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The Hobson FCPA Trial: Five Operational Lessons for the Compliance Professional

If you want to see how an FCPA case gets built in real time, you could do a lot worse than studying what came out at trial in the Hobson matter. The evidence presented to the jury did not turn on a single suspicious invoice or an isolated payment. It was the aggregation of ordinary commercial mechanics (commissions, pricing pressure, contract awards) with extraordinary risk indicators (coded language, commission splits tied to named initials, informal transfer channels, and documentation gymnastics). That is exactly why the Hobson trial matters to in-house compliance professionals: it shows how day-to-day operational decisions can be reframed as corrupt intent when the surrounding facts align.

Today, we consider five lessons learned for the compliance professional, each grounded in trial evidence and framed as operational indicators you can use in your program tomorrow morning.

Lesson 1: High commissions are not a “commercial issue.” They are an anti-corruption control failure waiting to happen.

One of the most important themes in the testimony was the economics of commissions. One witness described the agent’s commission levels as unusually high in the industry, citing a long-term arrangement in the range of $7 to $7.50 per metric ton, in contrast to what he described as a far lower norm for international sales agents. That is not a mere “sales comp” debate. In a high-risk market, the commission structure becomes the channel through which influence can be purchased.

The operational problem is not simply that the commission is high. It is that the commission becomes hard to explain as legitimate, and easy to justify internally as “what it takes” to win. In the testimony, jurors heard about internal communications implying there were “a few” people the agent had to “take care of,” and the witness described being shocked at how openly the subject was discussed.

Operational indicators to take away

  • A third-party commission materially above benchmark, especially when defended as “market practice” without evidence.
  • Business rationales that drift from services rendered into “this is what it takes to get the deal.”
  • Commission tied to award timing, acceptance, or “sorting things out” with a committee-like body at the counterparty.

Program moves

  • Require commission benchmarking and documented justification for outliers, with Compliance signoff for deviations.
  • Treat commission letters and renewals as high-risk events: refresh due diligence, re-paper services scope, and re-evaluate the payment model.
  • Add a “commission-to-service” test: what services were delivered, how were they evidenced, and how do they map to the payment amount.

Lesson 2: The third party is not the risk. The relationship ownership model is the risk.

The defense narrative emphasized distance: the company hired the agent, the company paid the agent, and once the agent was paid, the payer did not control what happened next. Compliance people have heard this argument in conference rooms for twenty years, usually dressed up as “commercial reality.”

But what the trial evidence highlights is a different issue: relationship ownership. The cooperating witness testified that the defendant took the lead on the relationship because of his contact with the agent. That is a control issue. When a single commercial leader “owns” the third party informally, the organization often loses the ability to enforce discipline: who approves what, who monitors what, and who escalates what.

Operational indicators to take away

  • A relationship that is “owned” by one person, with limited transparency and limited cross-functional involvement.
  • Commission approvals and payment pressure are driven by a single commercial voice rather than by a documented governance process.
  • Escalations framed as “help me pay him so we do not lose the business,” rather than “help me validate services and risks.”

Program moves

  • Assign “relationship ownership” formally: business owner, finance owner, and compliance owner, each with defined decision rights.
  • Require periodic third-party business reviews that are not sales calls: services delivered, invoices, payment routes, red flags, and counterparty risk.
  • Put “single-threaded third-party management” on your audit plan. It is a quiet failure mode.

Lesson 3: Communications are evidence, and code words are a control signal you can detect.

The most operationally actionable evidence from the trial is the communications that Hobson used with Ahmed. Jurors heard about messages that mixed coal pricing negotiations with discussions of who would receive parts of a commission, including initials corresponding to individuals connected to the state-affiliated buyer. This is the classic compliance trap: people treat messaging as informal chatter, while prosecutors and juries treat it as evidence of intent.

Even more pointed, testimony described the use of coded language for money, including references to “Mr. Yen,” and urgency about when the money would be available and in what currency. Whether a company can see those messages at the time is a separate question. The compliance lesson is that coded language almost always sits atop a known risk: someone believes the underlying conduct would not survive daylight.

Operational indicators to take away

  • Pricing plus commission allocation discussed in the same thread, especially where there is talk of who “needs to be paid” to keep contracts.
  • Code words for money, urgency cues, and currency references.
  • Language that treats counterparty actors as extracting “shares” tied to deal economics.

Program moves

  • Train sales and trading teams on “what will read badly to a jury” without being melodramatic. Show examples of risky phrasing and rewrite them.
  • Build a targeted communications surveillance protocol for the highest-risk channels and roles, consistent with local law and internal policy.
  • Add “coded language and euphemisms” to your investigation playbook as an escalation trigger, not an afterthought.

Lesson 4: Money movement patterns are where the story crystallizes.

The government’s evidence leaned heavily on how money moved: informal transfer mechanisms, travel touchpoints, offshore entities, and a money trail that could be explained individually but looked incriminating when sequenced.

For in-house compliance, this is the heart of operational control. The trial coverage covered Western Union transfers, travel to Dubai, cash declarations, and an entity structure involving a Dubai company and a US affiliate sharing the same address. It also described an “invoice construction” episode: drafting an invoice for a substantial payment, struggling to reproduce an official seal, then sending a wire and having the funds transferred.

You do not need to be a prosecutor to see the compliance problem: if you cannot explain who is being paid, why they are being paid, what they did, and where the money went, you do not have controls in place. You have hope.

Operational indicators to take away

  • Use of informal transfer services, cash, or complex routing in connection with third-party compensation.
  • Offshore entities are introduced late in the process, especially where documentation is improvised.
  • Payment routes that create distance between the payer, the payee, and the ultimate beneficiary.

Program moves

  • Tighten payment controls for third parties: no payment without a validated contract scope, documented services evidence, and verified bank account ownership.
  • Require screening for beneficial ownership and “connected parties” among third-party entities, including affiliates and payment intermediaries.
  • Implement a red-flag workflow for travel-linked payments, cash, and informal transfers: automatic review by Compliance and Finance.

Lesson 5: Investigation readiness is not a crisis skill. It is a design choice.

Finally, the verdict and the path to it underscore a point compliance professionals sometimes miss: your program is being built for a future fact-finder. In this case, the prosecution presented an overall theory built from messages, financial records, and a cooperating witness; the jury returned guilty findings across FCPA-related counts and related conspiracy and laundering charges.

The operational compliance lesson is not about litigation tactics. It is about what your systems retain and what your systems can explain. If your third-party file includes evidence of benchmarking, due diligence, contract scope, and monitoring, you have a fighting chance of showing legitimate intent. If your file is thin and the communications are ugly, the story will be told for you, in the immortal words of the Compliance Evangelist-Document Document Document.

Operational indicators to take away

  • Repeated internal discomfort expressed without escalation or remediation; IE., the “we know this is strange, but we need the deal” pattern.
  • Documents created to facilitate payment rather than to evidence legitimate services.
  • Controls that rely on “we did not know” rather than “we can show what we did and why.”

Program moves

  • Update your investigations protocol to integrate commercial data: pricing, commissions, and contract award timing, not just payment logs.
  • Build a rapid response kit for third-party risk: document hold, device preservation process, and review checklist for messaging platforms.
  • Treat high-risk third-party relationships as living files: quarterly updates, not annual check-the-box refreshes.

The Hobson trial is a reminder that compliance does not fail in the abstract. It fails in the seams: a commission justified without evidence, a relationship owned by one person, a payment routed because “it is easier,” and a set of messages that people assumed would never be read out loud in a courtroom. If you want your program to prevent the next case, focus on those seams, because prosecutors, juries, and regulators will, too.

Resources:

Articles by Matthew Santoni in Law360

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