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Ongoing Compliance Assessments: FCPA, UK Bribery Act and OCED Best Practices

One of the requirements consistent throughout the Principles of Federal Prosecution of Business Organization (US Sentencing Guidelines) and its section on corporate compliance programs; the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Good Practice Guidance on Internal Controls, Ethics, and Compliance, and the UK Bribery Act’s Consultative Guidance is the need for continued assessment of an anti-corruption and anti-bribery compliance program. This posting will review the specifics of each of these documents and will provide to the compliance and ethics practitioner some ideas on how to implement what each of these protocols stress is key component of any best practices compliance program.

US Sentencing Guidelines

The US Sentencing Guidelines state that there should be periodic reviews of a company’s compliance program, utilizing internal resources, such as a company’s Internal Audit function, and outside professional consultants. The OECD Good Practice states that a compliance program should be periodically re-assessed and re-evaluated to take into account any new developments. The UK Bribery Act Consultative Guidance, recently released by the UK Ministry of Justice, requires ongoing monitoring and review by noting that a compliance program and procedures should be reviewed regularly and a company should consider whether an “external verification [of the compliance program] would help.”

Speaking at the Compliance Week 2010 Annual Conference, Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division of the US Department of Justice, Lanny Breuer, indicated that such an external verification or assurance of the effectiveness of a compliance program is a key component to assist a company in maintaining a ‘best practices’ FCPA compliance program. He noted that it is through a mechanism such as an ongoing assessment that a company could continue to evaluate its own compliance program with reference to compliance standards which are evolving on a world wide basis.

OECD

In this same speech, Breuer cited as a benchmark for a best practices compliance and ethics program the protocols set forth in the OECD Good Practice Guidance on Internal Controls, Ethics, and Compliance. In this protocol the OECD suggested that “periodic reviews of the ethics and compliance programs or measures, designed to evaluate and improve their effectiveness in preventing and detecting foreign bribery, taking into account relevant developments in the field, and evolving international and industry standards.” Writing in the Society of Corporate Compliance and Ethics Magazine (SCCE) (Vol. 7 / No. 3), Russ Berland explained that this guidance meant that companies should regularly reassess their anti-bribery and anti-corruption compliance program to evaluate and improve its overall effectiveness. Although he did not give a time frame for this regular assessment, Berland noted that any such assessment “should take into account new developments in the area and evolving standards.

UK Bribery Act 

Principle Six of the UK Bribery Act’s Consultation Guidance discusses the need for ongoing monitoring and review. The Principle states “The commercial organization institutes monitoring and review mechanisms to ensure compliance with relevant policies and procedures and identifies any issues as they arise. The organization implements improvements where appropriate.” The reasons for this continued monitoring was to ensure that if, external events like government changes, corruption convictions, or negative press reports occur, an appropriate compliance response is triggered. The Guidance noted that it would be prudent for companies to consult the publications of relevant trade bodies or regulators that could highlight examples of good or bad practice. Organizations should also ensure that their procedures take account of external methods of issue identification and reporting as a result of the statutory requirements applying to their supporting institutions, for example money laundering regulations reporting by accountants and solicitors.

The Consultative Guidance provided advice for companies which covered several specific suggestions. The senior management of higher risk and larger organizations may wish to consider whether to commission external verification or assurance of the effectiveness of anti-bribery and anti-corruption policies. An independent review can provide to a company, which is undergoing structural change or entering new markets, with an insight into the strengths and weaknesses of its anti-bribery policies and procedures and in identifying areas for improvement. Such independent assessment would also enhance a company’s credibility with business partners or to restore market confidence following the discovery of a bribery incident, to help meet the requirements of both voluntary or industry initiatives and any future pre-qualification requirements.

Ongoing Assessment as ‘Best Practices’ 

All three cornerstones of guidance available to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) compliance practitioner include ongoing assessments as a key component of any best practices program. The text of each document and the remarks by commentators make clear the reasons for such an ongoing assessment. Not only do best practices evolve but companies and business evolve. An assessment is key to measuring where your program currently stands to allow you to know where it needs to be updated.

Attention should be paid to who and how the assessment is conducted. The entity, be it a law firm; professional consultant or other, which designed the FCPA compliance program for your company should not be the assessor. Such assessment would obviously be a conflict of interest. Additionally a drafter usually has blind spots when assessing one’s own work. An outside FCPA compliance professional should be engaged to assess your compliance policy, at no less than every two years, to review and make recommendations to keep your program at the best practices standard.

This publication contains general information only and is based on the experiences and research of the author. The author is not, by means of this publication, rendering business, legal advice, or other professional advice or services. This publication is not a substitute for such legal advice or services, nor should it be used as a basis for any decision or action that may affect your business. Before making any decision or taking any action that may affect your business, you should consult a qualified legal advisor. The author, his affiliates, and related entities shall not be responsible for any loss sustained by any person or entity that relies on this publication. The Author gives his permission to link, post, distribute, or reference this article for any lawful purpose, provided attribution is made to the author. The author can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com.

 

© Thomas R. Fox, 2010

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FCPA Compliance Report

Opinion Release Papers-11-01: Using the Opinion Release Procedure

The only Opinion Release of 2011 (11-01) may have left compliance practitioners initially scratching their heads. However, this collective head scratching is not because the Opinion Release is so difficult to understand and has no application to the everyday business of compliance, but for a polar opposite reason – the question posed to the Department of Justice (DOJ) is so straight-forward, and has been previously asked and answered, that it is difficult to understand how any first year compliance practitioner did not know the answer to it. Yet there is more than this facile analysis as to what may have been going on.

Background

The Requestor was a US Company which facilitated international infant adoptions and it desired  to bring some foreign governmental officials over to the US to learn more about it. The foreign government selected the officials to travel, the travel was economy class and it involved no WAGs (wives and girlfriends). The trip was scheduled to be for two days and the US Company paid all the vendors, airlines, hotels, local transportation and food service providers directly. No cash was provided to the traveling officials and any gifts would be branded and of nominal value.

Requestor Representations

In addition to those statements by the Requestor, it also represented to the DOJ the following:

  • It had no non-routine business (e.g., licensing or accreditation) under consideration by the relevant foreign government agencies.
  • Its routine business before the relevant foreign government agencies consists primarily of seeking approval of pending adoptions. Such routine business is guided by international treaty and administrative rules with identified standards.
  • The Requestor did not select the particular officials who will travel. That decision will be made solely by the foreign government agencies.
  • Apart from the expenses identified above, the Requestor did not compensate the foreign government agencies or the officials for their visit, nor will it fund, organize, or host any other entertainment, side trips, or leisure activities for the officials, or provide the officials with any stipend or spending money.
  • The visit will be for a two-day period (exclusive of travel time), and costs and expenses will be only those necessary and reasonable to educate the visiting officials about the operations and services of U.S. adoption service providers.
  • The Requestor has invited another adoption service provider to participate in the visit.

DOJ Discussion

The DOJ cited to Opinion Releases 07-01 and 07-02 for the general rules around travel and entertainment for foreign officials. It then stated, “Based upon all of the facts and circumstances, as represented by the Requestor, and consistent with these prior opinions, the expenses contemplated are reasonable under the circumstances and directly relate to “the promotion, demonstration, or explanation of [the Requestor’s] products or services.” 15 U.S.C. § 78dd-2(c)(2)(A). Therefore, the Department does not presently intend to take any enforcement action with respect to the planned program and proposed payments described in this request.”

Discussion

In his testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, then DOJ Representative Greg Andres spoke about the Opinion Release Procedure as one of the mechanisms by which the DOJ can not only bring transparency to the area of information relating to Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) but also can allow businesses with substantive questions to seek and receive specific answers to queries regarding factual scenarios which they may face. So what are the requirements under the Opinion Release Procedure? Initially I would note that DOJ has posted on its website, the Foreign Corrupt Procedures Opinion Procedure, (28 C.F.R. part 8).

The stated purpose is noted as follows: “These procedures enable issuers and domestic concerns to obtain an opinion of the Attorney General as to whether certain specified, prospective–not hypothetical–conduct conforms with the Department’s present enforcement policy regarding the antibribery provisions of the [FPCA]” (§80.1). The requirements of the Opinion Release Procedure are (1) the submission must be in writing; (2) an original and copies must be provided; and (3) must be sent to address provided. (§80.2) In addition to these specific requirements there are certain general requirements listed. (§80.6) They include that complete copies of all operative documents and detailed statements of all collateral or oral understandings. The request must be signed by an appropriate senior officer.

While there is additional language in the Opinion Release Procedure that it only relates to the query submitted to the DOJ, does not bind any other agency or department and can change if different facts occur or that the DOJ can ask for additional information from the party making the request, it is required under the terms of the Opinion Request Procedure “within 30 days after receiving a request that complies with the foregoing procedure, respond to the request by issuing an opinion that states whether the prospective conduct, would, for purposes of the DOJ’s present enforcement policy, [violate the FCPA].” (§80.8)

So there may be an addition lesson learned from Opinion 11-01, which is that the Opinion Release Procedure can be straightforward. The DOJ can be available to assist in interpreting the FCPA based upon the facts and circumstances a company faces in the real world. I have argued for greater transparency by the DOJ in providing information for companies and the compliance practitioner and the Opinion Release Procedure is one of the mechanisms by the DOJ does provide transparency and information.

However there might be another aspect to this specific Opinion Release. While I had discussed the above points from the perspective of an outside counsel, in-house lawyer or compliance office who specialized in FCPA compliance work; the Opinion Release Procedure is designed so that any person or company may submit a query to the DOJ and could be utilized by a company that does not have either an in-house compliance practitioner or even a General Counsel (GC). Simply put, a question can be submitted to the DOJ as straight forwardly as with a one-page document setting forth the information required under the Opinion Release Procedure.

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The Compliance Life

Bridget Abraham-From Consulting to Compliance

The Compliance Life details the journey to and in the role of a Chief Compliance Officer. How does one come to sit in the CCO chair? What skills does a CCO need to navigate the compliance waters in any company successfully? What are some of the top challenges CCOs have faced, and how did they meet them? These questions and many others will be explored in this new podcast series. Over four episodes each month on The Compliance Life, I visit with one current or former CCO to explore their journey to the CCO chair. This month, my guest is Bridget Abraham, CCO at Remitly, who had a decidedly non-traditional path to the CCO Chair.

From the Federal Reserve, Bridget then moved into the consulting world, starting a Bearing Point and then Deloitte. From there, she moved into the realm of compliance, starting in the financial world at Citibank, working in Compliance Analytics and Assessments. The banking world was transitioning from a manual approach to compliance into more of a tech solution option. She then moved to Western Union, first as Vice President of Global Compliance Programs, then to Deputy Chief Compliance Officer, where her role was much broader than her prior focus on data and data analytics.

Resources

Bridget Abraham LinkedIn Profile

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Blog

From Systemically Corrupt to Above Reproach: Examining Siemens’ Remarkable Turnaroun‪d‬

 

In 2006, Germany-based Siemens was ranked 22nd on the Global Fortune 500 with revenues of $100 billion. It was a global leader and one of the world’s most admired companies. Until November 16, 2006 when the Munich Police Department raided Siemens corporate offices and several subsidiaries based on whistleblower allegations of bribery and misuse of funds. This Munich Police Department investigation triggered a global corruption investigation which revealed that Siemens had methodically violated U.S., German and other global anti-bribery laws for decades. When the settlement of the case was announced in 2008, law enforcement didn’t pull any punches.  Yet what is equally remarkable is that a company that used corruption strategically and methodically to achieve its business objectives for decades remade itself in the wake of the corruption scandal to emerge as a model of corporate reform and business ethics.

Join us each week as we take a deep dive into the various forms of fraud across the world and discuss crime families, penny stock boiler rooms, international money launderers, narco-traffickers, oligarchs, dictators, warlords, kleptocrats and more.

Scott Moritz is a leading authority on white-collar crime, anti-corruption, and in the evaluation, design, remediation, implementation, and administration of corporate compliance programs, codes of conduct. He is also considered an authority in the establishment, training, and oversight of the investigative protocols carried out by financial intelligence, corporate security, and internal audit units.

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Innovation in Compliance

Innovating Compliance in the Middle East and Africa with Tomell Ceasar

 

Tomell Ceasar is the Group Head of Ethics and Compliance at Careem (An Uber Company). He is one of the founders of the Middle East and Africa Compliance Association (MEACA). This organization strives to raise awareness on business ethics and provides tools to build stronger and more responsible businesses. Essentially, they promote global regulatory compliance and effective governance in the Middle East and Africa. In this week’s episode, he explains to Tom the intricacies of practicing compliance outside the US, specifically the EAME. 

 

 

Compliance Practice in the EAME

Tom asks Tomell to describe what it is like practicing compliance in EAME. Tomell responds that it’s difficult to make broad generalizations on compliance region-wide since the EAME is such a huge territory. Compliance is a “Western value in terms of the way one approaches international business”, Tomell remarks, so adoption would take some time. However, appreciation of compliance roles and professionals grew exponentially over the past decade. International companies are seeing compliance through the US lens, and “they identified values of compliance being important enough to them to adopt similar frameworks and ideological perspectives as it relates to commercial enterprise, to be equivalent to the United States,” Tomell remarks.

 

The Birth of the MEACA 

As a co-founder of the Middle East and Africa Compliance Association, Tom wants to know how Tomell came up with the idea for the MEACA. Tomell explains that “the values of compliance have traditionally not been a staple of commercial enterprises in these regions.” Compliance has had a real maturation process over the last 10 years, and Tomell and his team saw a major opportunity to support the development and growth towards that end. There was a need for an organization willing to serve the distinct purpose of “serving and supporting the compliance community and to give them an avenue to connect, to network, to broaden their skill set.” Thus, the MEACA was born. To this day, they help companies promote and catalyze the compliance movement toward fighting corruption in companies and society. 

 

Resources 

Tomell Ceasar | LinkedIn

The Middle East and Africa Compliance Association

 

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Daily Compliance News

October 11, 2022 the Rethink Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Corruption and money laundering are destroying the planet. (FCPA Blog)
  • UK to ‘rethink’ replacing GDPR. (TechCrunch)
  • Meta appeals €405 million fine. (Cordery Compliance)
  • More whistleblowers at EY (FT)
Categories
Blog

Use Your Eyes in Compliance

One thing compliance professionals are rarely trained to do is trust your eyes. This may be because it seems too obvious. After all the well-known Howard Sklar maxim of “Water is Wet” is largely based on the fact that if something is so obvious you may not need to train on it. Yet two recent events make clear we all need to ‘trust our eyes’ in a variety of settings. The first is in the National Football League (NFL) and it involves Miami Dolphin quarterback, Tua Tagovailoa. Three weeks ago, he was tackled, thrown to the ground and his head snapped against the tuft. This is clearly a sign a concussion may be coming. After Tua got up, he stumbled and fell and then had to be helped up by a teammate and off the field.

I say all of this with absolute certainty as I was watching the game Dolphins v. Bills and saw it along with some 70,000 in the stadium and millions on television. Unfortunately, those who did not see these actions of Tua after the hit was the Dolphins medical staff who, rather amazingly (or perhaps not), cleared him under the NFL Concussion Protocol and sent him back to play in the second half of the game. Again, finding he was fine under the concussion protocol, he was allowed to play. The Dolphins claimed that he had sustained a “back injury” and that was why he stumbled and fell, not motor impairment. The next week, Tua took another shot to his head and this time he did not get up, stumble and fall. He did not get up at all. According to New York Times (NYT), he left the field on a stretcher and was taken immediately to a local hospital.

It was clear to anyone who saw the first concussion, that it was just that a concussion. However, “because of the incident, the league and union said they were considering changing the protocols, which currently allow a player with “gross motor instability” to return to the game if doctors decide there is an orthopedic reason for his unsteadiness.” Some doctor said the instability was due to Tua’s bad back and that was good enough. The NYT went on to further note, “The expected change will be to instead establish ataxia, a term describing impaired balance or coordination caused by damage to the brain or nerves, as a sign that automatically disqualifies a player from returning to the game.”

All of this informs compliance programs and compliance professionals as sometimes actions do not simply pass the eye test. I thought of this in the context of the recent Oracle Corporation Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement action. In this Oracle matter, the bribery schemes involved distributors, which were used as not only conduits to pay bribes, but as the mechanism to create a pot of money to pay bribes. The Oracle compliance program allowed sales employees at the subsidiaries to request monies meant to reimburse distributors for certain marketing expenses associated with selling Oracle products. There was a multi-pronged approval process in place. For marketing reimbursements “under $5,000, first-level supervisors at the Subsidiaries could approve the purchase order requests without any corroborating documentation indicating that the marketing activity actually took place.” Above this $5,000 threshold, additional approvals were required with additional requirements for business justification and documentation.

You can no doubt see where this is going as this internal control gap allowed for abuse. Indeed the Orderstated, “Oracle Turkey sales employees opened purchase orders totaling approximately $115,200 to [distributors] in 2018 that were ostensibly for marketing purposes and were individually under this $5,000 threshold.” That is at least 23 different expense requests to reimburse for marketing made under the threshold. Of course, there were no marketing efforts by the distributors and no follows up audits, inspections or even questions to confirm that the marketing expenses had actually occurred. The entire business unit was in on the fraud, and it stole money from the corporate office to fund it slush fund to pay bribes.

Clearly compliance was not using its eyes for if it had, it would have seen that there was a large number of marketing reimbursement requests at or below the threshold which required additional oversight and approval. Using your eyes does not mean that it is simply your eyes which catch nefarious conduct, it means that you use your eyes and if it something unusual occurs then additional investigation is warranted.

All of this brings to the second lesson from the NFL’s sordid tale involving Tua Tagovailoa; which is if the protocol does not work, change the protocol. Renee Miller, writing The Athletic, said, “The purpose of the onsite concussion “exam is to determine if any symptoms are apparent in a neurological exam (looking at reflexes, cranial nerve function and limited cognitive skills), and if so, whether they arise from a neurological origin.” It does not take into account what we all saw with our eyes, the stumbling, Tua grabbing his helmet and inability to focus. The NFL will now make a change to consider the other factors Tua exhibited. In other words, they changed the protocol to require and allow for additional information about the injured player in making a determination of that player’s returning to the game.

In the case of Oracle, there was a high risk of business unit employees using the marketing reimbursement requests to create a pot of money to pay bribes. We know this because this same bribery scheme was used by Oracle India to pay bribes and do business corruption, all of which was the subject of a prior FCPA enforcement action. Pretty clearly allowing business unit employees to obtain marketing reimbursements was something that would lead to disaster; which it did just as the Dolphins allowing Tua to come back into the second half of the Bills game where he sustained his first concussion was disastrous for Tua as he was much more seriously injured just the next week.

In compliance never forget to ‘use your eyes’ in testing your compliance program. If something does not look right, do additional investigation. If you do not do so, you may end up like Oracle, now one of 15 FCPA recidivists, a list no company wants to be on.

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Blog

Internal Controls Week: Part 5 – Assessing Internal Controls in International Operations

How should you assess your internal controls regime for international operations? It is incumbent that you need to review as much information as you can to understand the financial and operational structure of an entity and how it is integrated with the corporate headquarters, or the U.S. business unit’s financial and operation structure, if the foreign operation is part of a U.S. business unit.

You could begin with the TI-CPI to garner a sense of the reputation of the country in which your business unit is located, as well as the CPI for all other countries in which the location either markets business or has current customers. Another area for inquiry or review is the scope of your foreign operations. This means you will need to consider your sales model, whether employee based or primarily using third party representatives. You will also need to consider if such third-party representatives are coming into a commercial relationship with your company through your supply chain.

Other areas of inquiry should include whether your company’s finance and accounting staff produce financial statements that are integrated into the parent’s financial statements; whether your international business locations utilize a local bank account for local sales receipts as well as funds transfers from the U.S. and whether the account has local check signers and whether dual signatures are required on the checks. You may also want to consider the extent to which disbursements are made in the local currency and, of course, is there a local petty cash fund.

As with many other areas around internal controls,it is important to consider the local DOA and whether it is consistent with your corporate DOA. Some of the considerations regarding the local DOA should extend to which corporate or U.S. business unit approvals are required for transactions initiated locally, such as: 1) approval of vendor invoices, 2) disbursements of funds, including wire transfers; 3) execution of facilities leases; 4) execution of contracts with agents; and 5) approval of pricing and credit terms to customers and distributors. You should also review whether the local DOA provides appropriate SODs at the local business unit level.

You should consider how sales of product are conducted. For example, is an inventory maintained at the local operation for shipment to customers; are products drop shipped from U.S. directly to the customers of the local operation or are they drop shipped to distributors for delivery to the ultimate customer?

Hopefully you are already doing the above, but you should review what is being done to determine if employees or local contractors who are local nationals have gone through your due diligence process so that they have been properly vetted to determine whether they are government officials in any capacity or are relatives of government officials. Along the lines of a more formal FCPA analysis you should review to see if there has been any investigation of alleged fraud, including FCPA violations, at the location and, if so, what were the results of the investigation? Around customers, you should review with whom each international location does business to determine the extent to which its current customers are local government entities as well as the extent to which the location is pursuing sales activities for other local government entities.

If there has not been a sufficient assessment of controls, the compliance professional must then decide how to best determine whether the local controls are sufficient to satisfy the requirement of the FCPA and accurately reflect all transactions and prevent concealment of improper transactions. Some of these considerations would be an inadequate SODs because the separation of responsibility for physical custody of an asset from the related record keeping is a critical control. In practice, this means that persons who can authorize purchase orders should not be capable of processing accounts payable transactions. Further, the employee who prepares the deposit should not post the receipts to the customer accounts.

You should look to see if there is inappropriate access to assets. If there are, internal controls should be created to provide safeguards for physical objects such as inventory and cash, restricted information, critical forms and update applications. This means that an employee who only needs to view computer information should be restricted to “read and file scan” access and should not be granted “write and create” access. Moreover, controls should prevent the unauthorized removal of resale inventory and movable fixed assets from the premises.

It is not necessary to prove a that a bribe has been paid to have an enforcement action against a company for violation of the internal controls provisions of the FCPA. That was the situation in the SEC 2018 FCPA enforcement action involving Kinross Gold Corporation. It was this lack of effective internal controls, not the payment of a bribe, which was the basis for the civil enforcement action. This means that you should look to make certain the situation is not one of form over substance, where controls can appear to be well designed but still lack substance, as is often the case with required approvals.

Such a situation could arise in several different scenarios. The first is where an account manager’s signature attests to the accuracy of the payroll voucher information, but if the account manager does not have assurance that the supporting time records are accurate, the approval process lacks substance. Other examples are where a supervisor who approves expense reports but routinely does not look at the supporting documentation; a country manager provides a true control as an approver; or where the country manager or the local finance manager has ability to conceal the true nature of transactions without detection by anyone else.

Another important area involves sales and compensation for a foreign business unit. On the sales side of the equation, you review the three-year historical sales for the location and the budgeted sales for the upcoming year. This can give insight into the relative pressure on employees to grow the business and, accordingly, the possibility of an employee seeing a bribe as a good way to grow the business. The inquiries can lead to questions about compensation such as: What is the sales incentive compensation plan for local sales personnel? For the country manager? Such an inquiry gives insight into the possibility of personal benefit which might result from someone paying a bribe to win a contract which results in a large sales incentive compensation to the employee.

These reviews, questions, inquiries and analyses are designed to locate the pressure points involved in any company’s sales processes. This is because pressure is a key element of occupational fraud and the risk of fraud, including corruption, increases as the pressure increases. Since corruption is viewed as a subset of fraud, it might be a good time to review the “fraud triangle,” which lays out breeding ground for fraud in the corruption context:

  • Pressure which has financial implications, whether it be personal financial needs that are unmet or pressure to reach sales goals;
  • Rationalization. A fraud perpetrator always rationalizes that he/she is not a criminal and when committing fraud for personal benefit, the perpetrator intends to repay the money; when committing fraud for company benefit, the perpetrator rationalizes that the company really wants to meet its goals and that the perpetrator’s actions are in furtherance of the company’s goals; and
  • Opportunity. The perpetrator must be in a situation where the internal controls do not prevent the fraud and its necessary concealment
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All Things Investigations

All Things Investigations: Episode 13 – Tyler Grove on New CFIUS Executive Order

Welcome to the Hughes Hubbard Anti-Corruption and Internal Investigations Practice Group’s Podcast, All Things Investigations. In this podcast, host Tom Fox and returning guest Tyler Grove of the Hughes Hubbard Anti-Corruption & Internal Investigations Practice Group, highlight some of the key legal issues in white-collar investigations, locally and internationally.

 

 

Tyler Grove has worked at Hughes Hubbard for over 10 years, starting as a paralegal and then working his way up to full-time associate before taking the position of counsel. Tyler’s specialties include sanctions and export controls in addition to anti-money laundering and foreign investment issues. His practice has three main areas: compliance counseling, enforcement and investigations, and corporate diligence and filings.

Key areas we explore on this podcast are:

  • The genesis of Executive Order 14083 relating to CFIUS, and what it entails.
  • It’s become a standard follow-up question when making CFIUS filings to ask about a US business’ cybersecurity policies.
  • What is excepted foreign state? 
  • The Biden administration has conducted a holistic approach to business issues that may not have been considered national security issues in the past. 
  • CFIUS has been a flexible tool for the Biden administration to apply foreign policy.
  • How companies should be prepared to respond when asked to provide information or assistance in a CFIUS review.

Resources

Hughes Hubbard & Reed website 

Tyler Grove on LinkedIn

 

Categories
The ESG Report

UFLPA, Supply Chain & ESG with Travis Miller and Jamie Wallisch

 

Tom Fox welcomes Travis Miller and Jamie Wallisch to the ESG Report. In this episode, they talk about the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA), and how it impacts the way companies do business across the supply chain.

 

 

The UFLPA is a United States federal law that stops companies from importing products made with forced labor in the Xinjiang region of China or any other part of China with forced labor by workers or other minorities. This law is important because it makes sure that companies are aware of what is happening and take steps to stop it. The UFLPA makes companies use processes that already exist in their business. To follow the UFLPA, your company would need to have a compliance program in place. Jamie also explains how regulators could assess companies’ compliance programs using the UFLPA. 

 

Organizations need to recognize their organizational footprint because each company out there affects more than just the people who work there. It’s not just about who you choose to do business with but also who you choose to profit from. You can’t just condemn bad business practices verbally. You have to be actively engaged in ethical behavior. “It’s this assessment, it’s this realization that you are the sum of your components. You are the sum of your relationships,” Travis adds. 

 

Resources

Travis Miller | LinkedIn 

Jamie Wallash  

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