Categories
Jamming with Jason

Hypnotherapy is NOT of the Devil with Bill Klaproth

What is the common thing that helps cure cancer with only 4 months to live, Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), weight loss, depression, pain, anxiety, fear of dogs, and many other ailments?

And what if it works in as little as 1-3 sessions?

Would you like to know what it is?

Then listen to this #jammingwithjason #podcast episode with William “Bill” Klaproth to learn more.

Bill suffered a work accident that landed him in the hospital. After several surgeries and more than two years of rehab, he was told he couldn’t continue the telecommunications work he had been enjoying for years. “You should find yourself another career.”

What to do with the rest of his life?

When he saw the results his brother Dave got from hypnotherapy after a 4 month to live cancer diagnosis (who, BTW, is still going strong 5 years later), he had to give it a try, even though he was told with his religious upbringing that hypnosis was of the devil (yes, cue Church Lady voice).

What he found was a way to help people heal and help himself at the same time.

The fact that you are reading this means you need to hear his amazing story. Hypnotherapy has worked for me, Bill, Dave, and countless others… so it might be exactly what you need to hear today.

Reach out to Bill at: klaprothhypnotherapy.com

FOR FULL SHOW NOTES AND LINKS, VISIT:

E287 Hypnotherapy is NOT of the Devil with Bill Klaproth

LIKED THE PODCAST?

If you’re the kind of person who likes to help others, then share this with your friends and family. If you found value, they will too. Please leave a review [https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/jamming-with-jason-mefford/id1456660699] on Apple Podcasts so we can reach more people.

Join my Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/beinguniquely

OTHER RESOURCES YOU MAY ENJOY:

My YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/c/jasonleemefford] and make sure to subscribe

My Facebook page [https://www.facebook.com/jammingwithjasonmefford]

My LinkedIn page [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonmefford/]

My website [https://jasonmefford.com]

STAY UP TO DATE WITH NEW CONTENT:

It can be difficult to find information on social media and the internet, but you get treated like a VIP and have one convenient list of new content delivered to your inbox each week when you subscribe to Jason’s VIP Lounge at: https://jasonmefford.com/vip/ plus; that way, you can communicate with me through email.

Categories
The Hill Country Podcast

Becky Crouch Patterson – Cherishing a Sense of Place

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 the people and organizations that make these the most unique areas of Texas. Join Tom as he explores the people, places, and activities of the Texas Hill Country. In this episode, I visit with Becky Crouch Patterson, daughter of Imagineer Hondo Crouch, lifelong Hill Country resident, and famous artist. Highlights include:

·       The free thinker tradition in the Hill Country.

·       Growing up on the ranch with Hondo.

·       Her MOWA exhibit, Cherishing a Sense of Place.

·       The creation of beauty through the experience of pain.

Resources

Luckenbach Texas-The Center of the Universe by Becky Crouch Patterson

Hondo-My Father by Becky Crouch Patterson

The Ranch That Was Us by Becky Crouch Patterson

For more information on the Museum of Western Art, click here.

For information on the exhibit, Becky Crouch Patterson – Cherishing a Sense of Place, click here.

Categories
Great Women in Compliance

Ola Tucker – Focus on AML

Welcome to the Great Women in Compliance Podcast, co-hosted by Lisa Fine and Mary Shirley.

The Great Women in Compliance team are always pleased to observe progress whenever the library of Compliance offerings grows.  Ola Tucker published a book all about Anti-money laundering in July 2022, called “The Flow of Illicit Funds: A case study approach to anti-money laundering compliance” and Mary spoke with Ola about several of the topics included in the book.  Fun fact: Ola is also a contributor to GWIC work “Sending the Elevator Back Down: What We’ve Learned from Great Women in Compliance”.

 Ola explains the impetus for the book, why she went with a case study approach to presenting the information, some money laundering pitfalls, the dangers of cryptocurrency in relation to AML and how AML impacts terrorist financing.

The Great Women in Compliance Podcast is on the Compliance Podcast Network with a selection of other Compliance related offerings to listen in to.  If you are enjoying this episode, please rate it on your preferred podcast player to help other likeminded Ethics and Compliance professionals find it.  If you have a moment to leave a review at the same time, Mary and Lisa would be so grateful.

You can also find the GWIC podcast on Corporate Compliance Insights where Lisa and Mary have a landing page with additional information about them and the story of the podcast.  Corporate Compliance Insights is a much appreciated sponsor and supporter of GWIC, including affiliate organization CCI Press publishing the related book; “Sending the Elevator Back Down, What We’ve Learned from Great Women in Compliance” (CCI Press, 2020). If you enjoyed the book, the GWIC team would be very grateful if you would consider rating it on Goodreads and Amazon and leaving a short review.

You can subscribe to the Great Women in Compliance podcast on any podcast player by searching for it and we welcome new subscribers to our podcast.

Join the Great Women in Compliance community on LinkedIn here.

Categories
Compliance Into the Weeds

Compliance into the Weeds: Mudge and Whistleblower Allegations Against Twitter

Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast that takes a deep dive into a compliance-related topic, literally going into the weeds to more fully explore a subject. In this episode, we explore the recently publicly released whistleblower allegations by Peiter Zatko, AKA “Mudge,” made against his former employer Twitter. Highlights include:

  • The allegations made by Mudge.
  • What possible enforcement actions and legal ramifications could develop?
  • What does this mean for the Twitter/Elon Musk litigation?
  • Where was the Board, and who was the Board?
  • Is there more to come?

Resources

Matt in Radical Compliance

Categories
Daily Compliance News

August 31, 2022 the Non-Friendly Skies Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Musk tries to claim Mudge Report as a reason to stop the Twitter deal. (WSJ)
  • Ramaphosa appoints ABC counsel. (News24)
  • Is an offshoring Armageddon coming? (WaPo)
  • Air France is fighting in the cockpit. (NYT)
Categories
Blog

A Caremark Retrospective: Part II – Holdings and Rationale

Today, I continue my exploration of two of the most significant cases regarding Boards of Directors and corporate compliance; the Caremark and Stone v. Ritter decisions. The former decision was released in 1996 and the latter, some ten years later in 2006. The original Caremark decision laid the foundation for the modern obligations of Boards of Directors in oversight of compliance in general and a company’s risk management profile in particular. Stone v. Ritter confirmed the ongoing vitality of the original Caremark decision. Yesterday, in Part 1, we reviewed the underlying facts of the Caremark decision. Today, in Part II, we consider the holdings and the legal reasoning. Perhaps the most interesting thing about both cases is that even though the Court in Caremark delineated the doctrine and in Stone v. Ritter confirmed it, both Courts ruled against the moving parties and for the defendant corporate Boards.

Caremark

In Caremark, the Court began by noting that director liability for a breach of the duty to exercise appropriate attention can come up in two distinct contexts. In the first, liability can occur from a board decision that results “in a loss because that decision was ill advised or “negligent””. In the second, board liability for a loss “may be said to arise from an unconsidered failure of the board to act in circumstances in which due attention would, arguably, have prevented the loss.”

However, any decision is tempered by the following, what “may not widely be understood by courts or commentators who are not often required to face such questions, is that compliance with a director’s duty of care can never appropriately be judicially determined by reference to the content of the board decision that leads to a corporate loss, apart from consideration of the good faith or rationality of the process employed.” In other words, if there is a process or protocol in place a board cannot be said to have violated its duty, even with “degrees of wrong extending through “stupid” to “egregious” or “irrational”.” To do so would abrogate the Business Judgment Rule.

The Caremark court went so far as to cite Learned Hand for the following, “They are the general advisors of the business and if they faithfully give such ability as they have to their charge, it would not be lawful to hold them liable. Must a director guarantee that his judgment is good? Can a shareholder call him to account for deficiencies that their votes assured him did not disqualify him for his office? While he may not have been the Cromwell for that Civil War, Andrews did not engage to play any such role.”

However, there is a second type of liability which boards can run afoul of under Caremark, and it is the one which seems to the liability under which most boards are found wanting in successful Caremark claims. It is when “director liability for inattention is theoretically possible entail  circumstances in which a loss eventuates not from a decision but, from unconsidered inaction.” This was a departure from prior Delaware case law which said that a board did not have to look for wrongdoing but only had to investigate if informed about it. That was from an old 1963 decision and the Court relied on the 1992 US Sentencing Guidelines to note how such views were no longer accepted. Board obligations had changed by 1996 with the following, “obligation to be reasonably informed concerning the corporation, without assuring themselves that information and reporting systems exist in the organization that are reasonably designed to provide to senior management and to the board itself timely, accurate information sufficient to allow management and the board, each within its scope, to reach informed judgments concerning both the corporation’s compliance with law and its business performance.”

Stone v. Ritter

This case involved money laundering and a bank’s failure to report suspicious activity which led to an employee running a Ponzi scheme. The bank in question was fined over $40 million. Once again, the plaintiffs were not successful in their claims. The Stone v. Ritter court approved the Caremark Doctrine and went on to further specify thatCaremark required a “lack of good faith as a “necessary condition to liability”.” It is because the Court was not focusing simply on the results but in the board’s overall conduct “of the fundamental duty of loyalty.” It follows that because a showing of bad faith conduct, “is essential to establish director oversight liability, the fiduciary duty violated by that conduct is the duty of loyalty.”

Interestingly, the Court added what it termed as “two additional doctrinal consequences.” First, although good faith is a “part of a “triad” of fiduciary duties that includes the duties of care and loyalty, the obligation to act in good faith does not establish an independent fiduciary duty that stands on the same footing as the duties of care and loyalty.” Violations of the duties of care and loyalty may result in direct liability, whereas a failure to act in good faith may do so, but it would only result in indirect liability. The second consequence is that the “duty of loyalty is not limited to cases involving a financial or other cognizable fiduciary conflict of interest. It also encompasses cases where the fiduciary fails to act in good faith. As the Court of Chancery aptly put it in Guttman, “[a] director cannot act loyally towards the corporation unless she acts in the good faith belief that her actions are in the corporation’s best interest.””

The Stone v. Ritter court ended by further refining the Caremark Doctrine to define the necessary conditions for director liability under Caremark. They are:

  1. Directors utterly failed to implement any reporting or information system or controls;
  2. If they have implemented such a system or controls, consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operations thus disabling themselves from being informed of risks or problems requiring their attention.

In either situation, imposition of liability requires a showing that the directors knew that they were not discharging their fiduciary obligations. Where directors fail to act in the face of a known duty to act, thereby demonstrating a conscious disregard for their responsibilities, they breach their duty of loyalty by failing to discharge that fiduciary obligation in good faith.

As usual, once I get started, I often cannot stop so in my next blog post (or two) I will consider how this has evolved.

Categories
The Corruption Files

Episode 08: Banks Behaving Badly with Tom Fox and Michael DeBernardis

Tom Fox and Michael DeBernardis discuss the dubious bribery cases of financial institutions, specifically Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse, and Societe Generale (SocGen), that utilized commission agents of significant political power. They also talk about why compliance committees should look closer into the backgrounds of company agents and how the Deutsche Bank kickstarted France’s fight against corruption.

▶️ Banks Behaving Badly with Tom Fox and Michael DeBernardis

Key points discussed in the episode:

(00:00:36) Michael DeBernardis gives a brief background on the Deutsche Bank case.

(00:05:10) Tom Fox examines the compliance lessons to be learned from the Deutsche Bank case. Compliance professionals should consider not only families but friends of commission agents. The worst misconduct can gain reduced penalties when companies cooperate with investigations. Michael adds how Deutsche Bank took corrective action to achieve a significant discount.

(00:11:09) Two possible discounts companies may get for compliance are (1) a cooperation discount under the US sentencing guidelines and (2) a discount under the FCPA corporate enforcement policy.

(00:12:15) Michael DeBernardis’ standpoint as a lawyer to his clients: be forthcoming and argumentative when appropriate.

(00:13:54) Michael DeBernardis gives a brief background on the SocGen case.

(00:19:28) The SocGen case was the first US-France anti-corruption collaboration. Though bribery through agents has been done by others, it’s still an effective dishonest practice. Michael adds that companies have since improved in doing background checks on their agents.

—————————————————————————-

Do you have a podcast (or do you want to)? Join the only network dedicated to compliance, risk management, and business ethics, the Compliance Podcast Network. For more information, contact Tom Fox at tfox@tfoxlaw.com.

 

Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Data Integrity Through Intelligent Document Processing with Will Robinson

 

Will Robinson is a former investment banker, who now serves as the CEO at Encapture, a 20-year-old document management services company that pivoted into a SaaS product company in 2019. Tom Fox welcomes him to this week’s show to discuss how Encapture helps its customers attain data integrity through intelligent document processing.

 

 

Intelligent Document Processing

Encapture is a software company with a unique process called “intelligent document processing”. Will explains that this process makes it easy for organizations of varying sizes to collect incoming documents as a part of a business process. “Encapture’s machine learning can read the document and discern what type of document it is, then the system can extract data out of these documents and utilize the data for a variety of purposes,” he says. It can transfer data to another system as well as compare data across multiple documents. “We can automate a bunch of reporting on the compliance front,” he adds. 

 

Compliance and Intelligent Document Processing 

Tom asks Will to explain what intelligent document processing adds to the compliance aspect of Encapture’s customers like financial institutions. When discussing what values their services add to a bank, Will comments that “reduced compliance risk is honed into because it’s mission-critical”. Recently, more compliance regulations are being added, and the banks have no choice but to implement them because protecting customers and their data is the number one priority. Will explains that in any compliance initiative there’s data that’s being reported or there are processes that have to be well documented. Whenever a compliance regulator comes to ensure that the rules are being implemented this data has to be verified by about 5 different people, and this is a lengthy process. However, intelligent document processing can ensure that this process is done quickly and efficiently.

 

Evolution of Data Integrity

Tom adds that risk is always changing in the form of regulations and with data integrity, the new information will have to be vetted by every new regulation change. “Additionally there will be more requests for your information as the government and others may want it. However, if you have strong data integrity, you have that upstream problem solved and you can pull that data with a software update.” Your solution should be expansive enough to solve multiple regulatory changes. Will agrees and highlights that even though banks are usually late adopters of technology, “they recognize there’s need for a change, there’s need to update processes and update systems”. 

 

ESG: An Incremental Change

Banks are more reactive instead of proactive when it comes to ESG, Will tells Tom. Most of the ESG changes being implemented are incremental; using a proven process and appropriate technology like Encapture, complying with new regulations can be seamless and often happen within a few days. This directly benefits compliance leaders who need a dynamic platform that evolves with the ever-changing real world, Will points out. Tom comments that banks usually already have the information they need to comply, but it’s siloed. Encapture is  “a very powerful tool” that can help them utilize the information to respond more nimbly and a lot more quickly. “We feel like everybody is better served if we can solve this compliance issue and solve it efficiently,” Will remarks. 

 

Resources

Will Robinson | LinkedIn | Encapture

 

Categories
Daily Compliance News

August 30, 2022 the Pull the Plug Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Online gambling increases financial crime risk. (WSJ)
  • Musk’s legal team subpoenaed Mudge. (NYT)
  • No legal industry reform in CA. (Reuters)
  • Arrest for South African corruption in Trans-Net case. (Bloomberg)
Categories
Blog

A Caremark Retrospective: Part I – Background

It is often instructive to look back at old cases which have become so well known for a doctrine that the underlying facts are often forgotten. I did so recently in reading the original Caremark and Stone v. Ritterdecisions. The former decision was released in 1996 and the latter, some ten years later in 2006. They both made interesting reading and the underlying facts could well be drawn from the headlines of anti-corruption and anti-money laundering (AML) enforcement actions today. The original Caremark decision laid the foundation for the modern obligations of Boards of Directors in oversight of compliance in general and a company’s risk management profile in particular. Stone v. Ritter confirmed the ongoing vitality of the originalCaremark decision. Today, in Part 1, we review the underlying facts of the Caremark decision and in Part II, the legal reasoning.

Underlying Facts

In Caremark, the decision involved a company which provided patient care and managed care services and a substantial part of the revenues generated by the company was derived through third party payments, insurers, and Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement programs. Medicare and Medicaid payments were governed under the Anti-Referral Payments Law (“ARPL”) which prohibited health care providers (HCPs) from paying any form of remuneration (i.e., kickbacks) to physicians to induce them to refer Medicare or Medicaid patients to Caremark products or services.

To try and get around this prescription, Caremark entered various contracts for services (e.g., consultation agreements and research grants) with physicians at least some of whom prescribed or recommended services or products that Caremark provided to Medicare recipients and other patients. Moreover, Caremark had a decentralized governance and operational structure which allowed wide latitude to the business units to enter into such agreements without corporate or any centralized compliance or legal oversight. The results were about what you would expect.

Multiple federal investigations found that from the mid-1980s until the early 1990s, Caremark paid out millions to doctors in forms disguised to evade ARPL liability. Caremark claimed that its payments for consultation, teaching, research grants and other similar evasions did not violate the law. Further, it relied on an audit by Price Waterhouse (PwC) which concluded that there were no material weaknesses in Caremark’s control structure.

In 1993, Caremark formally changed its compliance manual to prohibit such payments, announced this change internally and put on training for this new set of policies. However, there were no attendant controls, monitoring or follow up noted. Indeed, it is not clear if much if anything changed at Caremark, given the decentralized nature of its business model.

Criminal and Civil Charges

In August 1994, Caremark was hit with a 47-page indictment alleging criminal violations of ARPL, specifically including making payments to induce physicians to refer patients to Caremark services and products. The indictment alleged that payments were “in the guise of research grants and others were consulting agreements.” Moreover, the Indictment went on to allege that such payments were made where no consulting services or research performed. (Very 2022 FCPA-ish) One doctor was alleged to have direct payments from Caremark for staff and offices expenses. Multiple shareholder suits were filed against the Board in Delaware and another federal Indictment was handled in Ohio. In addition to the claims in Ohio, new allegations of over billing and inappropriate referral payments made in Georgia and “reported that federal investigators were expanding their inquiry to look at Caremark’s referral practices in Michigan as well as allegations of fraudulent billing of insurers.” Rather amazingly, the company management, when reporting the Indictment to the Board of Directors, maintained the company had done nothing wrong.

Settlements

Of course, the Caremark senior management was not correct, and Caremark was required to pay millions to resolve enforcement actions. An agreement, with the Department of Justice (DOJ), Office of Inspector General (OIG), US Veterans Administration, US Federal Employee Health Benefits Program, federal Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services, and related state agencies in all fifty states and the District of Columbia required a Caremark subsidiary to enter a guilty plea to two counts of mail fraud, and required Caremark to pay $29 million in criminal fines, $129.9 million relating to civil claims concerning payment practices, $3.5 million for alleged violations of the Controlled Substances Act, and $2 million, in the form of a donation, to a grant program set up by the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act. Caremark also agreed to enter into a compliance agreement with the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

In addition to all these entities, Caremark was also sued by several private insurance company payors (“Private Payors”), who alleged that Caremark was liable for damages to them for allegedly improper business practices related to those at issue in the OIG investigation. As a result of negotiations with the Private Payors the Caremark Board of Directors approved a $98.5 million settlement agreement with the Private Payors in 1996.

In addition to the financial penalties, Caremark finally agreed to institute a full compliance program. It created the position of Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) and created a Board level Compliance and Ethics Committee who, with the assistance of outside counsel, was tasked with reviewing existing contracts and advanced approval of any new contract forms.

Join us for our next piece where we consider the court holdings and rationales in Caremark and Stone v. Ritter.