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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: March 4, 2026, The AI Content Explosion 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. Symphony AI is helping Spanish banks with sanctions screening. (FinTechGlobal)
  2. Agentic AI for reg compliance. (Yahoo!Finance)
  3. Chatbots and Influence. (YaleNews)
  4. Managing your AI content explosion. (PlanAdviser)
  5. AI for data protection. (Bloomberg)

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

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Compliance Into the Weeds

Compliance into the Weeds: SDNY’s New Declination Policy: Crime Categories, Cooperation, and Compliance Implications

The award-winning 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 explore it more fully. Looking for some hard-hitting insights on compliance? Look no further than Compliance into the Weeds! In this episode of Compliance into the Weeds, Tom Fox and Matt Kelly look at the recently announced new Southern District of New York standard for Declinations.

They look at SDNY U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton’s newly released self-disclosure/cooperation/declination policy and its implications for corporate compliance. While the core elements, prompt voluntary disclosure, cooperation, remediation, and restitution, mirror existing DOJ expectations, they highlight a significant change: SDNY now treats “aggravated circumstances” as certain categories of crimes that are categorically ineligible for declinations, including foreign corruption/FCPA, sanctions evasion, terrorism, sex trafficking with minors, smuggling, drug cartels, and forced labor, rather than focusing on offense traits such as senior management involvement or recidivism. They note potential inconsistencies with DOJ’s corporate enforcement approach, uncertainty about disclosure timing despite references to promptness and pre-investigation disclosure, broad discretion in enforcement, and the risk of forum shopping.

Key highlights:

  • Why SDNY Declinations Matter
  • Clayton Policy Key Changes
  • Aggravated Circumstances Redefined
  • FCPA Carve Out Confusion
  • Timing and Disclosure Pressure
  • Cooperation Restitution Disgorgement

Resources:

Matt in Radical Compliance

Tom in the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog

Tom

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A multi-award-winning podcast, Compliance into the Weeds was most recently honored as one of the Top 25 Regulatory Compliance Podcasts, a Top 10 Business Law Podcast, and a Top 12 Risk Management Podcast. Compliance into the Weeds has been conferred a Davey, a Communicator Award, and a W3 Award, all for podcast excellence.

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Blog

State AI Laws Are No Longer Background Noise: What Washington and Colorado Mean for Your Compliance Program

If you run a compliance program in 2026, you have a new operational reality: state legislatures are no longer waiting on federal agencies to define the rules of the road for artificial intelligence. They are writing the rules themselves, and they are doing so in ways that address the day-to-day mechanics of product design, customer communications, safety operations, and third-party governance. Two developments illustrate the direction of travel.

First, the state of Washington has been advancing legislation aimed at “companion” style conversational AI, meaning systems designed to sustain ongoing dialogue with users in a way that resembles a relationship rather than a single transaction. These proposals generally focus on transparency, user protection, and special safeguards for minors, including restrictions around sexual content and stronger expectations for detecting and responding to self-harm signals.

Second, Colorado has enacted a broad AI governance framework focused on preventing algorithmic discrimination in high-impact use cases. The details matter, but the theme matters more: organizations that develop or deploy certain AI systems will be expected to show their work through risk management, impact assessments, notices, and documentation that can withstand regulatory scrutiny.

For compliance professionals, the key point is this: these are not “AI policy” conversations. These are operational controls conversations. They will change what your teams build, how they monitor, and how they document decisions.

1. Washington

Companion chatbots move from UX decision to regulated interaction.

Washington’s companion-chatbot approach targets the behavioral reality of these systems. A chatbot that answers a question is one thing. Another is a chatbot designed to keep a user engaged, build intimacy, and act as a persistent presence. When a system is positioned as a “partner” in any form, the risk profile shifts from information quality to user safety, manipulation, dependency, and minors’ exposure. From a compliance standpoint, this is where you should focus:

1. Identity and disclosure are now control requirements, not marketing choices.

If your product presents as conversational, personable, or relationship-like, you should treat “clear disclosure that the user is interacting with AI” as a baseline control. Do not bury it in terms and conditions. Put it in the flow where the user forms expectations.

2. Minor protections move into engineering and content governance.

If you have minor users, or you cannot reliably exclude them, you need controls designed for minors by default. That means age gating where appropriate, content filters tuned for sexual content and grooming patterns, and escalation playbooks for self-harm indicators. It also means you should think about what “engagement optimization” looks like in a relationship-shaped interface. Features that are acceptable in a shopping cart can be unacceptable in a companion dynamic.

3. Self-harm response is an operational readiness question.

If your system can detect self-harm language, you must decide what you will do when you detect it. You need a triage policy, documentation of thresholds, and a human-in-the-loop escalation route when risk is elevated. The compliance failure here is not a false positive. The failure is having no plan, no logging, and no accountable owner when the system raises a signal.

What to do now: create a “companion AI” product classification and require enhanced safeguards if the product meets that definition. That classification step is a compliance control because it forces consistent governance. It prevents the slow drift from “helpful assistant” to “companion” without any risk re-assessment.

2. Colorado

Anti-discrimination AI controls that appear to be a compliance program.

Colorado’s AI governance approach is a preview of what many states may do next: treat AI as a source of civil rights risk and require organizations to demonstrate reasonable care. The thrust is simple: if you use AI in a high-impact context, you should be able to explain how you prevent discriminatory outcomes and monitor for them. Even if you do not operate in Colorado, this framework is a gift to compliance professionals because it translates AI risk into familiar compliance artifacts. Here is how to map it into your program:

1. Define “high-impact” use cases the way you define “high-risk” third parties.

High-impact areas usually include employment, housing, credit, insurance, education, and other contexts where decisions materially affect individuals. Build an inventory. You cannot govern what you do not list. Make the business identify which systems are used for screening, ranking, eligibility, pricing, or access.

2. Require an impact assessment that reads like a control memo.

Your impact assessment should not be a philosophical essay. It should answer concrete questions:

  • What decision does the system influence?
  • What data does it use, and what data does it not use?
  • What bias testing was performed and how often?
  • What performance drift indicators are monitored?
  • What human review exists, and when does it trigger?
  • What is the consumer notice process and the appeal or correction route?

Treat this like any other compliance documentation: consistent format, accountable owner, version control, and retention.

1. Put vendors inside your governance perimeter.

If a vendor supplies the model, you still own the outcome when you deploy it. Require contractual commitments around testing, documentation, model changes, incident notification, and audit rights. If the vendor refuses basic transparency, your risk posture should treat that as a red flag, not a procurement inconvenience.

2. Align to enforcement reality.

In many regulatory regimes, enforcement is driven by documentation and reasonableness. Your program should be able to show a regulator what you did before an incident, not only what you did after a complaint.

III.      The Shared Lesson: AI Governance is Becoming User-Safety Governance

Washington and Colorado might look different, but the compliance lesson is the same: regulators are moving toward protecting individuals from AI-enabled harm, whether that harm is discrimination in consequential decisions or manipulation and exposure risks in relationship-shaped systems. This means your program needs three capabilities:

Capability 1: Inventory with purpose.

Create a single inventory that captures system type, purpose, user population, training, and input data sources, and whether the system affects rights, access, or safety. Assign an owner for each system. An owner is not a team. It is a named person.

Capability 2: Controls embedded in product and operations.

Disclosure is a product control. Age gating is a product control. Self-harm escalation is an operations control. Bias testing is a model governance control. Logging is a forensic control. Compliance must stop treating these as “engineering decisions” and start treating them as “regulatory controls.”

Capability 3: Incident readiness built for AI.

You need a playbook for AI incidents: model drift, unsafe exposure to content, discriminatory outcomes, vendor model changes, prompt injection leading to harmful outputs, and data leakage through conversational interfaces. The playbook should include detection, triage, communications, remediation, and documentation.

A practical checklist you can implement next week

  1. Classify systems into: informational assistant, transactional assistant, companion-style conversational system, and high-impact decision support.
  2. Assign owners and require quarterly attestations for high-impact and companion categories.
  3. Standardize disclosures with a template approved by legal, compliance, and product.
  4. Implement minor safeguards as a default where age cannot be verified with confidence.
  5. Create a self-harm escalation protocol with thresholds, human review steps, and logging requirements.
  6. Bias testing on high-impact systems, document results, and set drift triggers.
  7. Update vendor contracts to require transparency, change-control notifications, and audit support.
  8. Build an AI incident response runbook and conduct a tabletop exercise with product, legal, and customer support teams.

Closing thought

Compliance professionals have been waiting for the “AI rulebook.” The states are writing it in real time. The most effective response is not to wait for perfect clarity. It is to install governance that can scale inventory, document assessments, embed controls, and ensure incident readiness. If you do those four things well, Washington and Colorado will not feel like surprise mandates. They will feel like confirmation that you built the right program early.

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Great Women in Compliance

Great Women in Compliance: Resilience is a Muscle You Can Build

In this episode of Great Women in Compliance, Lisa Fine talks with Trish Ashman, Senior Director of Ethics & Compliance (AMEA & APAC) at Cushman & Wakefield, about resilience, integrity, and knowing when it’s time to move on.

Trish shares her journey from private practice in London to Singapore and into the Ethics and Compliance space. Trish was at Wirecard and then at Twitter, both of which had her working through two major corporate crises – the fraud at Wirecard and the ownership change at Twitter. Trish candidly shares her experiences and lessons learned from both of those roles.

At Wirecard, she stayed to support employees during the collapse, focused on fairness and doing what she could to make a difference. At Twitter, after the acquisition dramatically reshaped the company and its compliance function, she considered whether she could still meaningfully influence ethical decision-making and if this role aligned with her values.

This episode is an honest conversation about ethics and compliance as a calling, resilience as a muscle, and how these experiences shaped Trish and helped her become resilient and find a role where she would thrive.

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AI Today in 5

AI Today in 5: March 3, 2026, The First AI Agent Payment 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. Rethinking the financial crime stack through AI. (FinTechGlobal)
  2. CA AG opposes Trump Administration attempts to gut AI law. (CA DOJ)
  3. First AI agent payment. (FinTechMagazine)
  4. Automating reg compliance with AI. (Bits&Chips)
  5. FCA review of AI in the UK financial sector. (GlobalComplianceNews)

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

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Innovation in Compliance

Innovation in Compliance – Healthcare Compliance: Fraud, Waste & Abuse, Culture, and Data-Driven Risk Management with Evan Sampson

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 Fox welcomes Evan Sampson, a noted health care compliance attorney.

Sampson traces his path from commercial litigation to representing healthcare practices on HIPAA/privacy and reimbursement matters, then moving in-house at a network of plastic surgery centers, where he managed compliance focused on fraud, waste, and abuse, and on evolving out-of-network billing rules leading into the No Surprises Act. Sampson explains how compliance programs can create business value beyond risk mitigation by uncovering inefficiencies and opportunities, such as identifying downcoding in medical billing and using complaint investigations to spot growth areas. He describes how his litigation background helps him anticipate how issues will unfold over time in investigations and litigation, thereby improving his credibility with business leaders. They discuss building a culture of compliance in fast-growing healthcare organizations, tracking regulatory changes across primary and secondary sources, and leveraging AI and data analytics to detect claim outliers and strengthen compliance.

Key highlights:

  • Healthcare Compliance Shift
  • Fraud, Waste, and Abuse
  • Compliance Creates Value
  • Building Compliance Culture
  • Tracking Regulatory Changes
  • AI in Compliance Analytics

Resources:

Evan Sampson on LinkedIn

Post & Schell

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

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: March 3, 2026, The Law Firms Cleared 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 Trump Administration gives up on illegal actions against law firms. (WSJ)
  • Trump, tariffs, and corruption. (NYT)
  • Getting complacent about the next financial meltdown. (FT)
  • Microsoft is cooperating with Japan’s anti-trust probe. (Bloomberg)
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The PfBCon Podcast

The PFBCon Podcast: Regulatory Ramblings Wins the 2025 Agora Award: Inside the Podcast Bringing Clarity to Global Financial Regulation

At a conference, the 2025 Agora Award for Excellence in Podcasting is formally presented to Regulatory Ramblings, recognizing its role in clarifying complex global financial regulation through expert, long-form dialogue and its contribution to transparency, accountability, and informed public discourse. Host Ajay Shamdasani (a veteran financial and legal journalist and senior research fellow at the University of Hong Kong) discusses the show’s origins—modeled on the idea of telling “the story of money” through the interconnections of law, regulation, finance, and capital—and how its scope has evolved to include ESG, sustainability, inclusion, and geopolitical risk alongside topics like money laundering, sanctions, fraud, crypto/Web3, cybercrime, anti-corruption, and human trafficking.

Ajay outlines the production team and roles (Professor Douglas Arner as team leader with editorial freedom; producer Prospero Laput as the technical backbone; admin support from Neo; research support, including Ying Man Chan) and explains a format change, adding a short topical segment before a longer interview to accommodate audience attention spans while keeping conversations authentic. The discussion also covers the podcast’s growing global reach through the Compliance Podcast Network, increased inbound guest and collaboration requests, listener feedback on episodes about U.S. regulatory shifts (including the FCPA, AML enforcement, and the GENIUS Act), and how the show anchors global issues back to Hong Kong and Asia-Pacific. Ajay reflects on the emotional impact of the human trafficking episode with Matt Friedman and comments on Hong Kong’s regulatory and fintech landscape versus Singapore and Dubai, the role and reputation of HKU Law, and broader themes of shifting global power centers, sanctions, and managed globalization. The episode closes with Ajay’s view that podcasting can be a public service that spreads ideas, builds awareness of institutions and research, and creates opportunities for collaboration.

Key highlights:

  • Agora Award Announcement: 2025 Excellence in Podcasting
  • Why They Won: “We’re Still Here” and Hong Kong’s Global Role
  • Origin Story & Mission: Telling the Story of Money (and Everything Connected)
  • Behind the Mic: Who Does What on the Show
  • Format Evolution: Spotlight Segments, Audience Attention, and Editorial Choices
  • Toughest Topics: Human Trafficking Episode and the Emotional Toll
  • HKU’s Role: Hong Kong’s Legal Education Powerhouse
  • Hong Kong Finance Today: FinTech, Crypto Rules, and Traditional Banking Reality
  • Growing the Audience: Compliance Podcast Network, Brand Awareness, and Listener Impact
  • Covering a Region (and the World): Balancing Local Hong Kong Anchors with Global News
  • US–China Thaw? Decoupling, Trade Realities, and What Comes Next
  • Why Professionals Should Podcast: Influence, Public Service, and Collaboration

Resources:

Follow Regulatory Ramblings on:

HKU FinTech Website

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Podcast Addict

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Blog

SDNY Just Raised the Stakes on Self-Disclosure: What Compliance Leaders Must Do in the First 14 Days

For years, compliance leaders have worked under a simple reality: if the government learns about a problem from someone else first, you have already lost leverage. The Southern District of New York (SDNY) just sharpened that reality into a clear, public framework. Its Corporate Enforcement and Voluntary Self-Disclosure Program for Financial Crimes, effective February 24, 2026, is not subtle. It is designed to force an earlier decision and reward companies that make it; this means making it fast, transparent, and with meaningful remediation and restitution.

This is not just a fraud prevention or reporting program. It reaches conduct that can show up in any company: accounting games, deceptive disclosures, market-facing misconduct, and the broader universe of financial crime risks that sit adjacent to bribery-and-corruption controls. If you are running a compliance program, you should read this initiative as a warning: even when the underlying misconduct is not charged as “bribery,” the financial-crimes hook is often where prosecutors live. You may think you are managing “corruption risk.” SDNY is telling you it is also “market integrity” and “victim harm” risk.

And SDNY is pairing that message with something rare in enforcement policy: speed. SDNY says qualifying companies “can expect to receive a conditional declination letter within two to three weeks of self-reporting”. That is a flashing sign for CCOs: the window for decision-making just got smaller.

The SDNY is pushing fiduciary duty and stewardship.

Business executives usually talk about self-disclosure as a tactical choice. Compliance professionals have long known better, and now the SDNY frames it as something deeper: governance and duty. The program states that corporate leaders are “fiduciaries” with a “fundamental duty” to ensure integrity and transparency, and it positions voluntary self-disclosure as a core act of good corporate citizenship and stewardship. It will be interesting to see whether this “fundamental duty” to ensure integrity and transparency, and the corporate leaders as ‘fiduciaries’, bring a new level of Caremark scrutiny to Delaware.

That language matters. It is not only prosecutors describing a pathway to leniency. It is prosecutors telling boards and executives what they believe ethical leadership requires when the company discovers misconduct that harms markets, counterparties, customers, or investors. In other words, SDNY is trying to turn self-disclosure into a leadership test.

The Carrot is Real and Designed to Change Behavior

SDNY’s incentives are intentionally strong. If a company meets the program requirements, including timely voluntary self-disclosure, full cooperation, and timely remediation, the SDNY says it will issue a declination and will not prosecute the company. It also states that there will be no criminal fine and that, if the company pays appropriate restitution to victims, SDNY will not require forfeiture. Even more significant for compliance leaders is the following: SDNY says it “generally will not require” an independent compliance monitor for a qualifying company.

Those are meaningful benefits. They are the kind of benefits that can change what a board is willing to authorize in the first two weeks of a crisis. But the benefits only matter if you can move fast enough, gather credible facts, and maintain control of the narrative.

The First 14 Days: what compliance leaders should do now, not later

If SDNY is telling you it can issue a conditional declination letter in “two to three weeks”, then your internal process cannot take three weeks to decide whether you even have a problem. The ethical governance move is to treat the first 14 days as a disciplined sprint, one that protects truth, protects victims, and protects the integrity of your program.

Days 1–2: Triage without spinning

Your first obligation is to stop the bleeding and preserve facts. That means:

  • immediate escalation into a controlled response team (Compliance, Legal, Finance, Internal Audit, IT/security, and, if needed, HR),
  • an evidence preservation hold that includes chat platforms, mobile devices, third-party messaging, deal rooms, and personal email, where permitted, and
  • a decision to ring-fence relevant individuals, accounts, and transactions so you do not create new harm.

Ethically, this is where senior leadership proves it wants the truth, not just a version of it.

Days 3–5: Board notice and decision rights

If you are waiting for “certainty” before you brief the board or a board committee, you are already behind the SDNY clock. The goal is not to accuse. The goal is to establish governance: decision rights, cadence, and oversight. SDNY’s fiduciary framing means this cannot be treated as a management-only event. The board must be positioned to make an informed decision on disclosure, remediation, and restitution as facts develop.

Days 6–10: Outside counsel, scoped investigation, and credibility building

This is when you decide whether to engage outside counsel and forensic support to ensure independence and speed. For SDNY purposes, credibility is currency. The company needs to show it can:

  • Identify the misconduct,
  • identify who was involved,
  • quantify harm, including victims and losses,
  • explain control failures, and
  • demonstrate remediation beyond “we are reviewing policies.”

Remember: SDNY’s program is built around concrete action, self-reporting, cooperation, remediation, and restitution. If your internal processes create delays and ambiguity, you are squandering the very benefits SDNY offers.

Days 11–14: Regulator strategy and the self-disclosure decision

This is the moment of ethical leadership. You will not know everything. You will know enough to determine whether misconduct occurred and whether it falls into a category SDNY will view as market-harming or integrity-compromising. SDNY is offering a structured benefit for early self-reporting, but it is also signaling that waiting for a subpoena is not a strategy.

Five Lessons for the Compliance Professional

Lesson 1: SDNY is reframing self-disclosure as a fiduciary duty rather than optional crisis PR.

The program’s emphasis on leaders as “fiduciaries” with a “fundamental duty” of integrity and transparency is a direct ethical challenge to boards and executives. If your organization treats disclosure solely as a legal risk calculation, SDNY is telling you that you have already missed the governance point.

Lesson 2: Speed is now a moral and operational requirement.

The “two to three weeks” commitment to a conditional declination letter is SDNY saying: “Do not slow-walk the truth.” In compliance terms, timeliness is not merely a matter of efficiency. It is ethical stewardship. Delay increases harm, increases victim loss, and increases the chance that someone else tells your story first.

Lesson 3: Restitution is not a side issue; it is a core ethical outcome.

SDNY’s program explicitly states that paying “appropriate restitution to victims” is central, and it links that to the decision not to pursue forfeiture. Compliance leaders should read this as a directional signal: the government is measuring corporate ethics by whether the company makes harmed parties whole, not merely by whether it updates a policy.

Lesson 4: The benefits are real, but they are earned through cooperation and remediation that changes behavior.

No prosecution, no fine, and generally no monitor are extraordinary incentives. But SDNY is also telling you what it values: companies that step forward, cooperate fully, remediate quickly, and do not play games with facts. Ethically, this is “clean hands” enforcement: if you want mercy, show you deserve it.

Lesson 5: Some conduct is simply disqualifying, and compliance must stop pretending every risk is manageable with process.

SDNY calls out aggravating circumstances that can make a company ineligible for a declination under the program. The list includes conduct tied to terrorism, sanctions evasion, foreign corruption, trafficking, cartels, forced labor, violence, and related financing or laundering. That matters because it draws an ethical boundary: there are categories of wrongdoing so corrosive that the “cooperate and remediate” story is not enough. For CCOs, the lesson is to build escalation protocols that treat these risks as existential and non-negotiable.

A Blunt Wake-up Call: The Cost of Not Self-Reporting is Going Up

SDNY is trying to end the era of corporate hesitation. The program signals that a company’s decision not to self-report will weigh heavily against it when prosecutors later assess resolutions. This is the part compliance leaders must say out loud internally: the old playbook of “let us wait and see” is increasingly incompatible with how prosecutors say they will exercise discretion. If your organization has not pre-built a rapid disclosure decision tree, you are asking to miss the window SDNY is dangling in front of you. You will not get the benefit of a program you were not prepared to use.

Conclusion: Compliance and Ethics that Move at Prosecutorial Speed

The SDNY initiative is not merely a new memo. It is a redefinition of what “responsible corporate conduct” looks like in real time. It asks boards and senior executives to behave like fiduciaries: to choose integrity and transparency early, to protect victims through restitution, and to treat cooperation and remediation as proof that the company is worthy of trust. For the compliance professional, the message is simple and uncomfortable: your program will not be judged by the elegance of your policies. It will be judged by whether your leadership can tell the truth quickly, act with stewardship, and make hard decisions when the facts are incomplete but the duty is clear.

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The Ethics Experts

Episode 244 – Joe Murphy (Part 2)

In this episode of The Ethics Experts, Nick Gallo welcomes Joe Murphy.

Joe Murphy, CCEP, is the editor of Compliance and Ethics: Ideas & Answers, a weekly newsletter for compliance and ethics professionals around the world. For over 45 years Joe has been a tireless champion of compliance and ethics in organizations and has done compliance work on six continents. Joe has published over 100 articles and given over 200 presentations in 21 countries. Joe is author of 501 Ideas for Your Compliance & Ethics Program and A Compliance & Ethics Program on a Dollar a Day. He is a Certified Compliance & Ethics Professional and a former member of the board of the Society of Corporate Compliance & Ethics. Joe was named one of The National Law Journal’s 50 Governance, Risk and Compliance Trailblazers and Pioneers 2014 and received SCCE’s Compliance and Ethics Award. He has been recognized as a lifetime member of the Australian Compliance Institute.

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Compliance and Ethics: Ideas & Answers