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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: September 12, 2025, The AI for RCA Episode

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest edition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI, so 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 four stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest related to AI.

Top AI stories:

For more information on the use of AI in Compliance programs, my new book, Upping Your Game. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: September 12, 2025, The Epstein and JPMorgan 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, including compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest, relevant to the compliance professional.

Top stories include:

  • British Ambassador sacked over Epstein relationship. (WSJ)
  • NYT Magazine on Epstein and JP Morgan. (NYT)
  • Was it fraud or something else? (FT)
  • AfD offices raided for Chinese payments. (FT)
Categories
Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – 10 Lessons for the Compliance Professional on Fighting Fraud, Waste and Abuse

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

We conclude our look at fraud, waste, and abuse by providing the compliance professional with 10 steps to take to help fight these three iniquities.

For more information on this topic, refer to The Compliance Handbook: A Guide to Operationalizing Your Compliance Program, 6th edition, recently released by LexisNexis. It is available here.

Categories
Creativity and Compliance

Creativity and Compliance – Crowdsourcing Compliance: Creative Strategies for Engaging Employees

Where does creativity fit into compliance? In more places than you think. Problem-solving, accountability, communication, and connection – they all take creativity. Join Tom Fox and Ronnie Feldman on the award-winning Creativity and Compliance. Ronnie’s company, Learning and Entertainment, utilizes the entertainment devices that people use to consume information in their everyday, non-work lives, and applies it to important topics around compliance and ethics. It is not only about being funny. It is about changing the tone of your compliance communications and messaging to make your compliance program, policies, and resources more accessible.

In this episode, Tom and Ronnie discuss innovative ways to tap into the collective intelligence of employees through crowdsourcing. They explore how creative methods can be used to promote an ethical workplace, including employee contests, mascots, and fun engagement activities. They highlight examples such as compliance trading cards, privacy promotions with pets, cocktail-themed compliance policies, and internal lip-syncing videos. They also discuss using internal podcasts to enhance corporate culture and the importance of creating a culture of trust where employees feel heard and engaged.

Key highlights:

  • Crowdsourcing Compliance: An Innovative Approach
  • Creative Examples of Employee Engagement
  • Building a Culture of Trust
  • Fun and Cost-Effective Compliance Strategies
  • The Power of Internal Podcasts

Resources:

Ronnie

Tom

Instagram

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

LinkedIn

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

Categories
Blog

Fighting Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: Ten Lessons for the Compliance Professional

Fraud, waste, and abuse are often bundled together in compliance conversations, but they are not interchangeable. Fraud is intentional deception, waste is the careless misuse of resources, and abuse is the opportunistic exploitation of gray areas. Each carries unique risks. Each erodes value. And each, if left unchecked, creates fertile ground for corruption and regulatory exposure.

Throughout this series, we have examined each element in depth. Fraud remains the most familiar, often linked directly to corruption. Waste, though usually unintentional, drains millions from corporate coffers each year. Abuse occupies the murky middle ground where rationalizations and loopholes open the door to larger misconduct. Finally, we examined how an integrated framework, spanning from controls to culture, can help compliance professionals address fraud, waste, and abuse in a holistic manner.

What emerges is clear: fighting fraud, waste, and abuse is not an optional add-on to anti-corruption programs. It is central to them. Fraud cannot thrive without weak controls. Waste creates the conditions that foster corruption. Abuse normalizes rule-bending until bribery becomes a natural extension of it.

For compliance professionals, the question is not whether to address fraud, waste, and abuse but how. Here are ten key lessons that stand out.

1. Know the Difference

The first lesson is definitional clarity. Fraud, waste, and abuse often overlap, but they are distinct categories of risk. Fraud is intentional and prosecutable. Waste is careless and costly. Abuse is opportunistic and corrosive. Treating them as one dulls your controls. Compliance programs must tailor messaging, policies, and monitoring to each risk. For example, fraud requires forensic controls, waste requires efficiency metrics, and abuse demands cultural reinforcement. Clarity sharpens strategy and ensures that prevention is precise, not blunt.

2. Fraud Prevention Requires Strong Controls

Fraud rarely occurs in isolation. Bribery schemes rely on falsified invoices, manipulated expenses, or deceptive contracts. Preventing fraud means embedding strong controls: segregation of duties, third-party due diligence, mandatory job rotations, and robust hotlines. Data analytics adds another critical layer, identifying anomalies in billing, procurement, or expenses before they metastasize. Fraud prevention is not just about legal risk; it is about stopping corruption before it takes root.

3. Waste Is More Than Inefficiency

Waste may lack intent, but its impact is devastating. It drains profits, frustrates shareholders, and weakens culture. Waste in corporate travel, maintenance, or software licenses often reflects poor oversight and sends the wrong cultural message: accountability is optional. Compliance cannot dismiss waste as “just operations.” Regulators and boards increasingly demand stewardship. Waste that goes unchecked creates cover for fraud and abuse, turning inefficiency into risk. Compliance leaders must treat waste as a core governance issue, not an afterthought.

4. Predictive Analytics Is a Compliance Tool

Our review of Shell’s predictive maintenance program offers a powerful analogy for compliance. By embedding sensors and utilizing predictive analytics, Shell reduced waste, minimized downtime, and enhanced safety. Compliance can achieve the same results. Predictive analytics enables compliance officers to move from reactive investigations to proactive risk detection. Expense anomalies, hotline spikes, or vendor irregularities can be flagged in real time, preventing issues before they escalate. Predictive analytics is no longer a “nice to have.” It is the future of compliance risk management.

5. Abuse Is the Gateway to Fraud

Abuse thrives in gray areas, exploiting loopholes, stretching policies, or rationalizing questionable conduct. It often starts small, such as recreating a lost taxi receipt, but escalates when unchecked. AI-generated fake receipts illustrate how easily abuse morphs into fraud. Abuse corrodes culture by teaching employees that rules can be bent without consequence. Compliance must treat abuse as seriously as fraud, because, in practice, abuse is often a precursor to fraud. Ignoring it is an invitation to systemic misconduct.

6. Technology Must Match the Threat

Employees are already using AI to generate fake receipts. Compliance must use AI to detect them. Modern expense-auditing platforms now flag anomalies in fonts, metadata, or behavior patterns. Similar tools analyze procurement, payroll, and travel data for red flags. The lesson is clear: compliance cannot fight tomorrow’s threats with yesterday’s tools. Technology must evolve as quickly as the risks do. Matching technology to the danger is no longer optional; it is essential for credibility and effectiveness.

7. Culture Is the Ultimate Control

Policies and tools matter, but culture determines outcomes. Fraud, waste, and abuse thrive where accountability is negotiable, where entitlement is tolerated, and where corner-cutting is excused. Conversely, a culture of transparency and stewardship closes the space in which misconduct thrives. Compliance officers must partner with leadership to model integrity, reinforce accountability, and celebrate stewardship. Culture sends the clearest message: fraud, waste, and abuse are not tolerated here. Without cultural reinforcement, even the strongest controls will eventually fail.

8. Empower Whistleblowers as Early Warning Systems

Whistleblowers are often the first to spot fraud, waste, or abuse. Yet too many organizations undercut their own defenses by failing to protect or empower employees who speak up. Robust reporting channels, anti-retaliation policies, and timely follow-up are essential. In the fight against fraud, waste, and abuse, whistleblowers are not just informants; they are strategic allies. Empowering them demonstrates that the company values integrity, deters misconduct, and surfaces risks before regulators do.

9. Build Cross-Functional Coalitions

Fraud, waste, and abuse cut across silos. Fraud may surface in finance, waste may occur in operations, and abuse may be present in HR. Compliance cannot fight these battles alone. Cross-functional coalitions with audit, procurement, IT, and HR ensure risks do not slip through the cracks. Coalitions also strengthen messaging: stewardship is everyone’s responsibility. When functions share data, align incentives, and coordinate responses, blind spots shrink and resilience grows. Compliance professionals must position themselves as connectors across the enterprise.

10. Continuous Improvement Is Non-Negotiable

Fraud, waste, and abuse risks are not static; they are dynamic. Predictive models require recalibration. Fraud schemes evolve. Waste emerges in new technologies and processes. Abuse shifts as policies and cultures change. Compliance programs must continually improve by reviewing data, updating controls, and reassessing cultural vulnerabilities to ensure ongoing effectiveness. Static programs become obsolete, leaving gaps for misconduct to exploit. Dynamic, evolving compliance programs, by contrast, remain credible, resilient, and aligned with regulatory expectations.

Conclusion

Fraud, waste, and abuse represent a continuum of risks that, if left unchecked, will erode profitability, corrode culture, and undermine trust. Fraud is the most visible, but waste and abuse are equally insidious. Together, they form the ecosystem in which corruption thrives.

For compliance professionals, the fight against fraud, waste, and abuse is both a mandate and an opportunity for growth. By understanding the differences, strengthening controls, leveraging predictive analytics, addressing abuse early, deploying technology, fostering a culture of compliance, empowering whistleblowers, forming coalitions, and committing to continuous improvement, compliance can lead the fight.

The message is simple: fraud, waste, and abuse are not just a financial issue; it is also a compliance issue. When compliance professionals treat it as such, they not only protect their organizations from regulatory exposure but also create cultures of stewardship, accountability, and integrity. That is the true mandate of modern compliance to ensure that fraud, waste, and abuse cannot take root and that corporate integrity remains strong.

Resources:

Untangling Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: A Primer for the Compliance Professional

From Controls to Culture: Building Anti-Corruption Programs that Address Fraud, Waste, and Abuse

Culture, Costs, and Compliance: Tackling Corporate Waste with Data-Driven Solutions

Culture, Controls, and Consequences: Why Compliance Should Address Abuse Before It Escalates

Categories
Compliance Tip of the Day

Compliance Tip of the Day – Using Your ABC Framework to Prevent Fraud Waste and Abuse

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

We continue our look at fraud, waste, and abuse. Today, explore using a best practices compliance program to fight these three iniquities.

For more on this topic, check out The Compliance Handbook, a Guide to Operationalizing your Compliance Program, 6th edition, which was recently released by LexisNexis. It is available here.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: September 11, 2025, The Lest We Never Forget 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, including compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest, relevant to the compliance professional.

Top stories include:

  • Citi and UBS settle with the CFTC over commodity trading compliance violations. (Bloomberg)
  • Goldman Sachs’ GC was once Epstein’s administrator. (WSJ)
  • The son of a Chinese regulator under investigation has been detained. (FT)
  • Gen Z protestors force recognition of Nepali PM. (Reuters)
Categories
AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: September 11, 2025, The Cruz Sandbox AI Episode

Welcome to AI Today in 5, the newest edition to the Compliance Podcast Network. Each day, Tom Fox will bring you 5 stories about AI, so 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 four stories from the business world, compliance, ethics, risk management, leadership, or general interest related to AI.

Top AI stories include:

  • Navigating the path to AI compliance. (BDO)
  • AI and ML are reshaping financial compliance. (FinExtra)
  • Ted Cruz proposes a free Sandbox. (Tech Policy Press)
  • Why AI alone can’t fix compliance screening. (FinTechGlobal)
  • Empire AI program exceeds expectations, says Gov. (Bloomberg)

For more information on the use of AI in Compliance programs, my new book, Upping Your Game. You can purchase a copy of the book on Amazon.com.

Categories
It's art

It’s Art, Let’s Talk About It – The Journey of Walt Gonske: An Artist’s Path from New York to Taos

The Museum of Western Art is dedicated to excellence in the collection, preservation, and promotion of Western Heritage and the education and cultural enrichment of our diverse audiences. The Museum serves as a bridge between the past and the present, ensuring that the legacy of the American West is preserved for future generations. Western Art is as engaging and important as ever. In this award-winning podcast series, Museum Executive Director Darrell Beauchamp welcomes Walt Gonske to discuss his career, focusing on his latest exhibition, ‘Walt Gonske, the Church Series.’

Their conversation covers Gonske’s early passion for drawing, his transition from a freelance men’s fashion illustrator in New York to a renowned painter in Taos, New Mexico. Gonske shares his experiences, including his unique ‘Paint Mobile,’ painting techniques, and the importance of painting from life. The discussion also touches on his journey of establishing himself in the art world, his collaboration with the Taos Six, and insights for emerging artists.

Highlights include:

  • Walt’s Artistic Beginnings
  • Building a Life and Career in Taos
  • The Taos Six and Artistic Community
  • The First Paint Mobile Experience
  • Techniques and Bright Colors
  • The Church Series Exhibition
  • Advice for Young Artists

Resources:

Museum of Western Art

Darrell Beauchamp on LinkedIn

Walt Gonske – The Church Series

Walt Gonske Fine Art Website

Categories
All Things Investigations

All Things Investigations – FinCEN’s Recent Actions: Existential Threat for Financial Institutions in Mexico

Welcome to the Hughes Hubbard Anti-Corruption & Internal Investigations Practice Group’s podcast, All Things Investigation. In this podcast, host Tom Fox welcomes back Jeremy Paner and Diego Durán de la Vega to discuss recent FinCEN enforcement actions targeting three Mexican financial institutions. The conversation explores the implications of these actions under the Fend Off Fentanyl Act, the evolving regulatory landscape, and the existential risks facing financial institutions operating in Mexico. The guests provide practical compliance guidance, lessons learned, and a forward-looking perspective on U.S. enforcement trends.

Highlights include:

  • Why These Enforcement Actions Matter
  • The Fend Off Fentanyl Act: A New Legal Tool
  • U.S. Government Focus on Mexico
  • Lessons from OFAC Enforcement
  • Compliance Implications for Financial Institutions
  • Responding to Enforcement: Practical Steps
  • Global Jurisdiction and the U.S. Financial System
  • Key Lessons for Compliance Officers
  • Looking Ahead: Future Enforcement Trends

Key Takeaways for Compliance Professionals:

  • The Fend Off Fentanyl Act introduces new, immediate risks for financial institutions, especially those with ties to Mexico.
  • U.S. enforcement actions can have global reach, severing access to the U.S. financial system.
  • Compliance programs must be robust, proactive, and responsive to regulatory advisories and negative media.
  • Effective communication between compliance and legal functions is crucial for mitigating risk.

Resources:

Hughes Hubbard & Reed website

Jeremy Paner

Diego Durán de la Vega