Categories
The ESG Report

Jared Connors Looks Into 2023

In this episode of the ESG Report, Tom Fox discusses the regulatory movement towards mandatory climate disclosure requirements. Guest Jared Connors explains why product liability, previously viewed as a negative for sustainability, is now viewed as a positive.

Jared Connors is on the regulatory team at Assent. In his role, he supports and analyzes the market, engages standards and framework makers and regulatory agencies to help understand what companies will face and how they can comply.

 

  • Jared says that product compliance depends on how certain jurisdictions approach sustainability. 
  • Consumers make an impact on upstream corporation supply and demand, and that impact is shown via downstream companies who produce the products.
  • Companies have to do a better job at being proactive about knowing their supply chain and the stance of the suppliers that they work with.
  • Organizations need to be able to show that their suppliers have no connection to modern day slavery. 
  • Jared stresses the point of transparency as opposed to sustainability. When companies, suppliers and stakeholders are transparent, business becomes more ethical. 

 

Resources

Jared Connors on LinkedIn

Assent

Categories
Corruption, Crime and Compliance

The FTX Crypto Exchange Scandal — Interview of Matt Stankiewicz from The Volkov Law Group

 

The cryptocurrency industry is a young and rapidly growing one fraught with legal and economic risks. These risks can be exploited by ill-intentioned parties to fill their pockets and fund their lavish lifestyles. One such party is the disgraced founder of FTX, Sam Bankman-Fried (commonly called “SBF”), former darling of Silicon Valley and Wall Street. The FTX exchange was hailed as the gold standard for cryptocurrency, but a series of events led to a bank run and exposed the fraudulent scheme behind-the-scenes. Matt Stankiewicz joins Michael Volkov to discuss the legal ramifications of the fall of FTX and SBF.

Matt Stankiewicz is Partner at the Volkov Law Group, specializing in anti-bribery & corruption controls and compliance programs. Recently, he was responsible for conducting a global anti-corruption compliance audit and testing of Fortune 100 medical device company’s activities in ten countries. 

 

Some ideas you’ll hear them explore are:

  • Having well over 100 subsidiaries across the globe, FTX was the go-to cryptocurrency exchange, even allowing users to trade various derivative products. At its height, the peak daily trading volume on FTX was over $20 billion. 
  • As it turned out, FTX was closely linked to a crypto trading firm called Alameda Research, founded by SBF, who owned 90% of it when it collapsed. It was a crypto hedge fund, Matt comments. 
  • Alameda used FTX to do all their trading and investments, and enjoyed special privileges that were not revealed to the public or to investors. One such privilege was  exemption from FTX’s risk management software that required users to use some of their assets as collateral if they were trading on margin.
  • Lack of regulatory clarity is a major risk in the cryptocurrency industry. This lack of clarity creates opportunities for fraud, as well as challenges for companies trying to comply with regulations. 
  • Companies that adopt strong ethics and compliance programs can mitigate the risks of cryptocurrency and be more successful than those who do not.
  • One of the biggest appeals of cryptocurrency is that you don’t have to deal with an intermediary when transacting.

KEY QUOTE

“One of the benefits of cryptocurrency, which could have prevented a lot of this, is the fact that you can self-custody your assets.”

 

Resources

Matt Stankiewicz on LinkedIn

Email Matt: mstankiewicz@volkovlaw.com 

Volkov Law Group

 

The Fall of FTX: The Legal Ramifications of the Collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s Cryptocurrency Empire (I of IV)

 

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Categories
FCPA Compliance Report

Tom Fox and Mike Volkov with the 2022 Year in Review for the FCPA, Part 1

Welcome to the award-winning FCPA Compliance Report, the longest running podcast in compliance. In this special episode, I am joined by Mike Volkov, founder of the Volkov Law Group. We begin a two-part podcast on looking back on the year 2022 in FCPA and Compliance. We consider the Monaco Memo, the key cases and some of the important issues which arose in 2022 and how they might impact compliance in 2023.

In this episode we consider:

·      The Monaco Memo

·      The Stericycle FCPA enforcement action

·      The KT FCPA enforcement action

·      The upcoming trial of Cognizant executives and internal investigations

·      Key individual prosecuted

Resources

Mike Volkov on LinkedIn

The Volkov Law Group

Categories
Daily Compliance News

January 9, 2023 – The Don’t Pee in a Plane 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.

Some of the stories include:

  • DOJ sets up a website for those defrauded by FTX. (Reuters)
  • Vietnam removes two Deputy PMs for corruption. (Aljazeera)
  • Indian bank exec urinates on a fellow plane passenger. (NYT)
  • Will remoted work continue in 2023? (Bloomberg)
Categories
31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

Day 8 – Internal Controls and Compliance

What are internal controls? The best definition I have come across is from Jonathan Marks, who defined internal controls as:
Internal control is an action or process of interlocking activities designed to support the policies and procedures detailing the specific preventative, detective, corrective, directive, and corroborative actions required to achieve the desired process outcomes or objectives(s). This, along with continuous auditing, continuous monitoring, and training, reasonably assures: 

  • The achievement of the process objectives linked to the organization’s objectives;
  • Operational effectiveness and efficiency;
  • Reliable (complete and accurate) books and records (financial reporting);
  • Compliance with laws, regulations, and policies; and 
  • The reduction of risk fraud, waste, and abuse, which,
  • Aids in the decline of process and policy variation, leading to more predictive outcomes.

The DOJ and SEC, in the 2020 FCPA Resource Guide, stated:
Internal controls over financial reporting are the processes used by compa­nies to provide reasonable assurances regarding the reliabil­ity of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements. They include various components, such as a controlled environment that covers the tone set by the organi­zation regarding integrity and ethics, risk assessments, and con­trol activities that cover policies and procedures designed to ensure that management directives are carried out (e.g., approvals, authorizations, reconciliations, and segregation of duties); information and communication; and monitoring. … The design of a company’s internal controls must take into account the operational realities and risks attendant to the company’s business, such as the nature of its products or services, how the products or services get to market, the nature of its workforce; the degree of regulation; the extent of its government interaction; and the degree to which it has operations in countries with a high risk of corruption.

This was supplemented in the 2020 Update with a pair of pointed questions: whether a company has made a significant investigation into its internal controls and whether they have been tested, then remediated based upon the testing?

The bottom line is that internal controls are just good financial controls. The internal controls that detail requirements for third-party representatives in the compliance context will help detect fraud, which could lead to bribery and corruption. As an exercise, map your existing internal controls to the Ten Hallmarks of an Effective Compliance Program or some other well-known anti-corruption regime to see where gaps may exist. This will help you to determine whether adequate compliance internal controls are present in your company. From there, you can move to see if they are working in practice.

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 four significant controls for the compliance practitioner to implement initially. (a) Delegation of authority (DOA); (b) Maintenance of the vendor master file; (c) Contracts with third parties; and (d) Movement of cash/currency.
Categories
Sunday Book Review

January 8, 2023 – The Top AI and Machine Learning Books for 2023 Edition

In the Sunday Book Review, I consider books that interest the compliance professional, the business executive, or anyone curious. It could be books about business, compliance, history, leadership, current events, or anything else that might interest me. In today’s edition of the Sunday Book Review, we consider some of the top AI and machine learning books that every compliance professional should read in 2023:

·       Future Ready: The Four Pathways to Capturing Digital Value by Stephanie L. Woerner, Peter Weill, and Ina M. Sebastian

·        Digitalization of Financial Services in the Age of Cloud by Jamil Mina, Armin Warda, Rafael Marins, and Russ Miles

·       Power and Prediction: The Disruptive Economics of Artificial Intelligence by Ajay Agrawal, Joshua Gans, and Avi Goldfarb

·        Practicing Trustworthy Machine Learning by Yada Pruksachatkun, Matthew Mcateer, and Subhabrata Majumdar

Resource

The Enterpriser’s Project- 10 must-read tech books for 2023

Categories
Sports and Compliance

Damar Hamlin – Lessons in Leadership and Crisis Management

Welcome to the Sports and Compliance podcast. For the longest time, I have wanted to have a podcast on the intersection of Sports and the World of Compliance and Ethics, both for those stories as they play out on the Sports Page and for the lessons they provide to business executives and compliance professionals. In this podcast series, I am joined by one of the top compliance commentators, Stephen Martin, CCO at Skillsoft. Together, we will use our love of sports and competition to discuss current ethical issues in sports, look at compliance through a sports lens, and determine how the world of sports and its stories can guide the compliance professional.

In this episode, we are joined by Lisa Fine, co-host of the Great Women in Compliance podcast, Buffalo, NY native, and uber Buffalo Bills fan. We deep dive into the Damar Hamlin injury from the compliance and leadership perspectives. Our topics include:

  • Lisa’s reflections on the annus horribillus Buffalo had in 2022 and how the Bills are, in many ways they are the city’s glue.
  • How did we all feel watching it in live time?
  • What were the NFL’s policy and procedural failures in crisis response and management?
  • The leadership demonstrated by the coaches and players in the face of being told to return to play.
  • Why verifying information before reporting it is so critical?
  • The role of ESPN.
  • The role of the stadium EMS personnel.
  • This story has united the entire country in a way not seen for some time.
Categories
Daily Compliance News

January 7, 2023 – The $436MM Trips 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 today include:

  • Will TikTok ever be in compliance? (Reuters)
  • Cruise lines were ordered to pay $436MM for violating Helms-Burton Act. (WSJ)
  • Special Counsel hires anti-corruption prosecutors. (Bloomberg)
  • Blogging for Engineers 101. (NYT)
Categories
Wirecard

IT Shopping on eBay

Welcome to Season 3 of Lies, Spies & Corporate Crimes: The Wirecard Saga. The Wirecard Saga has become the world’s leading source of all things Wirecard. In Lies, Spies & Corporate Crimes: The Wirecard Saga, Mikhail Reider-Gordon, Managing Director of Institutional Ethics & Integrity at Affiliated Monitors, looks at the biggest financial scandal in post-war Germany from a variety of angles. In this episode, Mikhail continues her exploration of those persons, entities, and governments who have been damaged, some beyond repair, by Wirecard and the nuclear fallout from its scandal.

Some of the highlights include:

  • Claims of exculpatory evidence concealed
  • Much is irrelevant to this trial
  • Shopping on eBay
  • Cash to the HedgeHog
  • Shareholder lawsuit struck down
  • Germany’s FIU forgets 100,000 STRs
  • BaFin ups their social media presence
  • Apas punts
Categories
Greetings and Felicitations

Podfest Expo 2023 – Alex Sanfilippo on 5 Ways to Grow Your Podcast

In this episode of the PodfestExpo 2023 Preview Podcasts series, I visit Alex Sanfilippo, podcast host, and maven. We discuss his presentation at PodfestExpo on 5 key ways to grow your podcast. Some of the issues we tackle in this podcast are:

  • Action items you can take away immediately to grow your pod.
  • Pick a few key sessions at Podfest and deeply dive into them.
  • How to grow your pod on a budget.

I hope you can join me at PodfestExpo 2023, hosted by Podfest Global. This year’s event will be January 26-29, 2023, at the Renaissance Orlando at Seaworld in Orlando, Florida. The line-up of this year’s event is first-rate, with some of the top names in podcasting.

Podfest Expo is a community of people interested in and passionate about sharing their voice and message with the world through the powerful mediums of audio and video. We’re proud to unite as many people as possible to learn, get inspired, and grow better together.

 PodfestExpo is so much more than just a mere conference. While we pride ourselves on featuring the most engaging speakers, exciting topics, and in-depth content, the thing that sets PodfestExpo event apart from all others is the tight-knit community we’ve been building since 2013. You don’t just attend a Podfest event – you become part of the Podfest family.

Whether you’re new to podcasting or a veteran podcaster looking to innovate and improve your podcast, our easy-to-understand Conference Topics allow you to customize a daily agenda based on what you’re most interested in learning. No matter your skill level or experience, PodfestExpo 2023 has plenty to offer!

I hope you can join me at the event. For information on the event, click here. As an extra benefit to listeners of this podcast, Podfest Expo is offering a discount on the registration price. Enter discount code Fox10.

PodfestExpo 2023 is a production of Podfest Global, which is the sponsor of this podcast series.