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2 Gurus Talk Compliance

2 Gurus Talk Compliance: Episode 26 – The Compliance Week Wrap Up Edition

What happens when two top compliance commentators get together? They talk about 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 compliance related topics.

The Compliance Week National Conference, a premier event in the field of compliance, offered a rich assortment of discussions and insights on various compliance topics, such as AI monitoring, risk assessment, and oversight of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). Among the expert attendees were compliance professionals Tom and Kristy.

Tom highlighted the invaluable practical discussions led by practitioners, which had direct impact on compliance practices. He found the sessions on risk assessments and third-party risk management to be engaging and informative.

Similarly, Kristy found the conference sessions to be enlightening, notably a keynote on artificial intelligence and a workshop on leadership. She also valued the call for transparency in compliance roles, underscoring the conference’s ability to address recurring compliance challenges.

Both Fox and Grant-Hart’s perspectives were shaped by their extensive experiences and expertise in the field of compliance, highlighting the conference’s appeal to both veterans and newcomers alike.

Highlights Include:

1. Compliance Week Conference Roundup – Key thoughts, takeaways, and moments

2. Ericsson released from DPA.   (WSJ)

3. SEC says self-reporting is critical. (WSJ)

4. Corruption with JFK taxi dispatchers.   (NYPost)

5. No more late night messages from your boss—the Right to Disconnect. (WaPo)

6. Trafigura pleads guilty. (The Maritime Executive)

7. Inside the Russian Shadow Trade for Weapons Parts, Fueled by Crypto (WSJ) 

8. Sam Bankman – Fried is still gambling (The Verge) 

9. The Frustration of CCO Job Searches (Radical Compliance)

10. Florida man put car in cruise control, then partially stood up through sunroof while speeding, deputies say (FOX 35 Orlando)

Resources: 

Kristy Grant-Hart on LinkedIn

Spark Consulting

Tom

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 11, 2024 – The Panama Papers Goes to Trial 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 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.

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • The Panama Papers trial begins. (BBC)
  • Crypto says it has turned the compliance corner.  (WSJ)
  • KPMG pays $25MM for cheating. (FT)
  • A former PdVSA minister was arrested for corruption. (Reuters)

For more information on the Ethico ROI Calculator and a free White Paper on the ROI of Compliance, click here.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 10, 2024 – The Not Ubiquitous 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 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.

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • AI is not yet ubiquitous.  (WSJ)
  • Of corruption and Russian meddling. (FT)
  • The imprisoned Binance Director denies the AML charge. (BBC)
  • Yet another Boeing whistleblower allegation. (NYT)

For more information on the Ethico ROI Calculator and a free White Paper on the ROI of Compliance, click here.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 9, 2024 – The 3 Body Problem 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 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.

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Chinese object to the Netflix version of 3 Bodies. (NYT)
  • South Africa risks staying on the dirty money list. (Bloomberg)
  • There is more corruption in Kenya. (VoA)
  • Was Wirecard a Russian spy operation?  (FT)

For more information on the Ethico ROI Calculator and a free White Paper on the ROI of Compliance, click here.

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10 For 10

10 For 10: Top Compliance Stories For The Week Ending April 6, 2024

Welcome to 10 For 10, the podcast which brings you the week’s Top 10 compliance stories in one podcast each week.

Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, brings to you, the compliance professional, the compliance stories you need to be aware of to end your busy week.

Sit back, and in 10 minutes, hear about the stories every compliance professional should be aware of from the prior week.

Every Saturday, 10 For 10 highlights the most important news, insights, and analysis for compliance professionals, all curated by the Voice of Compliance, Tom Fox.

Get your weekly filling of compliance stories with 10 for 10, a podcast produced by the Compliance Podcast Network.

  • Trafigura pleads guilty. (The Maritime Executive)
  • Ericsson released from DPA.  (WSJ)
  • Autonomy paid whistleblower for wrongful termination.  (Law360) sub-req’d
  • More 1MDB-Swiss bankers are on trial. (Bloomberg)
  • 20 convictions and $1.7bn in penalties.  (Financial Regulation News)
  • The South African Speaker resigns.  (Reuters)
  • The former head of the Spanish football federation was arrested on corruption charges. (ESPN)
  • The SEC says self-reporting is critical. (WSJ)
  • Corruption with JFK taxi dispatchers.  (NYPost)
  • No more late-night messages from your boss—the Right to Disconnect. (WaPo)

For more information on the Ethico ROI Calculator and a free White Paper on the ROI of Compliance, click here.

You can check out the Daily Compliance News for four curated compliance and ethics-related stories each day, here.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 5, 2024 – The Right to Disconnect 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.

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • No more late-night messages from your boss—the Right to Disconnect. (WaPo)
  • Corruption with JFK taxi dispatchers.  (NYPost)
  • Tom Hays (again) to appeal his LIBOR conviction. (BBC)
  • A Swiss banker was charged with stealing dirty money from a client. (FT)

For more information on the Ethico ROI Calculator and a free White Paper on the ROI of Compliance, click here.

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Blog

The Trafigura FCPA Enforcement Action – Part 2 – The Bribery Schemes

We continue our exploration of the resolution of the FCPA enforcement action involving the Swiss trading firm G Trafigura Beheer B.V. (Trafigura), an international commodity trading company with its primary operations in Switzerland. The company pleaded guilty and will pay over $126 million to resolve an investigation stemming from the company’s corrupt scheme to pay bribes to Brazilian government officials to secure business with Brazil’s state-owned and state-controlled oil company, Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. Petrobras (Petrobras). The matter was resolved via a Plea Agreement. Information detailing the company’s conduct was also issued.

According to the Information, between approximately 2003 and 2014, Trafigura and its co-conspirators paid bribes to Petrobras officials in order to obtain and retain business with Petrobras. Beginning in 2009, Trafigura and its co-conspirators, who met in Miami to discuss the bribery scheme, agreed to make bribe payments of up to 20 cents per barrel of oil products bought from or sold to Petrobras by Trafigura and to conceal the bribe payments through the use of shell companies, and by funneling payments through intermediaries who used offshore bank accounts to deliver cash to officials in Brazil. The meeting in Miami created US jurisdiction for the FCPA violations.

While at first blush, the bribery schemes appear to be similar to FCPA violations from time immemorial, there are some interesting aspects that will inform how a compliance professional can learn new lessons from this enforcement action. These factors include corrupt actors, internal funding of the bribes from locations literally across the globe, and the potential conflicts of interest in hiring employees of customers prone to bribery and corruption.

Funding the Bribery Schemes

Unlike fraud, which is the theft of money, property, or goods from a company, bribery is the theft of money from a company to pay someone else. Hence, there must be a way for those involved in corruption to create a pot of money to pay bribes. It can be simply cheating on your expense accounts, hiding costs in marketing, or making fraudulent charitable donations. But in Latin America and specifically in Brazil, one of the most favored ways to do so is to bake the bribe directly into the contract sales price. Unfortunately, this makes bribe funding one of the most difficult to detect. That is what was done in the Trafigura case.

According to the Information, “Beginning in 2009, TRAFIGURA BEHEER B.V. and its co-conspirators agreed to make bribe payments of up to 20 cents per barrel of oil products bought from or sold to Petrobras by TRAFIGURA BEHEER B.V. and its subsidiaries and affiliated entities, and to conceal the bribe payments through the use of shell companies.” [emphasis supplied] What is the price of a barrel of oil on any trading market, spot or long term? It can vary quite widely, and during the time of the bribes paid in this matter, it vacillated between $55 to $90 per barrel. It would be more than difficult for any compliance officer to look at a trading contract and pick up this amount as an anomaly.

Additionally, executives at Trafigura and corruption traders at Petrobras pre-arranged the oil trading prices rather than letting the market determine them. The Information noted, “The Trafigura Executive 2 and Brazilian Official 1 agreed to prices for trades of oil products and bribe amounts for each trade. After the price had been determined,  Trafigura Executive 2 instructed Trafigura traders to engage in negotiations with Petrobras, which Trafigura Executive 2 knew to be a sham, in order to arrive at the pre-agreed price.” [emphasis supplied]

The next step was to internally fund the bribe payments through other Trafigura business units, where no one could connect the dots. It came about when one of the two corrupt Trafigura executives involved in the bribery scheme was transferred to run the company’s Singapore business unit. From there, this executive had a corrupt third party in Hong Kong bill the Singapore business unit for non-existent consulting services related to the Chinese market to the tune of $500,000. This money funded additional bribes to corrupt Petrobras employees. This same mechanism was used multiple times to add to the 20 cents per barrel surcharge being paid directly by Petrobras.

Corrupt Employees

There are a couple of other points of note about these bribery schemes. As noted above, there were two corrupt Trafigura executives called out in the Information. (Monikered as Trafigura Executives 1 & 2) Yet, according to the Information, there were other Trafigura executives who either knew about or approved the bribe payments, but they were not further identified in the Information. Trafigura Executive 2 initially worked under Trafigura Executive 1 but later became the head of the Singapore business unit. Clearly, he took corruption with him when he moved from Brazil to Switzerland (the home office) and then to Singapore. This is yet another data point that compliance officers need to assess.

One other point from this matter. Trafigura hired the first corrupt Petrobras employee after he left that company. Once again, compliance needs to figure out a way to become aware of such hires. It was clearly done to pay off this employee and to further the ongoing bribery scheme.

Join us tomorrow for a discussion of Trafigura’s response.

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Blog

The Trafigura FCPA Enforcement Action – Part 1 – Introduction

In March 2024, the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced the resolution of a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement action involving the Swiss trading firm G Trafigura Beheer B.V. (Trafigura), an international commodity trading company with its primary operations in Switzerland. The company pleaded guilty and will pay over $126 million to resolve an investigation stemming from the company’s corrupt scheme to pay bribes to Brazilian government officials to secure business with Brazil’s state-owned and state-controlled oil company, Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. Petrobras (Petrobras).

According to the DOJ Press Release, “Trafigura pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the anti-bribery provisions of the FCPA. Under the plea agreement, Trafigura will pay a criminal fine of $80,488,040 and forfeiture of $46,510,257. The department will credit up to $26,829,346 of the criminal fine against amounts Trafigura pays to resolve an investigation by law enforcement authorities in Brazil for related conduct.”

In the DOJ Press Release, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri, head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, said, “For more than a decade, Trafigura bribed Brazilian officials to illegally obtain business and reap over $61 million in profits. Today’s guilty plea underscores that companies will face significant penalties when they pay bribes and undermine the rule of law. The department remains determined to combat foreign bribery and hold accountable those who violate the law.”

U.S. Attorney Markenzy Lapointe for the Southern District of Florida said, “Our office will continue to target anyone who uses the Southern District of Florida to further foreign corrupt practices and bribery schemes. We will continue working with our Criminal Division colleagues to identify and prosecute those responsible, including individuals and corporations.” Finally, Assistant Director Michael Nordwall of the FBI’s Criminal Investigative Division noted, “Trafigura’s corrupt practices violated the FCPA, and today’s resolution demonstrates that there are steep penalties for any company that tries to bribe government officials.

The information noted that between approximately 2003 and 2014, Trafigura and its co-conspirators paid bribes to Petrobras officials to obtain and retain business with Petrobras. Beginning in 2009, Trafigura and its co-conspirators, who met in Miami to discuss the bribery scheme, agreed to make bribe payments of up to 20 cents per barrel of oil products bought from or sold to Petrobras by Trafigura and to conceal the bribe payments through the use of shell companies, and by funneling payments through intermediaries who used offshore bank accounts to deliver cash to officials in Brazil. Trafigura profited approximately $61 million from the corrupt scheme.

Trafigura’s conduct during most of the investigation was undoubtedly less than sterling. The company did not self-disclose to the DOJ and had the Plea Agreement dryly noted, “However, the defendant, in particular during the early phase of the government’s investigation, failed to preserve and produce certain documents and evidence promptly and, at times, took positions that were inconsistent with full cooperation.” Additionally, Trafigura was slow to exercise disciplinary and remedial measures for certain employees whose conduct violated company policy. In other words, it was not a company that engendered itself with the DOJ during the investigation phase.

Perhaps because of its conduct during the investigation and an apparent lack of a culture of compliance at the firm, the company only received 10% off the middle range under the sentencing guidelines. Trafigura was a recidivist, with (1) a 2006 guilty plea for entry of goods using false statements, (2) Trafigura’s 2010 conviction of violating Netherlands exports, and (3) a violation of Côte d’Ivoire environmental laws in connection with the discharge of petroleum waste. Ultimately, Trafigura admitted that it had done something illegal during the investigation. However, the company’s initial stance in resolution talks caused a lot of delays, and the government had to spend a lot of time and money gathering more evidence that could be used in court before Trafigura could agree to a peaceful resolution. This led to a guilty plea and a criminal fine, reflecting a 10% reduction off the fifth percentile of the applicable guidelines acceptable range.

In this blog series, we will consider bribery schemes, resolutions, and lessons learned for compliance professionals.

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Daily Compliance News

Daily Compliance News: April 2, 2024 – The Welcome to CW24 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.

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Autonomy paid whistleblower for wrongful termination. (Law360)
  • Shell appeals climate change ruling. (FT)
  • More 1KDB-Swiss bankers are on trial. (Bloomberg)
  • More apartment seizures in NYC, this time in Trump bldg. (forbes)

For more information on the Ethico ROI Calculator and a free White Paper on the ROI of Compliance, click here.

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10 For 10

10 For 10: Top Compliance Stories For the Week Ending March 30, 2024

Welcome to 10 For 10, the podcast that brings you the week’s Top 10 compliance stories in one podcast each week. Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, brings you the compliance professional and the compliance stories you need to know to end your busy week. Sit back, and in 10 minutes, hear about the stories every compliance professional should know from the prior week. Every Saturday, Tom Fox, the Voice of Compliance, curates 10 For 10 to highlight the most significant news, insights, and analysis for compliance professionals. Get your weekly fix of compliance stories with 10 for 10, a podcast from the Compliance Podcast Network.

  • Shohei Ohtani denies any knowledge of his translator’s gambling. (WSJ)
  • Luxury apartments targeted by DOJ. (WSJ)
  • Crypto-Exchange KuCoin faced money-laundering charges.  (WSJ)
  • More Chinese companies are to be added to the banned list. (WSJ)
  • Corruption drives trafficking in SE Asia. (Al Jazeera)
  • South African Speaker of Parliament charged with corruption. (WaPo)
  • The former head of the China Football Association was jailed for life for corruption.  (ESPN)
  • EY promotes neurodiverse talent. (BBC)
  • More neurodiverse claims are made in the workplace. (FT)
  • An MoD report on UK corruption vis-à-vis Saudi Arabia was found in a public archive. (The Guardian)

Click here for more information on the Ethico ROI Calculator and a free White Paper on the ROI of Compliance.

You can check out the Daily Compliance News, which features four curated compliance and ethics stories each day, here.

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