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Daily Compliance News

October 25, 2022 the Crime Victim Status Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • DOJ alleges Huawei agent tried to bribe agent. (WSJ)
  • The long-term damage of Fat Leonard. (Foreign Policy)
  • The US updates guidelines on victim and witness assistance. (Reuters)
  • Families of Boeing crash fatalities granted crime victim status. (NYT)
Categories
Blog

Lafarge: Part 1 – Corruption at the Top

On April 24, 2017, Holcim Group issued a press release announcing the conclusion of the investigation into the payment of its subsidiary LaFarge to designated terrorist organizations. The Press Release stated in part, “The Board has now concluded the independent investigation and confirmed that a number of measures taken to continue safe operations at the Syrian plant were unacceptable, and significant errors of judgement were made that contravened the applicable code of conduct. The findings also confirm that, although these measures were instigated by local and regional management, selected members of Group management were aware of circumstances indicating that violations of Lafarge’s established standards of business conduct had taken place. . . .”

This statement is but one step in a lengthy and sordid process where LaFarge SA (before it merged with Holcim) made millions of dollars in payments to the terrorist group ISIS so that it could keep its Syrian cement plant open and get all the business it could do so during the Syrian Civil War. The Press Release concluded, “In hindsight any misdeeds may seem clear. However the combination of the war zone chaos and the “can-do” approach to maintain operations in these circumstances may have caused those involved to seriously misjudge the situation and to neglect to focus sufficiently on the legal and reputational implications of their conduct.” Indeed. [Emphasis supplied]

As reported by Law360, “France-based Lafarge and its defunct Damascus, Syria unit Lafarge Cement Syria, or LCS, each pled guilty to a count of conspiring to provide material support to foreign terrorist organizations and will pay a total of $777.78 million.” According to the Plea Agreement, this total amount consisted of a total criminal fine of approximately $91 million and forfeiture of $687 million. Please note this is not a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement action but an enforcement action based on USC 2339B for one count of conspiracy to provide material support to one or more foreign terrorist organizations. While this is not a FCPA enforcement action, it is a matter about corporate culture, tone at the top, senior executive involvement in corruption; in short it is all about compliance and ethics. This complete failure of compliance and ethics makes it a forceful study of the failings of corporate culture in the starkest way possible.

As laid out in the Statement of Facts, Lafarge finished construction of the Jalabiyeh Cement Plant in northern Syria at a cost of approximately $680 million and began operations in 2010. However, almost immediately “it faced strong competition from cheaper cement imported into northern Syria from Turkey, and in December 2010, Executive 3 sought the assistance of Intermediary 1 to intervene with the Syrian government to control the importation of competing Turkish cement.” In early 2011, the Syrian Civil War broke out and LCS wanted to be the biggest supplier in the soon to be war ravaged country. However, in 2012, ISIS began to gain strength and take over territory near the plant. ISIS also threatened LCS employees through intimidation and kidnapping.

Thereafter, five Lafarge executives from the corporate home office became involved in two-year campaign to pay off ISIS to allow the plant to keep in operation and to not threaten its employees. Beginning in the spring of 2013, Lafarge began paying protection money to ISIS through intermediaries and other third-party suppliers. The reason articulated was laid out in the Statement of Facts, (1) keep the investment in the physical assets (i.e., the plant); (2) keep the investment made in employees; (3) stay in the market to keep out Turkish competitors; and (4) make some profits. The payoffs to ISIS were made through a variety of schemes.

There was the old-fashioned way – cash, in the form of fixed monthly payments. There were payments made through intermediaries. You could not call them sales agents, but they were third parties charged with getting the protection for the bribes paid by LCS. There was a ‘tax’ paid on each truck that went in or out of the plant on roads controlled by ISIS. Eventually, in late 2013, these mechanisms morphed into a new business relationship between LCS and ISIS so that both sides were paid out of the profits from the sale of cement in Syria. For LCS it was simply a cost of doing business. At one point, Intermediary 1 was quoted for the following, “We currently sell for $8 to $10 million per month, with a $2 million profit, and pay less than 1⁄4 for protection. Other factories are paying for protection just to exist, without making the profits we are.”

But it did not simply stop with sales and ROI on paying bribes. LCS also purchased raw materials from ISIS, thereby contributing to international terrorism. The Statement of Facts noted, “Also in or about late 2013, LCS began to use Intermediary 2 to engage directly with ISIS-connected suppliers for the purchase of raw materials and supplies. LAFARGE and LCS retained the services of Intermediary 2 after he had personally met with the then-LAFARGE Group Honorary Chairman and a member of the LAFARGE Board of Directors who was a former LAFARGE Chief Executive Officer on September 16, 2013.”

Over the next few blog posts, I will be looking at the Lafarge enforcement action for lessons for the anti-corruption compliance professional. However, there are two additional points buried in all this corruption which bear noting. The first was reported by Pete Brush, in the Law360 article cited above, who wrote that during the court hearing where US District Judge William F. Kuntz II accepted the company’s guilty plea, he stated “This case impacts the victims of terrorist acts.” This would seem to indicate that any person who may have been the victim of ISIS terrorism could now bring suit against Lafarge (open question as to its successor).

The second item was buried in the Plea Agreement which said, “Lafarge’s commitment, in Attachment B, to guarantee the Defendants’ compliance with the terms of this Agreement.” [Emphasis supplied] Note the language used is not ‘certification’ as articulated in the Monaco Memo but ‘guarantee’ compliance with the terms of the Plea Agreement. How would you like to be the one who made that representation?

Tomorrow, we look at the bribery/payment schemes.

Categories
Greetings and Felicitations

Great Structures Week I: Vitruvius, the Brooklyn Bridge and Compliance

Welcome to the Greetings and Felicitations, a podcast where I explore topics that might not seem directly related to compliance but influence our profession. In this special series, I consider many structural engineering concepts are apt descriptors for an anti-corruption compliance program. In this episode 1, I consider the Roman architect Vitruvius and what makes a structure great. Highlights include:

·      The Vitruvius Triad.

·      Compliance Program formulations.

·      What are form, function, and structure

·      Continuous risk and continuous risk management.

·      Risks assessments after Covid 19.

Resources

Understanding the World’s Greatest Structures: Science and Innovation from Antiquity to Modernity,” taught by Professor Stephen Ressler from The Teaching Company.

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All Things Investigations

All Things Investigations: Episode 14 – Observations on January 6 Committee with Kevin Carroll & Kenyen Brown

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

 

 

Kevin Carroll is a partner in the firm’s Washington and New York offices, in its white collar and investigations practices. He represents businesses, senior executives, and government officials in congressional and criminal investigations, conducts internal investigations, and litigates national security claims. Kenyen Brown, a partner in the firm’s Washington office, focuses primarily on white-collar criminal litigation and compliance counseling, including matters involving the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and internal and government investigations. With his extensive white-collar litigation experience and refined judgment, Kenyen served as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama to which President Barack Obama appointed him.

Key areas we explore on this podcast are:

  • Why the Jan 6 Committee report would not be a complete investigation unless they ask former Vice President Pence about what he observed that day.
  • Because of the constitution of the Committee itself, there has been an absence of partisan rancor, which allowed them to tell a narrative from an investigative standpoint. The American people found this very valuable.
  • The influence of technology in public hearings and investigations. 
  • The significance of the Jan 6 Committee report.
  • People may get down into the semantics of what the President knew and argue the policy behind whether or not it was an insurrection, but at the end of the day, people were fearful for their lives. 
  • The clarification of the Electoral Count Act. 

 

Resources

Hughes Hubbard & Reed website 

Kevin Carroll on LinkedIn

Kenyen Brown on LinkedIn

 

Categories
The ESG Report

Supply Chain & ESG: Scope 3 Emissions Reporting Strategy with Devin O’Herron and Jared Connors

 

In this episode of the ESG Report,Tom Fox is joined by Devin O’Herron and Jared Connors of Assent to discuss Scope 3 emissions reporting as the key to disclosure success. They talk about the importance of accounting for Scope 3 in your emissions strategy.

 

 

There are three scope levels within the emissions reporting strategy: Scope 1 refers to things like your vehicle or things you’re doing around your facility; Scope 2 is the purchased heat or electricity powering your facility; and Scope 3 is all those variables outside your four walls. The most important aspect of Scope 3 is purchased goods. This has a large impact on organizations that may not necessarily take in raw materials and directly manufacture those raw materials into a finished good. “Even if your organization designs products and influences those products, you typically will obtain your raw materials components through your supply chain,” Jared says. The supply chain is a very significant factor to consider when coming up with the emissions strategy as a company.

 

A recent study found that Scope 3 emissions are typically 11 times larger than an organization’s Scope 1 and 2 emissions combined. As mandatory climate disclosure legislation progresses into the future, the overall emissions strategy needs to start accounting for Scope 3 as much as possible. “When it comes to Scope 3 emissions in particular, as we think about things like carbon taxes, risk in terms of risk, if you don’t understand what exactly that applies to your organization, you are missing a big opportunity,” Devin stresses. Organizations need to get a handle on their total emissions footprint. You cannot manage what you do not measure. 

 

Resources

Devin O’Herron on LinkedIn

Jared Connors | LinkedIn

Tom Fox’s email

Assent website

 

Categories
FCPA Compliance Report

A Dark Day for Dechert

In this episode, I visit with Jonathan Armstrong, partner at Cordery Compliance in London. We consider the recent payment by the international law firm Dechert of £20 million for its conduct and that of its former partner Neil Gerrard in the ENCR affair. The matter was a dark day for Dechert and a black eye on the legal profession. Some of the highlights include:

Key areas we discuss on this podcast are:

·      What were the failures of the law firm?

·      What led to the £20 million interim payment?

·      Will there be discipline against the law firm?

·      What is the role of a law firm in overseeing investigations?

·      How are the implications of holding investigative data under GDPR going forward?

·      Who watches the watchers (and investigators)?

 Resources

Jonathan Armstrong on Cordery Compliance

Hannah Walker in Law.com on the scandal

Categories
Daily Compliance News

October 24, 2022 the Ramaphosa Vows Crackdown Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Ramaphosa vows to crack down on corruption. (Barron’s)
  • Credit Suisse CCO to leave after little over one year in the job. (Bloomberg)
  • Hyundai is under investigation for the use of child Labor. (Reuters)
  • Alleged chess cheater sues. (FT)
Categories
Sunday Book Review

October 23, 2022 the Mad Scientist edition

In today’s edition of Sunday Book Review:

The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells

The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells

The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe

Hell House  by Richard Matheson

Categories
Popcorn and Compliance

Leadership Lessons from the Island of Lost Souls

I have always loved the classic Universal monster movies from the 1930’s. This month I am exploring one movie each week to mine it for leadership and compliance lessons. For this first entry in this short series on Popcorn and Compliance, I look at the original Island of Lost Souls is a 1932 American pre-Code science-fiction horror film, and the first sound film adaptation of H. G. Wells’ 1896 novel The Island of Dr. Moreau. The film was directed by Erle C. Kenton, from a script co-written by science fiction author Philip Wylie. It stars Charles Laughton, Richard Arlen, Leila Hyams, Bela Lugosi, and Kathleen Burke. The plot centers on a remote South Pacific island where mad scientist, Dr. Moreau, secretly conducts experiments to accelerate evolution in plants and animals, with horrific consequences. Featuring depictions of cruelty, animal-human hybrids, and irreligious ideas, the release of Island of Lost Souls was embroiled in controversy. Banned in some countries for decades, Island of Lost Souls has become an influential film and has acquired cult film status.

Resources

Island of Lost Souls Review

Categories
Daily Compliance News

October 22, 2022 the Managers are Not Alright Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Avoiding corruption in Ukraine reconstruction. (Brookings Institute)
  • Middle managers are not OK. (Bloomberg)
  • Meta continues to seek debarment of FTC chief. (Reuters)
  • Senate asks DOJ to publish white-collar prosecution data. (WSJ)