Categories
GalloCast

Gallocast – Episode 7

Welcome to the GalloCast. You have heard of the Manningcast in football. Now we have the GalloCast in compliance. The two top brothers in compliance, Nick and Gio Gallo, come together for a free-form exploration of compliance topics. It is a great insight on compliance brought to you by the co-CEOs of ComplianceLine. Fun, witty, and insightful with a dash of the two brothers throughout. It’s like listening to the Brothers Gallo talk compliance at the dinner table. Hosted by Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance.

Tom Fox peppers questions to Nick Gallo and Gio Gallo from Ethico with topics like what companies should consider doing business in Ukraine and how to identify great business risks. They also provide an understanding of compliance, changing human behavior, and techniques to get around ethical controls. Topics are spiced up with references to the recent Pope’s speech and technological advancements. Be sure to tune in, and don’t miss out on the brothers’ educational insights and witty dialogue.

Key Highlights

·       Logistical Challenges of Working in Ukraine –[00:04:00]

·       Compliance as an Opportunity to Manage Business Risk – [00:07:20]

·       The Role of Persuasion in Ethics and Compliance -[00:10:40]

·        US Semiconductor Industry Moves Away from Supply Chains – [00:13:43]

·        Risk Assessment and Crowdsourcing -[00:17:00]

·       The Ineffectiveness of Risk Assessment Strategies – [00:20:30]

·       Behavioral Psychology in Compliance Programs and Compliance Discipline -[00:23:50]

·       CEO Understanding of Compliance and Its Impact on Budgeting -[00:27:00]

·       The Benefits of Exploring Different Perspectives Through Reading -[00:29:52]

·       The Ethical Implications of AI-Generated Content – [00:36:25]

·       The Impact of Technology on the Economy – [00:39:37]

·       The Power of Simplifying Your Policy with Technology –[00:42:40]

·       Pope’s Condemnation of Corruption – [00:46:02]

Resources

Nick Gallo on LinkedIn

Gio Gallo on LinkedIn

Ethico

Categories
Compliance Into the Weeds

The Danske Bank AML Enforcement Action

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 a subject. In this episode, we consider the Danske Bank AML enforcement action, and the bank recently pled guilty to money-laundering violations through its Estonia subsidiaries.

Some of the highlights included:

  • The background facts.
  • What did the home bank know and when?
  • Did a tech failure set this all in motion?
  • The Bank’s attempts to hide the violations from US authorities.
  • Why is the US and not Denmark bringing an enforcement action against a Danish bank?
  • What about CCO certification?
  • The role of the Danish monitor.

 Resources

Tom in the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog

Matt Kelly in Radical Compliance

Categories
Sunday Book Review

December 4, 2022 – The Top Books on Tech Edition

In the Sunday Book Review, I consider four books that interest the compliance professional, the business executive, or anyone curious. It could be books about business, compliance, history, leadership, current events, or anything else that might interest me. In today’s edition of the Sunday Book Review, we consider four books of the FT’s top books from 2022 on technology:

Chip War: The Fight for the World’s Most Critical Technology by Chris Miller

The Power Law: Venture Capital and the Art of Disruption by Sebastian Mallaby

Freedom to Think: The Long Struggle to Liberate Our Minds by Susie Alegre

Reality+: Virtual Worlds and the Problems of Philosophy by David J Chalmers

Resources

FT’s Best Books of 2022: Technology

Categories
From the Editor's Desk

November and December 2022 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 which have appeared in Compliance Week over the past month, look at top compliance stories upcoming for the next month, talk some sports and generally try to solve the world’s problems.

In this month’s episode, we look back at top stories in CW from November around the SEC enforcement statistics for the prior years, how CW will report and cover the FTX scandal and take a deep dive into the print edition which focused on tech and innovation in compliance and the creative use of the DOJ’s Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs and its Update by Home Depot to assess its own compliance program and remediate any gaps in a proactive manner. We previewed some of the stories CW will look at in December including several articles from the CW ‘Inside the Mind of the CCO’ survey which was concluded in October.

We conclude with a look at some of the top sports stories including a look at the NFL season as it moves into its final full month of regular season play, riff on the World Cup and the US win over Iran and ask if Tom Brady should have retired and stayed retired for the 2022 season.

 Resources

Kyle Brasseur on LinkedIn

Compliance Week

Categories
Daily Compliance News

June 15, 2022 the Nigeria Loses Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • US, UK to collaborate in ComTech award for AML. (WSJ)
  • ESG in credit agreements. (Reuters)
  • Nigeria loses $417bn suit against JPMorgan. (NYT)
  • Schwab settles with SEC. (NYT)
Categories
Innovation in Compliance

Creating a Safer Compliance Ecosystem with Eva Pittas


 
Eva Pittas is the co-founder and COO of Laika, a company that helps other companies manage compliance, obtain security certifications, and build trust with enterprise customers. Tom Fox welcomes her to this week’s show to talk about Laika and how it helps its clients.
 

 
The Birth of Laika
Eva began her professional life running IT risk and control for Citigroup and even worked there after the financial crisis of 2008. She was an integral part of the strong response to counteract the economic collapse. She joined the fintech industry in 2014, as she saw the growth happening in that space. She noticed that many companies “needed to get through with vendor procurement but they did not know what those processes would look like, what diligence would be, or what the security requirements were.” She started her consultancy boutique, BRCG, to provide answers to these questions. Working in the fintech space emphasized the importance of audits. Laika was born as a compliance solution for the rise of the cloud and to address the lack of expertise in information security and compliance guidance for companies. 
 
The Complete Compliance Solution 
Tom asks Eva about their typical clients and to describe the complete compliance solution. Eva says that most of their clientele are small to medium-sized innovative technology companies that are looking to introduce a holistic compliance program. She explains, “Compliance is not very straightforward….. it requires an interpretation of a standard, of a rule, of a regulation and how to apply that to your business.” Compliance programs have to evolve constantly to meet new compliance standards. Laika provides a customizable solution based on your compliance needs. 
 
What Makes Laika Special
Eva explains that what makes Laika stand out from other companies is that they have the expertise for all these recognized requirements. She states, “What Laika does is provide expert guidance and various subject matter experts that are a part of our solution that helps companies implement and maintain compliance.” Laika University facilitates this learning process.  
 
Women In Tech 
Eva emphasizes that women belong in the technology industry, no matter their background. “Technology is not in the future – it’s here,” she says. She encourages more women to enter the space, as you do not need a technological background to break into tech – several non-technical jobs are being created every day. 
 
Resources 
Eva Pittas | LinkedIn | Twitter   
Hey Laika  
 

Categories
Blog

Driving the Digital Transformation of Compliance

The digital transformation of compliance will probably be the biggest change in our profession since the move to operationalizing compliance in the past decade. Legal professionals are generally ill-suited to lead this effort due to the legal focused training we all received, not quantitative training that most business students received. This means that many Chief Compliance Officers (CCOs), compliance professionals and corporate compliance functions struggle to reap the benefits of investments in digital transformation. I was therefore intrigued by a recent Harvard Business Review (HBR) article, by Marco Iansiti and Satya Nadella, Microsoft Chief Executive Officer (CEO), on a five-step approach to digital transformation. The article, Democratizing Transformation, sets out how innovation can be pushed out throughout a company’s workforce. I have adapted it for the compliance professional.
For a true digital transformation, technologists and data scientists alone cannot bring about the kind of wholesale innovation both a compliance function and a business unit need. This means that your organization should pair “data scientists with business [and compliance] employees who had insight into where improvements in efficiency and performance were needed.” Another strategy, which is near and dear to the heart of Carsten Tams, Ethical Business Architect and founder and CEO of Emagence LLC, is to use Design Thinking concepts in designing and implementing a digital innovation of compliance. The authors note, “A growing number of teams adopted agile methods to address all kinds of opportunities. The intensity and impact of transformation thus accelerated rapidly, driving a range of innovation initiatives.” This same strategy can work in sales as well as compliance.
It is this step which “democratize access to data and technology” outside of compliance and can lead to true and permanent innovation. The potential for employee-driven digital innovation cannot be accomplished by small groups of technologists and data scientists walled off in organizational silos. It will require much larger and more-diverse groups of employees – executives, managers, and frontline workers – coming together to rethink how every aspect of the business should operate. Once again this is what Tams has talked about with his articulation of Design Thinking, the engagement of business unit employees can well be a significant driver of compliance.
To achieve the type of engagement which will drive real digital transformation, a CCO must create synergy in three key areas: Capabilities, Technology and Architecture. The authors state, “Digital transformation requires that executives, managers, and frontline employees work together to rethink how every aspect of the business should operate.”

  1. Capabilities. It is axiomatic that successful transformation and innovation efforts in compliance requires “that companies develop digital and data skills in employees outside traditional technology functions. These capabilities alone, however, are not sufficient to deliver the full benefits of transformation; organizations must also invest in developing process agility and, more broadly, a culture that encourages widespread, frequent experimentation.” It is all a long-winded way of saying “Call Carsten Tams” and use his framework for Design Thinking as a starting point for your digital transformation.
  2. Technology. As always, “investment in the right technologies is important, especially in the elements of an AI stack: data platform technology, data engineering, machine-learning algorithms, and algorithm-deployment technology. Companies must ensure that the technology deployed is easy to use and accessible to the many nontechnical employees participating in innovation efforts.” Fortunately, there are more compliance product providers you can provide the right tech to you. See the Rise of ComTech.
  3. . One of the things that many compliance professionals do not often consider is that of architecture. The authors believe the “investment in organizational and technical architecture is necessary to ensure that human capabilities and technology can work in synergy to drive innovation. That requires an architecture—for both technology and the organization—that supports the sharing, integration, and normalization of data (for example, making data definitions and characteristics consistent) across traditionally isolated silos. This is the only real, scalable way to assemble the necessary technological and data assets so that they are available to a distributed workforce.” This is similar to what the Department of Justice (DOJ) intoned in the 2020 Update to the Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Program where they mandated for the first time that both the CCO and corporate compliance function should have access to all corporate data, literally cutting across all siloes.

The authors concluded, “mandate for digital transformation creates a leadership imperative: Embrace transformation, and work to sustain it.” I would add that these words apply even more so to the CCO who is leading the digital transformation of a compliance program. You should put together a clear strategy and sell it to the Board and senior management as well as communicating it “relentlessly” throughout your organization. Work to inaugurate a compliance “architecture to evolve into as you make the myriad daily decisions that define your technology strategy. Deploy a real governance process to track the many technology projects underway, and coordinate and integrate them whenever possible. Champion agility in all business initiatives you touch and influence. And finally, break free of tradition. Train and coach your employees to understand the potential of technology and data, and release the innovators within your workforce.”
Momentum is growing for the digital transformation of compliance; from the regulators to business units to investors. Indeed, it will be the driving strategy for compliance in 2025 and beyond. But we must always remember that it is the human element that will be the critical component to drive the transformation and more importantly use those tools to drive compliance up to the next level of effectiveness and engagement.

Categories
The Compliance Life

Valerie Charles – CCOs and the Compliance Profession Down the Road


The Compliance Life details the journey to and in the role of a Chief Compliance Officer. How does one come to sit in the CCO chair? What are some of the skills a CCO needs to success navigate the compliance waters in any company? What are some of the top challenges CCOs have faced and how did they meet them? These questions and many others will be explored in this new podcast series. Over four episodes each month on The Compliance Life, I visit with one current or former CCO to explore their journey to the CCO chair. This month, my guest is Valerie Charles, partner at StoneTurn. We discuss Valerie’s journey to the CCO chair, then to a ComTech start up, to her current role at StoneTurn and look down the road at where ComTech and compliance will be in 2025 and beyond.
In this concluding episode, Valerie looks down the road at the compliance function. She believes there will be increased use of ComTech by compliance functions. Moreover, CCOs and compliance professionals will need learn how to use data and become more comfortable in leveraging data for insights to help prevent, detect and remediate corporate conduct. The corporate compliance function will become even more important in the corporate setting as it will bring together various corporate functions such as legal, HR and IT into collaborative actions.
Resources
Valerie Charles LinkedIn Profile
Valerie Charles at StoneTurn

Categories
This Week in FCPA

Episode 286 – the Georgia Finally Beats Alabama


The college football season has ended with UGA finally defeating UA. Tom and Jay turn their full attention to the NFL playoffs now and also look at some of the week’s top compliance and ethics stories this week in the Georgia Finally Beats Alabama edition.

Stories

1.     Carnival and Princess Cruise Lines violated DPA yet again. Matt Kelly in Radical Compliance. DOJ Press Release.
2.     Prioritizing items from the Strategy on Countering Corruption. Worth McMurray in the FCPA Blog.
3.     DOJ to look at short sellers. Jaclyn Jaeger in Compliance Week (sub req’d).
4.     Proposed framework for CCO liability analysis. Mengqi Sun in WSJ Risk & Compliance Journal.
5.     Manipulation on timing of FCPA enforcement action? Matthew Stephenson debunks a new article in GAB.
6.     ComTech comes to financial institution compliance. Christian Wunderly in the FCPA Blog.
7.     Phil Tetlock and Superforecasting come to risk management. Jim DeLoach in CCI.
8.     Ethics and FCPA predictions for 2022. Mike Volkov with a double dose of Carnac the Magnificent. Ethics here. FCPA here.
9.     Banks develop climate risk consortium. Aaron Nicodemus in Compliance Week(sub req’d)
10.  Liability of local representatives under GDPR. Kelly Hagedorn and Matthew Worby in Compliance and Enforcement.

Podcasts 

11.  Tom and Matt Kelly conclude a 2-part podcast series on issues they are following in 2022.  On Compliance into the Weeds, Part 1 and Part 2.
12.  In January on The Compliance Life, I visit with Valerie Charles, partner at StoneTurn. Val has one of the most interesting journeys in compliance. In Part 1, she discussed her academic background and early professional career. In Part 2, she discusses her move to ComTech.
13.  The Compliance Podcast Network welcomes Professor Karen Woody and her new podcast, Classroom Insider. In this most unique pod, Karen interviews some of her student to tell the history of insider trading. In Episode 4, Colin Manchester discusses the evolution of the disclose or abstain rule.
14.  Mikhail Reider-Gordon returns in Lies, Spies & Corporate Crimes: The Wirecard Saga, with Season 2, Episode 3 Shell Games.
15.  Check out 31 Days to a More Effective Compliance Program returns, which runs for the month of January, from January 1 to January 31. Available on the Compliance Podcast NetworkMegaphoneiTunes, and all other top podcast platforms.
Tom Fox is the Voice of Compliance and can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Jay Rosen is Mr. Monitor and can be reached at jrosen@affiliatedmonitors.com.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

January 14, 2022 the Secret Talks Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Cross border Inter-Parliamentary Alliance against Kleptocracy. (com)
  • Netanyahu in secret talks to plead out. (TimesofIsreal)
  • ComTech coming to the AML fight. (WSJ)
  • Robinhood seeks to have meme-lawsuit dismissed. (Reuters)