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Compliance Week Conference Podcast

Compliance Week 2024 Speaker Preview Podcasts – William Nelson on Building Out a Compliance Program

In this episode of the Compliance Week 2024 Speaker Preview Podcasts series, William Nelson discusses his panel at Compliance Week 2024, “Building a Compliance Organization from the Ground Up.”. Some of the issues he will discuss in this podcast and his presentation are:

  • Building out a compliance program from the ground up
  • The nuts and bolts of compliance
  • Learning about AI in compliance and other cutting-edge topics at Compliance Week 2024

I hope you can join me at Compliance Week 2024. This year’s event will be held April 2-4 at The Westin Washington, DC, Downtown. The line-up for this year’s event is first-rate, with some of the top ethics and compliance practitioners around.

Gain insights and make connections at the industry’s premier cross-industry national compliance event, offering knowledge-packed, accredited sessions and take-home advice from the most influential leaders in the compliance community. Back for its 19th year, join 500+ compliance, ethics, legal, and audit professionals who gather to benchmark best practices and gain the latest tactics and strategies to enhance their compliance programs. Compliance, ethics, legal, and audit professionals will gather safely face-to-face to benchmark best practices and gain the latest tactics and strategies to enhance their compliance programs, among many others, to:

  • Network with your peers, including C-suite executives, legal professionals, HR leaders, and ethics and compliance visionaries.
  • Hear from 80+ respected cross-industry practitioners who are CEOs, CCOs, regulators, federal officials, and practitioners to help inform and shape the strategic direction of your enterprise risk management program.
  • Hear directly from panels on leadership, fraud detection, confronting regulatory change, abiding by cross-border rules and regulations, and the always-favorite fireside chats.
  • Bring actionable takeaways to your program from various session types, including cyber, AI, Compliance, Board obligations, data-driven compliance, and many others, for you to listen, learn, and share.
  • Compliance Week aims to arm you with information, strategy, and tactics to transform your organization and career by connecting ethics to business performance through process augmentation and data visualization.

I hope you can join me at the event. For information on the event, click here. As an extra benefit to listeners of this podcast, Compliance Week is offering a $200 discount on the registration price. Enter the discount code TFOX2024 for $200 off.

The Compliance Week 2024 Preview Podcast series is a production of the Compliance Podcast Network. Compliance Week is the sponsor of this series.

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Compliance Week Conference Podcast

Compliance Week 2024 Speaker Preview Podcasts – Darrel Byer on Building a Compliance Program from the Ground Up

In this episode of the Compliance Week 2024 Speaker Preview Podcasts series, Darrel Byer discusses his presentation at Compliance Week 2024, “Building a Compliance Organization from the Ground Up.” Some of the issues he will discuss in this podcast and his presentation are:

  • Experiences in building their departments and why they made the choices they did
  • What worked, Forward-looking opportunities for improvement
  • Meeting new colleagues at Compliance Week 2024

I hope you can join me at Compliance Week 2024. This year’s event will be held April 2-4 at The Westin Washington, DC, Downtown. The line-up for this year’s event is first-rate, with some of the top ethics and compliance practitioners around.

Gain insights and make connections at the industry’s premier cross-industry national compliance event, offering knowledge-packed, accredited sessions and take-home advice from the most influential leaders in the compliance community. Back for its 19th year, join 500+ compliance, ethics, legal, and audit professionals who gather to benchmark best practices and gain the latest tactics and strategies to enhance their compliance programs. Compliance, ethics, legal, and audit professionals will gather safely face-to-face to benchmark best practices and gain the latest tactics and strategies to enhance their compliance programs, among many others, to:

  • Network with your peers, including C-suite executives, legal professionals, HR leaders, and ethics and compliance visionaries.
  • Hear from 80+ respected cross-industry practitioners who are CEOs, CCOs, regulators, federal officials, and practitioners to help inform and shape the strategic direction of your enterprise risk management program.
  • Hear directly from panels on leadership, fraud detection, confronting regulatory change, abiding by cross-border rules and regulations, and the always-favorite fireside chats.
  • Bring actionable takeaways to your program from various session types, including cyber, AI, Compliance, Board obligations, data-driven compliance, and many others, for you to listen, learn, and share.
  • Compliance Week aims to arm you with information, strategy, and tactics to transform your organization and career by connecting ethics to business performance through process augmentation and data visualization.

I hope you can join me at the event. For information on the event, click here. As an extra benefit to listeners of this podcast, Compliance Week is offering a $200 discount on the registration price. Enter the discount code TFOX2024 for $200 off.

The Compliance Week 2024 Preview Podcast series is a production of the Compliance Podcast Network. Compliance Week is the sponsor of this series.

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From the Editor's Desk

From The Editor’s Desk – January and February 2024 in Compliance Week

Welcome to From the Editor’s Desk, a podcast where co-hosts Tom Fox and Kyle Brasseur, EIC at Compliance Week, unpack some of the top stories that have appeared in Compliance Week over the past month, look at the top compliance stories upcoming for the next month, talk about some sports and generally try to solve the world’s problems.

Tom Fox and Kyle Brasseur are back. In this episode, they look at the Department of Justice’s role in shaping corporate compliance practices through its enforcement actions, setting the tone for companies to voluntarily self-disclose and cooperate. Tom believes that the DOJ is making a concerted effort to highlight what companies are doing right in enforcement actions, particularly in relation to remedial efforts and cooperation. He sees the DOJ’s settlement documents as a clear communication of what they expect from companies going forward. Kyle emphasizes the importance of focusing on the positive aspects of enforcement actions and learning from what companies are doing right to prevent similar situations in the future. He mentions the use of data analytics and the retention of off-channel communications as examples of new expectations from the DOJ. Join Tom Fox and Kyle Brasseur on this episode of From the Editor’s Desk as they delve deeper into the topic of DOJ enforcement actions and corporate compliance practices.

Highlights Include:

  • SAP Enforcement Action
  • CNIL and Amazon’s Excessive Employee Surveillance Violation
  • Exploring Best Practices in Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering Compliance
  • Highlighting Compliance Success in Financial Services
  • Insights from DOJ Enforcement Actions Roundtable
  • Bill Belichick
  • NFL Playoffs
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2 Gurus Talk Compliance

2 Gurus Talk Compliance – The Disturbing Edition

What happens when two top compliance commentators get together? They talk compliance of course. Join Tom Fox and Kristy Grant-Hart in 2 Gurus Talk Compliance as they discuss the latest compliance issues in this week’s episode! In this episode, Tom and Kristy take on a wide variety of topics including Florida Woman gone astray.

In the ever-evolving world of regulatory compliance and risk management, challenges are constant and strategies must be dynamic. Tom highlights recent FCPA enforcement actions and a Declination. Kristy highlights the criminal enterprise that was Binance and the role of its former CCO, asks why employees are so miserable, and checks in on Florida Woman. Join Tom Fox and Kristy Grant-Hart as they delve deeper into these issues in this episode of the 2 Gurus Talk Compliance podcast.

  • FCPA enforcement actions involving UK Reinsurers. FCPA Blog
  • Compliance Officers feeling regulatory heat. Compliance Week
  • Why you should be very wary of forever chemicals. CCI
  • Lifecore receives declination. Pryor Cashman
  • ABC insights from Sierra Leone GAB
  • ‘I am personally disturbed’ by FDIC harassment allegations: Gruenberg Yahoo Finance
  • Binance Penalties Include a Number of Crypto Industry Firsts WSJ
  • Kristy’s new book has been published! Your Year as a Wildly Effective Compliance Officer
  • Why Is Everyone So Unhappy at Work Right Now? WSJ
  • Florida woman with outstanding warrants busted after calling cops to report stolen weed worth $5. New York Post

 Resources

Kristy Grant-Hart on LinkedIn

Spark Consulting

Tom

Instagram

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

LinkedIn

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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report: Susan Divers – 2023 LRN Global Standards Edition

Welcome to the award-winning FCPA Compliance Report, the longest-running podcast in compliance. In this episode, Tom Fox welcomes back LRN’s Susan Divers to discuss the second report 2023 from LRN on the LRN Ethics & Compliance Program Effectiveness Report, 2023 Global Standards Edition.

Susan Divers is a seasoned professional in ethics and compliance, working closely with Tom Fox and associated with LRN. She strongly believes in the significance of ethics and compliance programs in companies, emphasizing the need for continuous training and reminders to ensure employees understand and adhere to the rules and expectations. Susan has noticed a trend of integrating ethics and compliance considerations into HR systems, such as performance reviews and promotions, to hold individuals accountable for their actions. She advocates for a shift from rule-based to values-focused programs, emphasizing personal responsibility and implementing policies like Clawback to address misconduct and enforce consequences. Join Tom Fox and Susan Divers as they delve deeper into this topic on the next episode of the FCPA Compliance Report podcast.

Key Highlights:

  • Values-Based Ethics and Compliance Programs
  • Continuous Learning and Reinforcement for Ethical Behavior
  • A values-focused approach to Ethics and Compliance
  • Creating a Culture of Integrity and Accountability

Resources:

Susan Divers on LinkedIn

LRN

Ethics & Compliance Program Effectiveness Report, 2023 Global Standards Edition

Tom Fox

Threads

Instagram

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

LinkedIn

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Principled Podcast

Season 10 Episode 2 – The Importance of Humanizing Ethics and Compliance Programs

What you’ll learn on this podcast episode

Keeping the focus on the human element of ethics and compliance can help E&C programs move from “cop” to “coach.” But what does that look like in practice? In this episode of the Principled Podcast, host Susan Divers talks about the importance of humanizing ethics and compliance with Adam Balfour, the author of Ethics & Compliance for Humans. Listen in as the two discuss best practices that Adam has used over the course of his E&C career, managing regional and global ethics and compliance programs as well as leading areas of global risk management and privacy. 

Guest: Adam Balfour

Adam Balfour – Grayscale

Adam Balfour is on a mission to help make ethics and compliance more relatable and relevant for his fellow human beings. He likes to design ethics and compliance programs that employees can actually relate to, engage with and find useful. Originally from Scotland, Adam worked for a number of years as an attorney for two international law firms in New York before moving to Nashville, Tennessee to work for Bridgestone. He is an active member in the ethics and compliance community, a co-editor of the “Compliance and Ethics: Ideas & Answers” newsletter together with Joe Murphy, Jeff Kaplan, and Rebecca Walker, and CCEP certified. His first book, Ethics & Compliance for Humans, was published by CCI Press and is available now.    

Host: Susan Divers

Headshot_Susan_Divers_S7E18_Principled_Podcast

Susan Divers is a senior advisor with LRN Corporation. In that capacity, Ms. Divers brings her 30+ years’ accomplishments and experience in the ethics and compliance area to LRN partners and colleagues. This expertise includes building state-of-the-art compliance programs infused with values, designing user-friendly means of engaging and informing employees, fostering an embedded culture of compliance and substantial subject matter expertise in anti-corruption, export controls, sanctions, and other key areas of compliance.

Prior to joining LRN, Mrs. Divers served as AECOM’s Assistant General for Global Ethics & Compliance and Chief Ethics & Compliance Officer. Under her leadership, AECOM’s ethics and compliance program garnered six external awards in recognition of its effectiveness and Mrs. Divers’ thought leadership in the ethics field. In 2011, Mrs. Divers received the AECOM CEO Award of Excellence, which recognized her work in advancing the company’s ethics and compliance program.

Mrs. Divers’ background includes more than thirty years’ experience practicing law in these areas. Before joining AECOM, she worked at SAIC and Lockheed Martin in the international compliance area. Prior to that, she was a partner with the DC office of Sonnenschein, Nath & Rosenthal. She also spent four years in London and is qualified as a Solicitor to the High Court of England and Wales, practicing in the international arena with the law firms of Theodore Goddard & Co. and Herbert Smith & Co. She also served as an attorney in the Office of the Legal Advisor at the Department of State and was a member of the U.S. delegation to the UN working on the first anti-corruption multilateral treaty initiative.

Mrs. Divers is a member of the DC Bar and a graduate of Trinity College, Washington D.C. and of the National Law Center of George Washington University. In 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 Ethisphere Magazine listed her as one the “Attorneys Who Matter” in the ethics & compliance area. She is a member of the Advisory Boards of the Rutgers University Center for Ethical Behavior and served as a member of the Board of Directors for the Institute for Practical Training from 2005-2008.

She resides in Northern Virginia and is a frequent speaker, writer and commentator on ethics and compliance topics. Mrs. Divers’ most recent publication is “Balancing Best Practices and Reality in Compliance,” published by Compliance Week in February 2015. In her spare time, she mentors veteran and university students and enjoys outdoor activities.

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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

One Month to a More Effective Compliance Program: Day 8-Executives and Compliance Compensation Incentives

The lack of personal consequences for senior executives responsible for corporate malfeasance is explored in this podcast episode. Executives are incentivized to take excessive risks, knowing they won’t have to pay any fines, while shareholders bear the brunt of penalties. Proposed solutions include the concept of “skin in the game,” where executives contribute a portion of their compensation to a pool of money that can be used to pay penalties. Another suggestion involves forfeiting the performance bond of senior management in the case of large fines. A third approach suggests creating a contract that would enforce a reduction in pay for failures of corporate governance. These proposals aim to hold senior executives personally accountable for compliance failures and align executive compensation with compliance objectives. HR professionals play a crucial role in designing and implementing positive incentives to foster a culture of compliance and ethical conduct within organizations.

When it comes to compliance failures, the penalties are usually paid by shareholders, leaving senior executives largely untouched. This lack of personal accountability creates a disconnect between executive actions and the consequences of those actions. It’s high time we bridge this gap and ensure that senior executives are held personally responsible for compliance failures. What are some proposed solutions:

1. “Skin in the Game”. One proposed solution, advocated by William Dudley, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, suggests that senior management and material risk takers should forfeit their performance bond in the case of large fines. This approach would discipline individual behavior and decision-making, incentivizing individuals to flag issues when problems arise.

2. Automatic Pay Reductions. Another approach, proposed in an article titled “Ties That Bind Codes of Conduct,” suggests automatic reduction of pay for officers, directors, and advisors for failures of corporate governance. Executives would agree to pay back a portion of their gross compensation for a specified period before the beginning of any improprieties, regardless of their knowledge of misdeeds within the company.

Benefits of Accountability for Senior Executives:

1. Aligning Incentives. Corporate leaders cannot afford to turn a blind eye to compliance failures anymore. Holding senior executives accountable ensures that their compensation is directly tied to compliance objectives, aligning incentives and promoting ethical business practices.

2. Addressing Perverse Incentives. Perverse incentives in corporate pay, such as additional compensation based on company performance, can lead to unethical behavior and non-compliance. By implementing accountability measures, we can address these perverse incentives and create a culture of ethical behavior within organizations.

3. Driving Positive Change. Creating positive incentives within organizations is crucial to driving ethical behavior and compliance. HR professionals play a pivotal role in designing and implementing these incentives, ensuring that they are effective in promoting a culture of compliance.

Three key takeaways:

1. Perverse incentives are named that for a reason; they really are bad.

2. How can you create positive incentives in your organization?

3. There is a business response to this legal issue. Employ it.

For more information, check out The Compliance Handbook, 4th edition, available on LexisNexis.com.

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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

One Month to More Effective Reporting and Investigations – Miranda Warnings for Employees?

Must an investigator warn an employee that concealing information from company lawyers conducting an internal FCPA investigation could be a federal crime? Even if the company attorneys provided the now standard corporate attorney Upjohn warning? Does a company attorney asking questions morph into a de facto federal agent during an internal company investigation regarding alleged FCPA violations and is the attorney thereby required to provide a Miranda warning to employees during said investigation?

Employees who are subject to being interviewed or otherwise required to cooperate in an internal investigation may find themselves on the sharp horns of a dilemma requiring either (1) cooperating with the internal investigation or (2) losing their jobs for failure to cooperate by providing documents, testimony or other evidence. Many U.S. businesses mandate full employee cooperation with internal investigations or those handled by outside counsel on behalf of a corporation. These requirements can exert a coercive force, “often inducing employees to act contrary to their personal legal interests in favor of candidly disclosing wrongdoing to corporate counsel.” Moreover, such a corporate policy may permit a company to claim to the government a spirit of cooperation in the hopes of avoiding prosecution in addition to increasing the chances of earning meaningful credit under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines or the FCPA Corporate Enforcement Policy.

Three key takeaways:

  1. Make sure you provide an Upjohn warning.
  2. If an employee demands counsel to represent them during an internal investigation, who bears the cost?
  3. Always check state law requirements around internal investigations.
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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs Uncategorized

One Month to More Effective Reporting and Investigations – Board Investigations

In their article, “Successful Board Investigations”, David Bayless and Tammy Albarrán, offered seven considerations to facilitate a successful Board investigation.

  • Consider whether you need independent outside counsel.
  • Consider hiring an experienced investigator to lead the internal investigation.
  • Consider the need to retain outside experts.
  • Analyze potential conflicts of interest at the outset and during the investigation.
  • Carefully evaluate whistleblower allegations.
  • Request regular updates from outside counsel, without limiting the investigation.
  • Consider whether an oral report at the conclusion of the investigation is sufficient.

The authors conclude their piece by stating, “By keeping in mind the issues addressed above, the Board will be better prepared for the investigation and readily able to exercise good judgment throughout the review. A well-conducted investigation by the Board may spare the company further disruption and costs associated with follow-on investigations by the regulators, or at the very least minimize the company’s exposure.”

Three key takeaways:

  1. Retain the right counsel. Consider conflicts and appearance.
  2. Carefully evaluate all whistleblower allegations and reject retaliation.
  3. Consider receiving oral reports on an ongoing basis and one lengthy oral report at the end of the investigation.
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31 Days to More Effective Compliance Programs

One Month to More Effective Reporting and Investigations – Specific Benefits of a Hotline: A Case Study

Is your hotline working for you? In an article, entitled, Promoting Effective Use of the Company Compliance Hotline, José Tabuena provided an excellent example of the power of a hotline. He provided a case study of a company that had not integrated its IT function into its regular compliance and ethics training programs. As such there were zero calls into the hotline by IT employees. This dynamic was changed and IT was integrated into the company’s regular compliance and ethics training. Thereafter, the hotline received several calls from IT employees indicating that there were two major areas of complaints.

The favoritism problem. HR led an investigation that included questioning all IT managers about their direct reports and employees of their unit. The company determined that there was only one instance of a manager hiring a family member (a brother-in-law), but that person did not report to the manager and was in a different section of the IT organization. This finding made clear that there were misperceptions in the IT department, which affected the department’s morale.

Manipulation of data for bonuses. The company used the hotline to obtain more information from the callers on “isolating the metrics and the managers in question.” It was determined that the bonuses of a select few IT managers were indeed influenced by a questionable data source, which was controlled by a non-manager with minimal oversight and controls.

Basic tenets of an effective hotline. This case study provided three key tenets of an effective internal reporting system:

• First, a helpline is of no value if the workforce is not aware of it.

• Second, the ethics and compliance office obtained support from the Chief Information Officer (CIO) which likely influenced the success of the training and communications delivered by the ethics and compliance staff.

• Third, the awareness of the helpline is not sufficient to ensure success as you must make sure that issues and allegations are addressed and investigated.

This case study demonstrates the power of a hotline. The company’s Compliance Department “established the credibility of the helpline as a resource to raise issues and report misconduct.

 Three key takeaways:

1. Hotlines can be powerful tools for the compliance professional.

2. Simply because you have no hotline complaints does not mean you do not have any compliance or ethics issues that need review and resolution.

3. Adequate follow-up is a key part of overall hotline effectiveness.