business Wisdom into Compliance

In A Study in Scarlet, Sherlock Holmes does not simply solve mysteries; he implicitly outlines best practices that remain strikingly relevant to today’s compliance landscape. These lessons can translate for compliance professionals into actionable strategies to fortify compliance frameworks, improve organizational ethics, and drive business success.

Cross-Functional Synergy: Ensure diverse departmental insights inform your compliance program design. Holmes utilized Watson’s medical expertise, leveraging cross-departmental collaboration to create more robust, adaptive compliance structures.

Trust-Based Culture: Compliance innovation thrives where trust prevails. Demonstrating transparency and accountability cultivates trust and encourages innovative compliance problem-solving.

Objectivity and Independence: Regular external reviews and independent feedback ensure compliance programs remain sharp and attuned to emerging risks.

Emotional Insight: Emotional intelligence can enhance compliance effectiveness. Understanding employees’ emotional and psychological motivations can bolster compliance messaging and training efficacy.

Clear, Structured Communication: Establish a robust framework for clear compliance communication. This will prevent ambiguity and ensure alignment across all organizational levels.

Conclusion

Although fictional, Sherlock Holmes provides a powerful template for contemporary business compliance. By embodying these five business principles observed in A Study in Scarlet, compliance professionals can ensure their programs are robust, effective, proactive, and dynamic. Holmes reminds us that compliance, much like detective work, demands constant vigilance, a diverse skill set, structured communication, emotional intelligence, and trust-based relationships.

In the face of modern compliance challenges, ranging from regulatory upheavals and technological advancements to shifting corporate cultures, these timeless lessons from Sherlock Holmes offer valuable strategies that corporate compliance professionals can immediately deploy. As compliance programs evolve, embracing these lessons will position compliance officers not merely as corporate watchdogs but as critical strategic partners and business enablers.

Remember Holmes’ words: “There is nothing like first-hand evidence.” Compliance leaders must continuously seek first-hand insights into organizational behavior, culture, and practices. By applying Sherlockian clarity, logic, and strategic thinking to our compliance programs, we can transform compliance from a reactive safeguard into a proactive catalyst for ethical business excellence.

Let Holmes inspire your compliance journey, empowering your teams to navigate the complexities of corporate ethics and integrity with confidence and innovation. Embrace these five business lessons, apply them rigorously, and watch your compliance program thrive.

As Holmes would undoubtedly advise, the game is always afoot—so let’s play it well.

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Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Podcasting for Compliance Training

Welcome to “Compliance Tip of the Day,” the podcast where we bring you daily insights and practical advice on navigating the ever-evolving landscape of compliance and regulatory requirements. Whether you’re a seasoned compliance professional or just starting your journey, we aim to provide bite-sized, actionable tips to help you stay on top of your compliance game. Join us as we explore the latest industry trends, share best practices, and demystify complex compliance issues to keep your organization on the right side of the law. Tune in daily for your dose of compliance wisdom, and let’s make compliance a little less daunting, one tip at a time.

Use all the tools at your disposal for training, including podcasting.

For more on this topic, check out The Compliance Handbook, a Guide to Operationalizing Your Compliance Program, 6th Edition, which LexisNexis recently released. It is available here:  https://bit.ly/433bKre

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Hill Country Authors

Hill Country Authors – A Journey Through West Texas and a Life of Adventure with Ben English

Welcome to a new season of the award-winning Hill Country Authors Podcast, sponsored by Stoney Creek Publishing. In this podcast, Hill Country resident Tom Fox visits with authors who live in and write about the Texas Hill Country. In this episode, Tom visits with author Ben English, who shares his remarkable life story and how it has influenced his writing.

Ben talks about his upbringing in Texas, military service in the Marine Corps, career with the Texas Highway Patrol, and eventual retirement that led him to become a successful author. He discusses his historical and fictional works and his profound connection with West Texas, the region he calls home. Ben also delves into his latest book ¡Cristeros!, discussing upcoming book signings in the Hill Country. The episode encapsulates his deep love for history, storytelling, and the unique spirit of West Texas.

 

Key highlights:

  • Military Service and Career
  • Writing Journey and Inspirations
  • Living in West Texas
  • Latest Book Release: ¡Cristeros! 

Resources:

Ben H. English Website

Ben H. English on Facebook

Podcast Cover Art

Nancy Huffman Fine Art

Tom Fox

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Everything Compliance

Everything Compliance: Episode 154, The Law Firms in Trouble Edition

Welcome to this edition of the award-winning Everything Compliance. In this episode, the quartet of Matt Kelly, Jonathan Marks, Karen Moore, and Karen Woody is hosted by Tom Fox, the Compliance Evangelist.

  1. Karen Moore reviews changes to the UK Modern Slavery Act. She shouts out to her nephew, who graduates from Georgetown Law School this week, and to the NFL superfan for allegedly causing Shedeur Sanders to drop to the 5th round before being drafted in the recent NFL Draft.
  2. Matt Kelly, the Matt Galeotti speech updates the DOJ Corporate Enforcement Policy for white-collar actions. He rants about the GOP’s attempt to ban states from regulating AI.
  3. Jonathan Marks considers the role of internal audit in tariff compliance and why tariffs should be considered a strategic risk. He rants about MLB caving to President Trump and allowing those who bet on baseball back into the fold.
  4. Karen Woody considers the impact, fallout, and congressional investigations of the law firm’s dealings with President Trump. She shouts out to the Washington & Lee Law School graduating class 2025.
  5. Tom Fox shouts out to the Disney TV series Andor.

The members of Everything Compliance are:

Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, is the host, producer, and sometimes panelist of Everything Compliance. He can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. The award-winning Everything Compliance is part of the Compliance Podcast Network.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: May 22, 2025, The Trump and Dump 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:

  • When is a bribe a gift? (FT)
  • Export controls for chips have backfired. (NYT)
  • Matt Levine on the ‘Trump and Dump’ strategies used by cryptos. (Bloomberg)
  • More corruption allegations against ex-Malaysia PM. (Bloomberg)
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Blog

It’s a New Dawn – Compliance Monitors in 2025

In a move that should surprise no corporate compliance professional, the DOJ’s Criminal Division issued a new Memo on May 12, 2025, updating and clarifying its policies on the selection, imposition, and oversight of compliance monitors in corporate resolutions. (Herein the ‘Monitor Memo.’) This new guidance refreshes prior directives (including the foundational Morford Memo) and lays out how monitorships should be assessed, tailored, and executed in granular detail. I want to end my short series on the DOJ’s announcement of changes in white-collar enforcement by reviewing the changes to monitor selection and monitorships going forward and then considering what this means for compliance professionals. As Grace Slick said when Jefferson Airplane hit the stage at Woodstock on the morning of Day 2, “It’s a new dawn.”

I. Monitors: Precision Tools

First, the DOJ clarifies that monitorship should not be used for punitive purposes. Instead, they aim to ensure that a company meaningfully implements compliance reforms and reduces the risk of future misconduct. However, the DOJ also recognizes that monitors can be costly and intrusive. Hence, their use must be carefully calibrated. The core principle of the Monitor Memo is that monitors should be imposed only when necessary, and their scope should be tailored to the misconduct and the company’s risk profile.

The Criminal Division lays out four key factors for when a monitor may be appropriate:

  1. Risk of Recurrence. If the underlying misconduct is serious—think sanctions violations, FCPA infractions, healthcare fraud, or cartel facilitation—and has national or international implications, the risk of recurrence will weigh heavily in favor of a monitorship.
  2. Other Oversight. If another regulator (domestic or foreign) is already effectively overseeing compliance, the DOJ might hold back on appointing a monitor. But if your company committed crimes despite existing oversight, that fact will support the need for one.
  3. Compliance Program & Culture. If your company has revamped its program, replaced bad actors, and created a credible culture of compliance, that cuts against the need for a monitor. But if your program is underdeveloped, window dressing won’t suffice.
  4. Control Maturity & Self-Monitoring Capacity. Have you tested your controls? Have they been in place long enough to prove they work? Can you test, update, and scale your compliance framework internally? If yes, you may avoid a monitor. If not, start preparing now.

The DOJ’s memo drives home one central theme: fit matters. The DOJ wants focused, cost-conscious, collaborative monitorships, from budget caps to biannual meetings.

Here’s what that looks like (at this point):

  • Budget Caps: Monitors must submit a detailed budget, subject to DOJ approval, at the outset of their work. Rate caps and cost estimates must be justified, updated before each review phase, and strictly adhered to.
  • Tri-Partite Meetings: At least twice a year, the monitor, the company, and the DOJ must meet to align goals, address concerns, and ensure transparency. These are not performative check-ins; they are designed to keep all parties rowing in the same direction.
  • Collaboration over Confrontation: The DOJ is encouraging a cultural shift. Monitorships should be approached as mutual partnerships, not hostile audits. Companies have a voice; explaining operational constraints or challenging unnecessary actions is not a red flag.

The selection of a monitor should not be a backroom deal. As a monitorship is a multilayered and often multiyear process, the selection process should be designed to ensure integrity, independence, and credibility. The Monitor Memo sets out a new and transparent process.

  1. Company Nominates: The company proposes 3–5 candidates with no recent ties to the organization and compliance and independence certifications.
  2. DOJ Interviews and Evaluations: Prosecutors and section supervisors interview each candidate, assessing their qualifications, objectivity, cost-efficiency, and experience.
  3. Standing Committee Review: A special committee, including ethics officials, reviews the DOJ’s recommended candidate and must approve before the pick moves to the Assistant Attorney General (AAG).
  4. Final Approval: The AAG reviews the recommendation and sends it to the Office of the Deputy Attorney General (ODAG), which gives the final stamp of approval.

In short, this is a deliberate, transparent process. If the DOJ rejects a candidate or the entire slate, the company must resubmit promptly.

The DOJ’s 2025 memorandum reflects an evolution in how federal prosecutors see compliance monitors: not just as watchdogs but as facilitators of lasting cultural change. For the corporate compliance community, this is a clarifying moment. The DOJ isn’t out to punish companies for punishment’s sake. It offers your compliance regime a chance to prove that your organization’s compliance house is in order and that your company can keep it that way without someone watching over your shoulder.

II. Lessons for the Compliance Professional

Taken in conjunction with the Galotti Memo, revised CEP, and Galeotti Speech, what should compliance leaders be doing today?

  • Bolster Your Program Now

The most effective way to avoid the imposition of a monitor and indeed receive a full Declination is to have a robust, tested, and risk-aligned compliance program already in place when misconduct is discovered, or better yet, before it occurs. If your program is reactive, overly general, or untested, it signals to the DOJ that you may need outside help. But suppose you can demonstrate that your program has been implemented thoughtfully, customized to your company’s risk profile, and embedded into business operations. In that case, you are far more likely to avoid a monitor. That means (1) documenting not only your policies and procedures; (2) showing how they are communicated, enforced, and regularly improved; (3) that your internal controls are more than words on paper; they are working in practice; and (4) continuous improvement through regular testing, third-party evaluations, and board-level oversight.

  • Document Everything

In compliance, if it is not documented, it did not happen. This mantra has never been more important than in the post-resolution environment. The DOJ’s refocused CEP and changes to monitorship decisions underscore the need for companies to contemporaneously and comprehensively document all remediation efforts, disciplinary actions, training rollouts, and policy changes. If your company responds to misconduct with serious reforms, but you do not have the paper trail to back it up, prosecutors may assume those reforms are temporary, superficial, or nonexistent. That is a recipe for a monitor.

  • Engage Experts

One of the clearest signals a company can send to the DOJ about its seriousness in addressing misconduct is proactively engaging third-party experts before the government forces its hand. The revised CEP and Monitor Memo recognizes that a company’s voluntary use of outside compliance consultants, forensic auditors, or legal advisors can reduce or even eliminate the need for a monitor. These experts provide an independent lens, help benchmark your program against industry standards, and identify gaps before they become systemic failures. The bottom line is not to wait for the government to tell you to bring in expertise. Be proactive. Be smart. Be credible.

  • Prove Your Culture Has Changed

Culture is the bedrock of compliance, and the DOJ knows it. The revised CEP and Monitor Memo encourage prosecutors to consider whether a company’s leadership and culture differ meaningfully from those that allowed the misconduct to occur. This creates a critical opportunity for compliance professionals to prove that their house has been cleaned and remodeled. It means demonstrable metrics, employee survey data, speak-up culture indicators, training completion rates, or reduction in hotline-related retaliation claims that show your culture is becoming one of integrity and accountability. Suppose you can show that employees now report misconduct earlier, that internal investigations are handled more fairly, and that ethical conduct is rewarded. In that case, your company is more likely to argue that external supervision is no longer necessary, even if a full Declination is not warranted. Cultural change takes time, but in the eyes of the DOJ, it is one of the most persuasive indicators of whether your organization has truly moved on from its past.

  • Prepare for Monitoring Anyway

If your company believes it will avoid a monitorship, prepare as if one is coming. Pressure tests your program and creates a remediation roadmap aligning with DOJ expectations. Be ready to show how your company has made significant progress. Preparing for a monitor also forces your team to adopt a monitor’s mindset: testing controls, tracking effectiveness, documenting improvements, and coordinating with business units. It’s a rigorous, forward-leaning exercise that will strengthen your compliance program, even if the monitor never arrives. Remember, the DOJ is not just interested in what you say your organization will do; it is watching what you have already done. Preparation shows maturity. And if the monitor is ultimately imposed, you can hit the ground running with a partner who views you as ready, willing, and able, not reluctant or reactive.

The bottom line from these new DOJ pronouncements is that compliance can be cleaned up, and then full walking papers for FCPA or other white-collar crime incidents that your organization may have sustained can be obtained. Now is the time to take advantage of the DOJ’s incredibly pro-business approach. If your senior management harks back to the Executive Order suspending FCPA investigation and enforcement, tell them that the DOJ has lifted the suspension.

Resources:

CRM White Collar Enforcement Plan

Revised CEP

CRM Monitor Memo

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The Hill Country Podcast

The Hill Country Podcast – From Small Town Dreams to College Baseball: Noah Ochoa’s Journey

Welcome to the award-winning The Hill Country Podcast. The Texas Hill Country is one of the most beautiful places on earth. In this podcast, Hill Country resident Tom Fox visits with the people and organizations that make this the most unique area of Texas. This week, we have guest host RJ Ochoa from Schreiner University, who sits down with his older brother, Noah Ochoa, to discuss Noah’s extensive baseball journey.

Noah shares his experiences playing baseball from high school in Loveland to various college levels, including EPCC, University of Arkansas Fort Smith, and Schreiner University. They delve into his recruitment process, the challenges of JUCO ball, and the transition to a four-year college program. The conversation also touches on the emotional culmination of their baseball journey, playing together in Noah’s final college season. Additionally, they discuss the impact of the transfer portal, handling setbacks, and plans post-baseball, offering insights and advice for aspiring athletes facing similar challenges.

Key highlights:

  • High School Baseball Journey
  • Recruitment, Challenges, and Experiences in JUCO
  • Transition to the University of Arkansas Fort Smith
  • Adapting to New Challenges at Schreiner University
  • Life After and a Lesson from Baseball
  • Advice for Future Athletes

Resources:

Other Hill Country Focused Podcasts

Hill Country Authors Podcast

Hill Country Artists Podcast

Texas Hill Country Podcast Network

Reel Creators of the Texas Hill Country

Rotary Voices of Kerrville

Cover Art

Nancy Huffman Fine Art

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: May 21, 2025, The I Want You Back 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:

  • US drives UK back into arms of EU. (FT)
  • Former US Navy Number 2 convicted of corruption. (Yahoo!News)
  • Don’t use Huawei chips. (Bloomberg)
  • Microsoft tries to mollify the EU.  (Reuters)