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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 29, 2026, The Trial of the Century 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:

  • PR exec tried to get rid of documents. (FT)
  • Why did First Brands hire BDO? (FT)
  • Altman v. Musk. Trial of the Century. (FT)
  • Should your Board appoint a Bot? (FT)

For more information on the use of AI in compliance programs, Tom Fox’s new book, Upping Your Game, is available. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

To learn about the intersection of Sherlock Holmes and the modern compliance professional, check out Tom’s latest book, The Game is Afoot-What Sherlock Holmes Teaches About Risk, Ethics and Investigations on Amazon.com.

Categories
The Hill Country Podcast

The Hill Country Podcast: AJ Rodriguez of Guadalupe Bank on Community Banking, Local Growth, and Interest-Rate Uncertainty

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, Tom’s partners, Gilbert Paiz and Andrew Gay, take the lead in visiting with AJ Rodriguez, now the interim CEO and board member of Guadalupe Bank.

AJ recounts entering banking after a ranch fire led him to college, an internship, and an examiner role with the U.S. Treasury, and subsequent roles at larger banks before becoming CEO of a South Texas community bank that grew to 31 branches and $2.2B in assets; after retiring in 2012 and moving to Fredericksburg, he helped launch the Backwoods barbecue restaurant and later joined Guadalupe Bank, stepping in as CEO after the prior CEO resigned. They contrast community banks with national banks, emphasizing local decision-making, relationship-based service, community involvement, and support for small businesses, and provide Guadalupe Bank details (about $254–$256M in assets, ~37–38 employees, locations in Kerrville and Fredericksburg, and a San Antonio production office planned to become a branch). They cover recruiting talent via a Schreiner University internship rotation program, regional optimism post-flood and amid steady growth, current products and fraud-prevention investments, and non-advisory commentary on interest rates, inflation, and market volatility.

Resources:

Guadalupe Bank 

Other Hill Country-Focused Podcasts:

Hill Country Authors Podcast

Hill Country Artists Podcast

Texas Hill Country Podcast Network

Cover Art

Nancy Huffman

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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: April 29, 2026, The (AI) Trial of the Century Edition

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest addition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI to start your day. Sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee, and listen in to AI Today In 5. All, from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, we consider five stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest about AI.

Top AI stories include:

  1. Musk v. Altman-AI Trial of the Century. (WSJ)
  2. A RegTech solution vs. an internal bespoke solution. (FinTech Global)
  3. AI governance in practice. (bankinfo security)
  4. AI in a skilled nursing facility. (McKnights)
  5. US v. states—the battle for AI governance. (Vorys)

For more information on the use of AI in compliance programs, Tom Fox’s new book, Upping Your Game, is available. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

To learn about the intersection of Sherlock Holmes and the modern compliance professional, check out Tom’s latest book, The Game is Afoot-What Sherlock Holmes Teaches About Risk, Ethics and Investigations on Amazon.com.

Categories
Great Women in Compliance

Great Women in Compliance: Risk as a Leadership Discipline: Lessons from Internal Audit

Guest Bio:

Michelle Wagner is Vice President and Head of Internal Audit at DocuSign, where she leads global audit strategy and helps the organization strengthen governance, risk management, and internal controls while supporting a culture of integrity and accountability.

With more than 25 years of experience across consulting and industry,

Michelle has held leadership roles at Deloitte, Costco, and SAP, where she led large audit portfolios, built high-performing teams, and drove governance and risk transformation initiatives across complex global organizations.

Michelle is known for her practical, people-centered approach to risk leadership and for translating complex risk insights into clear, actionable guidance. She is passionate about mentoring emerging leaders and helping organizations move from reactive risk management to proactive, insight-driven decision-making.

Show Notes:

Risk is often framed as technical work, but at its core, it is deeply human.

In this episode of Great Women in Compliance, Dr. Hemma Lomax sits down with Michelle Wagner, Head of Internal Audit at DocuSign, to explore how curiosity, empathy, and partnership help organizations manage risk more effectively and build stronger ethical cultures.

Michelle shares insights from a career spanning consulting and global leadership roles, reflecting on the moments that shaped her leadership philosophy and the lessons she has learned about influencing without authority, building trust, and helping teams see risks as opportunities to improve rather than problems to avoid.

Together, they discuss the evolving role of internal audit, the importance of collaboration across risk functions, and how emerging technologies such as AI can help leaders identify patterns and generate insights while reinforcing the need for human judgment.

This conversation is a reminder that great risk leaders don’t just protect organizations — they help them succeed.

Episode highlights:

  • Why risk management is fundamentally a leadership discipline
  • Lessons from moving from consulting to executive leadership roles
  • What makes an internal audit function truly valuable
  • How audit, compliance, and business teams can partner effectively
  • The role of curiosity and psychological safety in surfacing risks
  • Michelle’s perspective on AI and the future of risk management
  • Leadership lessons from mentoring and building teams
Categories
Blog

John Locke and the Legitimacy of Compliance Governance

We continue our exploration of Enlightenment Thinkers to see their influence on modern compliance programs. This week’s category is broader than philosophers, as many of these men excelled in numerous fields such as science, mathematics, calculus, and medicine. However, each contributed a key component that relates directly to our modern compliance regimes. In this post, we consider René Descartes and what he teaches as the next step beyond Bacon: evidence must be examined rigorously.

If Francis Bacon teaches us that compliance must be grounded in evidence, and René Descartes teaches us that evidence must be examined with rigor, John Locke brings us to the next great question: why should anyone trust the system itself? That question sits at the center of every modern compliance program. Employees are asked to report concerns, managers are expected to model ethical behavior, boards are charged with oversight, and companies routinely tell regulators that their compliance program is real, effective, and embedded in the business. But none of that works if the people inside the organization do not believe the system is fair, credible, and worthy of trust. That is why John Locke matters so much to the modern compliance professional.

Locke is often remembered as a philosopher of liberty, consent, rights, and accountable government. He argued that authority is legitimate only when it is exercised responsibly and for the benefit of those subject to it. Power, in Locke’s world, is not self-justifying. It must be bounded, accountable, and tied to obligations. That idea is highly relevant to corporate compliance. A compliance program is not legitimate simply because senior management approved it, or because the board receives quarterly updates, or because policies have been published on an intranet site. It is legitimate when employees experience it as fair, when reports are taken seriously, when retaliation is not tolerated, when discipline is consistent, and when leadership is seen to be accountable to the same standards as everyone else. That is not abstract philosophy. That is compliance governance.

Why Locke Matters to Compliance

Locke’s central insight is that authority derives its legitimacy from responsible exercise and reciprocal obligation. In a political context, that meant government existed to protect rights and serve the governed, not simply to command obedience. In the corporate context, the analogy is not exact, but the lesson is powerful. Employees will not trust a compliance program merely because it exists. They will trust it only if they believe it operates fairly, protects those who raise concerns, applies standards consistently, and treats power as accountable.

This is where Locke helps compliance professionals understand something many organizations still miss. Trust in a compliance system is not automatic. It has to be earned. An employee deciding whether to call a hotline is making a deeply practical judgment. Will anyone listen? Will the matter be reviewed fairly? Will the reporter be protected from retaliation? Will the senior executive who generated the concern be treated differently from everyone else? If the employee believes the answer to those questions is no, the reporting system has already failed, no matter how polished the company’s policy language may be.

The DOJ’s Compliance Expectations Are About Legitimacy

The Department of Justice does not use the language of social contract theory, but its Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs (ECCP) is filled with Locke’s concerns. The ECCP asks whether the program is well-designed, applied in good faith, and works in practice. It asks about tone at the top and tone in the middle. It asks whether reporting mechanisms are trusted, whether investigations are handled properly, whether discipline is applied consistently, and whether there is protection against retaliation. Those are all questions of legitimacy. A compliance program that employees do not trust cannot work in practice.

This point is critical because too many organizations still frame culture as something soft and secondary, a matter of messaging rather than system design. Locke would reject that categorically. In his framework, legitimacy is not a decoration added to authority. It is what makes authority durable and acceptable. In a company, that means culture and governance cannot be separated. Speak-up systems, fair treatment, board attention, transparent escalation, and consistent discipline are not peripheral to compliance. They are core structural elements of it.

Speak-Up Culture Is a Test of Governance

Few areas of compliance reveal Locke’s relevance more clearly than a speak-up culture. Every company says it wants employees to raise concerns. Every company says it prohibits retaliation. But the real issue is whether employees believe those statements are true in lived experience. That belief is shaped more by organizational behavior than by slogans.

If employees see complaints buried, if they watch high performers protected despite repeated concerns, if they hear that reporting a problem is career-limiting, or if they conclude that management is more interested in identifying the reporter than addressing the underlying issue, the company has lost legitimacy. In Lockean terms, authority has ceased to be trustworthy because it is no longer being exercised for the benefit of those subject to it.

This is why non-retaliation is so important. It is not simply an employment-law consideration or a human-resources aspiration. It is a governance imperative. Retaliation tells employees that the system serves power rather than principle. Once that lesson is absorbed, reporting declines, silent resignation grows, and risk moves underground. A company may still claim to have a hotline, but it no longer has a functioning speak-up culture.

Fairness Is Not Soft. It Is a Control.

Locke also helps us understand the role of fairness in a compliance program. In many organizations, fairness is discussed as a value. It should be discussed as a control. Why? Because fairness shapes behavior. When employees believe standards will be applied consistently, they are more likely to follow them, more likely to report deviations, and more likely to trust the company’s response when issues arise. When employees believe discipline is arbitrary, selective, or influenced by rank and revenue generation, the opposite occurs. Cynicism spreads quickly. Policies become performative. Reporting drops. Informal norms replace formal standards.

That is why the ECCP pays so much attention to disciplinary consistency. Regulators understand that a compliance program loses credibility when senior leaders are treated differently from line employees. Locke would have recognized the point immediately. In any system of authority, legitimacy is undermined when rules are used to bind the weak but not the powerful.

Board Oversight and Accountable Authority

Locke’s philosophy is equally useful when thinking about board oversight. He believed that those entrusted with authority must remain accountable for how they exercise it. That is a principle every board member should understand in the context of compliance.

Board oversight is not merely about receiving information. It is about ensuring that authority inside the company is properly bounded, monitored, and answerable. The board does not run day-to-day compliance, but it is responsible for ensuring that management has created a system worthy of trust. That means asking whether reporting channels work, whether investigations are independent, whether non-retaliation protections are real, whether major risks are escalated, and whether compliance has stature and access.

This is particularly important because boards sometimes fall into the trap of treating compliance as a downstream operational matter. Locke would have viewed that as a category mistake. Governance is not something separate from legitimacy. Governance is how legitimacy is maintained.

For the modern board, that means compliance oversight must be substantive. Directors should ask not only for dashboards, but for explanations. How does management know employees trust reporting channels? What evidence supports claims of a strong culture? How is middle management assessed? What happens when senior leaders are implicated? What trends in reporting, substantiation, retaliation, and discipline should concern the board? Those questions move oversight from ceremonial to real.

In that sense, Locke also speaks directly to Caremark-era expectations. Directors have obligations not simply to exist, but to oversee. A board that does not ensure the company has credible systems of information and response is not exercising accountable authority. It is abdicating it.

Culture and the Middle Management Problem

No discussion of compliance legitimacy would be complete without examining middle management. The DOJ, in both the ECCP and the FCPA Resource Guide, 2nd edition, has long emphasized that “tone at the top” is not enough. Tone in the middle matters enormously, because employees experience the company most directly through their immediate supervisors.

This is another place where Locke offers real insight. In any system of authority, legitimacy rises or falls through those who exercise power closest to the governed. If middle managers pressure employees to ignore controls, discourage escalation, roll their eyes at compliance training, or quietly punish bad news, the company’s formal commitments will collapse in practice.

This is why companies must treat middle management behavior as a governance issue. Are managers trained not just on rules, but on their duty to support reporting and ethical decision-making? Are they evaluated on how they build culture? Do promotion and bonus structures reinforce ethical leadership, or only financial performance? Are there consequences when managers create pressure that undermines compliance expectations?

These are not marginal considerations. They are central to whether the compliance program is experienced as legitimate in daily operations. Locke reminds us that people judge institutions less by official declarations than by how authority is exercised.

The Compliance Officer as Steward of Institutional Legitimacy

Locke casts the compliance officer as a steward of institutional legitimacy. That is an important and underappreciated role. The compliance officer helps the company earn trust, not through public relations, but through structure, fairness, and accountability. The compliance officer helps ensure that when people speak up, they are heard; when misconduct occurs, it is handled consistently; when leaders exercise authority, they do so under standards that bind them as well. In this sense, compliance is not just about preventing legal violations. It is about making the institution worthy of confidence.

That is why legitimacy matters so much. A company with high trust in its compliance system detects issues earlier, responds more effectively, learns more quickly, and sustains a stronger ethical culture over time. A company without that trust becomes opaque to itself. Risk goes silent. Problems surface late. Governance becomes reactive. The institution loses one of its most important defenses: its own people’s willingness to tell it the truth.

Five Lessons Learned for the Modern Compliance Professional

First, a compliance program must be legitimate to be effective. Employees must believe the system is fair, credible, and trustworthy.

Second, speak-up culture is a governance test. Reporting mechanisms only work when employees believe concerns will be taken seriously and retaliation will not follow.

Third, fairness is a control. Consistent discipline, equal treatment across levels of seniority, and transparent standards strengthen compliance credibility.

Fourth, boards must exercise accountable oversight. They should test management’s claims about culture, reporting, and non-retaliation with real evidence.

Fifth, middle management is where legitimacy lives or dies. A company must align manager incentives, expectations, and accountability with its compliance values.

Coming Next: Thomas Hobbes and Why Every Compliance Program Needs Order

If John Locke teaches us that compliance governance must be legitimate, Thomas Hobbes will remind us that legitimacy alone is not enough. A company also needs structure, clear rules, assigned authority, escalation pathways, and credible enforcement. In Part 4, I will explore how Hobbes helps explain the roles of policies, procedures, internal controls, and operational discipline in a best-practices compliance program. Trust matters, but so does order.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 28, 2026, The Corruption Convictions Upheld 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:

  • The EU is in more corruption trouble. (Euractiv)
  • US to target Mexican politicians in ABC campaign. (LATimes)
  • Former Speaker of the Ohio House loses at the Supreme Court. (KSAT)
  • Mike Madigan conviction upheld by 7th (BloombergLaw)

For more information on the use of AI in compliance programs, Tom Fox’s new book, Upping Your Game, is available. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

To learn about the intersection of Sherlock Holmes and the modern compliance professional, check out Tom’s latest book, The Game is Afoot-What Sherlock Holmes Teaches About Risk, Ethics and Investigations on Amazon.com.

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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: April 28, 2026, The Barriers to Success in AI Edition

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest addition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI to start your day. Sit back, enjoy a cup of morning coffee, and listen in to the AI Today In 5. All, from the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, we consider five stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest about AI.

Top AI stories include:

  1. Governance and compliance barriers to AI success. (SC Media)
  2. AI in payroll. (Thomson Reuters)
  3. Can AI agents create regulatory risk? (ICAEW Insights)
  4. China blocks Meta takeover of Manus. (CNBC)
  5. OpenAI breaks Microsoft exclusivity. (Reuters)

For more information on the use of AI in compliance programs, Tom Fox’s new book, Upping Your Game, is available. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

To learn about the intersection of Sherlock Holmes and the modern compliance professional, check out Tom’s latest book, The Game is Afoot-What Sherlock Holmes Teaches About Risk, Ethics and Investigations on Amazon.com.

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Innovation in Compliance

Innovation in Compliance: Beating Compliance Drift: Why Regulatory Intelligence and Continuous Monitoring Matter with Jeff Kushner

Innovation occurs across many areas, and compliance professionals need not only to be ready for it but also to embrace it. Join Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, as he visits with top innovative minds, thinkers, and creators in the award-winning Innovation in Compliance podcast. In this episode, host Tom visits with Jeff Kushner, a compliance and IT security leader at Allgress.

Jeff talks about “compliance drift,” where external obligations such as laws, frameworks like NIST/ISO/CIS, and customer and licensing requirements fall out of alignment with internal governance policies, procedures, and contracts, creating silent gaps that surface only during audits or incidents. They discuss the added volatility from business and geopolitical changes and identify industries most exposed to hidden compliance risks, including small and mid-sized businesses, AI-focused organizations, behavioral health clinics managing many frameworks across multiple sites with drop-in audits, and small DoD contractors facing CMMC. Jeff argues that traditional spreadsheet-based or audit-centric GRC is static and point-in-time. He describes Reg Watch as a complementary regulatory intelligence layer that continuously monitors 3,000+ global standards, provides real-time alerts, explains changes in plain English, and provides sample policies and implementation steps, along with supporting documentation and follow-up validation.

Key highlights:

  • Compliance Drift Explained
  • Volatility Beyond Regulations
  • Why Old GRC Fails
  • Reg Watch Intelligence Layer
  • Documenting Actions and Proof

Resources:

Jeff Kushner on LinkedIn

Allgress

Innovation in Compliance was recently honored as the Number 4 podcast in Risk Management by 1,000,000 Podcasts.

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The PfBCon Podcast

Bryan Barletta on the Podcast Movement + Sounds Profitable Merger: What Changes for Creators, Brands, and Business Growth

Bryan Barletta discusses why he initiated the merger between Sounds Profitable and Podcast Movement, aiming to better serve the broader podcast ecosystem beyond a few large companies and to reinvent events in a post-COVID world focused on meaningful connections and ROI. He explains that Sounds Profitable will continue its day-to-day research, consulting, and partner network, while Podcast Movement will anchor major events, including a three-day, free-to-the-public program at South by Southwest and an August main event likely based in New York to improve global accessibility and pricing fairness. The conversation covers podcasting’s evolution into a business development and marketing tool, with brands valuing engagement across platforms, not just downloads. Bryan outlines initiatives to improve networking and meeting matchmaking, increase transparency in speaker selection, expand diversity, provide speaker training, and explore honoraria while emphasizing that the real value of events lies in in-room connections.

Key highlights:

  • Why the Merger Happened
  • New Structure and Role
  • Podcasting as a Business Tool
  • Attracting CMOs and Buyers
  • Designing Better Networking
  • Beyond Downloads Metrics
  • South by Southwest Access
  • Future Initiatives and Wrap

Resources:

Follow Sounds Profitable on:

Website

LinkedIn

X (formerly Twitter)

Follow Bryan Barletta on:

LinkedIn

Instagram

Categories
Blog

René Descartes and the Discipline of Internal Investigation

This week, we are moving to Enlightenment Thinkers to see their influence on modern compliance programs. This week’s category is broader than philosophers, as many of these men excelled in numerous fields such as science, mathematics, calculus, and medicine. However, each contributed a key component that relates directly to our modern compliance regimes. In this post, we consider René Descartes and what he teaches as the next step beyond Bacon: that evidence must be rigorously examined.

If Francis Bacon taught us that a compliance program must be grounded in evidence, René Descartes teaches the next step: evidence must be examined with rigor. That is why Descartes is the natural second installment in this series on what Enlightenment thinkers can teach us about modern corporate compliance. Bacon gave us empiricism. Descartes gives us a method. Bacon tells us to look. Descartes tells us how to think about what we find.

For the compliance professional, that is no small matter. Modern compliance programs do not fail only because they lack information. They often fail because organizations do not ask the right questions, challenge convenient assumptions, or investigate troubling facts with sufficient discipline. A hotline report comes in, and management prematurely dismisses it. A financial anomaly is explained away because the business result looks attractive. A third-party red flag is rationalized because the market opportunity seems too important to slow down. In each case, the problem is not simply a lack of data. The problem is a lack of disciplined inquiry.

That is where Descartes has something important to say to the modern Chief Compliance Officer.

Why Descartes Matters to Compliance

René Descartes is best known for methodical doubt. He believed that if one wanted to arrive at reliable knowledge, one had to strip away weak assumptions and test what could be known. He did not advocate doubt for its own sake. He advocated doubt as a disciplined tool, a way to avoid error and reach sound conclusions. His method required breaking problems into parts, analyzing them carefully, proceeding in an orderly manner, and ensuring nothing important was overlooked. That is remarkably close to what an effective compliance investigation function should do.

The compliance professional cannot assume an allegation is false because it is inconvenient. Nor can one assume it is true because it is emotionally compelling. The task is to examine. What happened? Who knew what, and when? What documents exist? What controls should have operated? Where are the inconsistencies? What explanation fits the evidence, and what explanation merely sounds comforting? Descartes would have recognized this immediately. A sound conclusion requires method, not instinct.

In a corporate environment, that is especially important because organizations are full of narratives. Managers tell stories about performance. Employees tell stories about why something was necessary. Third parties tell stories about local customs or business necessities. The compliance function should listen, but it cannot stop there. It must test those stories against facts.

The DOJ Expects More Than a Quick Answer

The Department of Justice’s Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs (ECCP) does not use philosophical language, but its expectations align closely with Cartesian thinking. The ECCP asks whether investigations are properly scoped, whether the company has adequate resources to conduct them, whether the company preserves and analyzes relevant data, whether reporting structures support independence, and whether lessons learned are used to improve the compliance program. That is not a request for superficial closure. It is a demand for disciplined inquiry.

The ECCP is not interested in whether a company can produce a memo that says the matter has been reviewed. It wants to know whether the review was credible. Did the company ask hard questions? Did it follow the evidence even when the evidence was uncomfortable? Did it look at underlying causes or accept a narrow explanation that minimized institutional responsibility? These are Descartes’ questions as much as the DOJ’s.

Method Beats Reaction

One of the most important lessons Descartes offers is that method matters more than reaction. Too many organizations still respond to reports of misconduct in an ad hoc fashion. The identity of the reporter, the subject’s seniority, or the business sensitivity of the issue can distort the process from the outset. Some matters are overreacted to because they are visible. Others are under-investigated because they are politically awkward. That is not a system. That is improvisation. A mature compliance program requires a clear, repeatable investigative method.

That begins with triage. Allegations should be assessed based on risk, scope, subject matter, and potential impact. Matters involving senior leadership, financial controls, corruption risk, retaliation, or systemic process failures may require immediate escalation and greater independence. Low-risk issues may still require attention, but not every matter needs the same level of response. Cartesian thinking does not mean treating every problem identically. It means applying a coherent method to determine what level of inquiry is warranted.

From there, the matter should be broken down into manageable components. What is the allegation? What business process is implicated? What documents are likely relevant? Who are the key custodians? What data sources exist? What is the working timeline? What controls should have operated? What policy provisions may have been implicated? This is classic Descartes: divide complex problems into smaller parts so they can be understood.

Disciplined Skepticism Is a Compliance Strength

Compliance professionals sometimes worry that skepticism will be perceived as mistrust. But disciplined skepticism is not cynicism. It is not hostility. It is professional rigor. It is the recognition that people often explain events in self-protective ways, that organizations prefer neat stories to messy truths, and that important facts are often buried inside routine processes. Descartes would have understood that skepticism is a necessary safeguard against error.

Consider a common internal reporting scenario. A manager says that a questionable payment was simply an administrative oversight. Perhaps that is true. But a compliance professional guided by Descartes would ask several follow-up questions. Was it really isolated? Have similar payments occurred before? Were approval thresholds bypassed? Was the vendor properly vetted? Were invoice descriptions vague or coded? Did someone raise concerns earlier? Was the explanation consistent across all available records? None of those questions accuse. They clarify.

Documentation Turns Inquiry Into Credibility

Another Cartesian lesson for compliance is the importance of orderly reasoning. An investigation cannot simply be sound in substance. It must also be documented in a way that shows how the conclusion was reached. This is essential for institutional memory, for regulatory defensibility, and for credibility with boards and senior management.

A well-documented investigation answers basic but vital questions. What was alleged? Who handled the matter? What evidence was reviewed? Which witnesses were interviewed? What facts were established? What policy or control failures were identified? What conclusion was reached, and why? What remediation followed? This kind of documentation is not bureaucratic excess. It is proof of intellectual discipline.

Without it, the company cannot show that it acted reasonably. It cannot identify patterns across matters. It cannot demonstrate consistency. It cannot revisit earlier decisions when new facts emerge. Most importantly, it cannot turn an individual case into organizational learning. Descartes’ method was about structured thinking. In corporate compliance, documentation is how structured thinking becomes durable.

Independence Matters When the Facts Get Uncomfortable

No discussion of investigations would be complete without addressing independence. The most elegant methodology in the world will not help if investigators are pressured to protect favored executives, minimize business disruption, or avoid awkward findings. Cartesian rigor requires a willingness to follow the facts wherever they lead. That, in turn, requires real autonomy.

The ECCP addresses this directly through its focus on stature, authority, resources, and access. Can the compliance function investigate senior personnel? Can it escalate concerns to the board or audit committee when necessary? Is it empowered to challenge management narratives? These are not secondary governance questions. They are central to whether the investigation process can produce reliable conclusions.

There is a reason so many compliance failures involve not merely misconduct, but management interference with the review of misconduct. When power shapes the investigation, facts become negotiable. Descartes would have seen that as a fundamental corruption of method.

Investigations Must Lead to Remediation

A Cartesian compliance program does not end with a finding. It asks what the finding means for the system. That is why investigations must connect to remediation and root cause analysis. If an allegation is substantiated, the question is not simply who violated what rule. The question is what enabled the failure.

Was the training insufficient? Were incentives pushing employees toward bad decisions? Was a manager creating pressure that undermined ethical judgment? Did the approval process invite shortcuts? Was the policy too vague to guide real-world conduct? These questions push the company from conclusion to improvement.

This is where Descartes connects back to Bacon. Bacon teaches that we need evidence. Descartes teaches that we must reason carefully from the evidence. Together, they create a powerful model for compliance effectiveness. The company observes, investigates, documents, learns, and improves.

The Compliance Officer as a Guardian of Clear Thinking

If Bacon cast the compliance officer as an institutional scientist, Descartes casts the compliance officer as a guardian of clear thinking. In a corporation full of pressure, narrative, hierarchy, and urgency, that role is vital. Someone must insist that facts be tested, that assumptions be challenged, that conclusions be explained, and that the process remain disciplined when the easier path is to settle for a quick answer.

That is not merely an investigative skill. It is a governance function. It protects employee fairness, the board’s credibility, and the company’s defensibility. It also builds trust over time, because people learn that reports are taken seriously, that outcomes are reasoned rather than political, and that the system values truth over convenience.

René Descartes may seem an unlikely guide for corporate compliance. Yet his method of doubt, order, and careful reasoning belongs squarely within the modern best-practices compliance program. In an era where companies are judged not simply on whether they responded, but on how they responded, Descartes offers an enduring lesson: clear thinking is a control.

Five Lessons Learned for the Modern Compliance Professional

First, allegations should trigger a method, not a reaction. A repeatable investigative framework reduces bias and improves consistency.

Second, disciplined skepticism is a professional obligation. Compliance must test explanations against facts rather than accept convenient narratives.

Third, complex matters should be broken into parts. Scoping, evidence review, interviews, control mapping, and timeline construction all improve rigor.

Fourth, documentation is essential. It is how the company proves that its inquiry was credible and how it preserves institutional learning.

Fifth, an investigation is not complete until it informs remediation. Findings should lead to enhancements in control, policy changes, training updates, or broader governance improvements.

Coming Next: John Locke and the Legitimacy of Compliance Governance

If Francis Bacon teaches us to gather evidence and René Descartes teaches us to examine it rigorously, John Locke asks an equally important question: why should anyone trust the system in the first place? In Part 3, I will explore how Locke’s ideas about legitimacy, rights, and accountable authority provide a powerful framework for speak-up culture, non-retaliation, fairness, and board oversight. In the world of compliance, authority alone is never enough. It must also be credible.