Categories
Daily Compliance News

March 15, 2022 the Compliance is Complicated Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Compliance is complicated in the shadow of Russia. (WSJ)
  • Tencent looking at big AML fine in China.  (WSJ)
  • Corruption and death in Brazil’s imperial city. (FT)
  • Russia and managing political risk. (FCPA Blog)
Categories
Daily Compliance News

March 11, 2022 the Enablers Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Another BitMex founder pleads guilty. (WSJ)
  • Corruption stripping Cameroon?  (Crux)
  • The Enablers of Russian oligarchs. (NYT)
  • Regime change in Pakistan? (Bloomberg)
Categories
Everything Compliance

Episode 95, the Russia Invades Ukraine Edition


Welcome to the only roundtable podcast in compliance. The entire gang was also recently honored by W3 as a top talk show in podcasting. In this episode, we have the quartet of Jonathan Marks, Karen Woody, Jonathan Armstrong, Tom Fox and Matt Kelly. We dedicate the entire episode to compliance issues arising from the Russia invasion of Ukraine. We conclude with our fan favorite Shout Outs and Rants.

  1. Karen Woody considers the impact of corruption in both Russia and Ukraine going forward. Karen shouts out to the Ukraine’s U.N. Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya for his impassioned plea for Russia to stop its invasion of his country this week, at the United Nations.
  1. Matt Kelly looks at the export control issues and sanctions issued by the US and its allies in this arena. Kelly shouts out Jackson Reffitt, who testified against his father in his father’s Capital Insurrection trial.
  1. Jonathan Marks discusses the sanctions which have been levied by the Biden Administration, how to assess this evolving risk and the role of the Board in managing this risk. Marks rants about Bob Blaffert (again)  and shouts out to Sonny Johnson, an autistic basketballer who made the game winning shot that helped his team win its final game of the season.
  1. Jonathan Armstrong looks at how the shooting war in the Ukraine has spilled over into a cyber war across the globe. Armstrong shouts out to Paddington Bear for giving comfort to refugees across the globe and to the voice of Paddington Bear, Ukrainian President Zelensky.
  1. Tom Fox shouts out to the Texas GOP for stopping AG Ken Paxton from renomination in the party’s primary and for forcing him into a run-off with George P. Bush.

 The members of the Everything Compliance are:

  • Jay Rosen– Jay is Vice President, Business Development Corporate Monitoring at Affiliated Monitors. Rosen can be reached at JRosen@affiliatedmonitors.com
  • Karen Woody – One of the top academic experts on the SEC. Woody can be reached at kwoody@wlu.edu
  • Matt Kelly – Founder and CEO of Radical Compliance. Kelly can be reached at mkelly@radicalcompliance.com
  • Jonathan Armstrong –is our UK colleague, who is an experienced data privacy/data protection lawyer with Cordery in London. Armstrong can be reached at armstrong@corderycompliance.com
  • Jonathan Marks is Partner, Firm Practice Leader – Global Forensic, Compliance & Integrity Services at Baker Tilly. Marks can be reached at marks@bakertilly.com

The host and producer, ranter (and sometime panelist) of Everything Compliance is Tom Fox the Voice of Compliance. He can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Everything Compliance is a part of the Compliance Podcast Network.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

March 10, 2022 the 4-Day Notice Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
·      Matthew Stephenson speaks. (Harvard Law Today)
·      Black Panther movie director arrested for ‘banking while black’.   (BBC)
·      Sunny Balwani trial to begin. (WSJ)
·      SEC proposes 4-day notice requirement for cyber breach. (Reuters)

Categories
This Week in FCPA

Episode 293 – the Ukraine Hangs On edition


As Ukraine hangs on from the Russian invasion, Jay is on assignment so fan fav Kristy Grant-Hart joins this week as a co-host with Tom to look at some of the week’s top compliance and ethics stories from the impact of the Ukrainian crisis in the Ukraine Hangs On edition. 
Stories

  1. What Russia invasion means for companies and compliance. Tom with a series in the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog. Matt Kelly in Radical Compliance.
  2. Dick Cassin says sanctions may lead to more corruption in the FCPA Blog.
  3. Jaclyn Jaeger looks at supply chain disruption and issues in Compliance Week (sub req’d)
  4. Matthew Murray asks if Putin invaded Ukraine to advance corruption, in GAB.
  5. Chasing oligarchs’ money, from the Washington Post.
  6. The Swiss approach to Ukraine crisis. Mark Pieth in Risk and Compliance Europe.
  7. Mike Volkov focuses on new and evolving sanctions, in Corruption Crime and Compliance.
  8. Economic nationalism and corporate governance. Martin Geller, in Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance.
  9. Illicit finance and High-value art. Sullivan & Cromwell lawyers in Compliance and Enforcement.
  10. The invasion and cybersecurity. Jonathan Armstrong in Cordery Compliance.

Podcasts and More

  1. In March on The Compliance Life, I visit with Audrey Harris, Managing Director at AMI, formerly CCO at BHP. In Part 1, she discusses her academic background and early professional career.
  2. On the FCPA Compliance Report, Tom has a 2-part series with Trade Compliance guru Matt Silverman on the full extent of possible Russia sanctions (Part 1) and the corporate response you need to make (Part 2).
  3. Tom and Loren Steffy look energy issues and fallout from the Russian invasion in Greetings and Felicitations.
  4. Tom and Matt Kelly take a deep dive into the compliance weeds about the Russian invasion on Compliance into the Weeds.
  5. Silvia Surman devotes the entire week to Russian trade sanctions and economic issues in The Compliance Kitchen.
  6. Tom celebrates Texas Independence Day and the anniversary of the Alamo in a podcast with Don Frazier, Executive Director of the Texas Institute at Schreiner University on The Hill Country Podcast.

Tom Fox is the Voice of Compliance and can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Kristy Grant-Hart is Compliance Kristy and can be reached at kgranthart@sparkcompliance.com.

Categories
Daily Compliance News

March 4, 2022 the Ericsson Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Ex-Nissan exec given suspended sentence in Japan. (NYT)
  • CA companies perverting Federal Arbitration Act.  (Reuters)
  • Is crypto complying with sanctions. (WaPo)
  • DOJ accuses Ericsson of violating DPA. (The Guardian)
Categories
Daily Compliance News

March 2, 2022 the Texas Independence Day Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Estee Lauder exec fired for racial social media post. (WSJ)
  • Widespread corruption under Zuma detailed.  (FT)
  • Sanctions as corruption super-spreader. (FCPA Blog)
  • If you are a bigamist, can you claim a spousal privilege. (Law360)
Categories
Daily Compliance News

March 1, 2022 the We’ re No. 2 Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

    • According to TI-CPI, Nigeria second most corrupt country in West Africa. (Business Insider Africa)
    • How allowing corruption corrupts those who allow it.  (The Guardian)
    • Gertler offers deal to end corruption investigations. (Haaretz)
    • Leak broke Ericsson corrupt payments to ISIS. (ICIJ)
Categories
Compliance Into the Weeds

Corrupt Culture and Bags of Cash-the KT Corp. FCPA Enforcement Action


Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast which takes a deep dive into a compliance related topic, literally going into the weeds to more fully explore a subject. This week, Matt and Tom turn to the recent FCPA enforcement action brought by the SEC involving the Korean company KT Corp. Some of the issues we consider

  • Background facts and a corrupt culture, literally from the top.
  • How does the SEC have jurisdiction over KT Corp?
  • Why you need a flow chart of the bribery schemes and a scorecard of the players.
  • Corruption leading to the Korean Blue House.
  • Bags of cash delivered and kept in office safes.
  • Was the resolution an interim step before a monitor is employed?

Resources
Tom with a 3-part series in the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog
Matt in Radical Compliance

Categories
Blog

KT Corp. FCPA Enforcement Action: Part 2 – The Bribery Schemes – Flow Charts and Scorecards

Matt Kelly and I did an episode on our podcast, Compliance into the Weeds, about the KT Corporation settlement Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) via a Cease and Desist Order (the Order) for “disgorgement of $2,263,821, prejudgment interest of $536,457, and a civil money penalty in the amount of $3,500,000” bringing the total fine and penalty to just over $6.3 million. One of the most prescient lines that came out of the podcast was that you need a flow chart to follow all the bribery schemes and you needed a scorecard to follow all the persons and entities involved in those schemes. In today’s post we will look at the bribery schemes in some detail.
I. South Korea
a. Getting Cash
As I mentioned yesterday, the bribery schemes used by KT Corp. harkened back to some older FCPA enforcement actions in one respect as one of the key bribery schemes used involved cash. The cash was garnered to fund a series of bribes from 2009-2017. The Order noted, “high-level executives of KT maintained slush funds, comprised of both off-the-books accounts and physical stashes of cash, in order to provide items of value to government officials, among others. These included gifts, entertainment and, ultimately, illegal political contributions to members of the Korean National Assembly serving on committees relevant to KT’s business.”
The cash was obtained in two distinct ways. In the first scheme, 2009-2013,  the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and another senior approved inflated bonuses to other executive officers and executives. The recipients laundered the bonus payments into cash and next returned the cash to the CEO. This generated a slush fund of approximately $1 million. Some of the funds were held in another executive’s personal bank account, while the cash was stored in a safe in the corporate offices. The CEO then used the cash as a slush fund for gifts and payments to Korean government officials with the ability to influence KT Corp.’s business. There was no accompanying spreadsheet recordation’s of the gift recipients, although these payments were apparently common knowledge within the executive ranks. In a massive accounting fraud, the company “booked the slush fund amounts as executive bonuses, even though the money was used for gifts and for payments to government officials.”
Eventually this bribery scheme was uncovered, and the CEO was criminally charged on this matter. This did not deter KT Corp. in moving forward to continue to engage in bribery and corruption. From 2014 to 2017, the company’s Corporate Relations (“CR”) Group was brought in as the funding mechanism to create the pot of money to pay bribes. However, this vendor did not deliver gift cards to the CR Group but cash. The corrupt vendor even kept a percentage of the overall amount of cash as a fee. To facilitate the accounting fraud, the company used the phrase “CR Case Benchmarking,” in the company purchasing system as the purported purpose for the purchase.
But the cloak and dagger style used by KT Corp. continued as the vendor would meet a representative from the CR Group outside the KT office building where the vendor would give the CR Group representative “a paper bag containing a large manila envelope of cash, corresponding to the value of the gift cards purchased, less a commission for Vendor.” The cash was kept locked in the CR Group offices.
Unlike the first bribery scheme which was run directly by the CEO, in this second phase the cash was provided “to KT officers and managers, with the understanding that they would transfer the funds electronically to the contributions accounts for various Korean lawmakers. Once the transfer was made, a CR employee would inform the particular lawmaker’s aide that the contribution came from KT. This scheme was used to evade Korea’s Political Funds Act, which prohibits corporations from making political contributions. Most of the funds went to lawmakers in the National Assembly who sat on committees with the ability to impact the telecommunications industry and KT’s business.”
b. Hiring of Princelings
Here we saw a variety of the Princelings scandal that engulfed JPMorgan and other entities in bogus hiring’s of sons, daughters and other family members to provide illegal benefits to foreign government officials. Yet another scheme involved hiring individuals, as KT Corp. employees, with personal connections to the South Korean White House and ruling party, (the “Blue House”). Once they were hired these individuals were given even more cushy jobs in the company. In a derivation of the Princelings hiring schemes, the company also hired an entire advertising agency which did not meet KT Corp. criteria for retention as a vendor. In addition to hiring this unqualified advertising agency, “KT paid the two individuals a total of $454,009 in salaries and the advertising firm a total of $5.88 million in fees.”
II. Vietnam
a. Solar Power Project
In this project, KT Corp. used a sophisticated business venture, which was not a formal partnership or Joint Venture (JV) partnership. Under this bribery scheme, KT Corp. had another company involved in the project wire some $95,000 to KT Corp, who then would facilitate the payment of the bribe. The money was wired to a KT Corp. employee’s personal bank account, who then withdrew as cash. The employee and a construction company subcontractor representative met the corrupt government official and he was paid the money. Internally, the payment was described as “a rebate to the project owner.”
However, that did not end the matter for KT Corp. as they had to repay the construction company for the $95K. The construction company billed KT Corp. for the bribe, describing it as “expenses for engaging in sales activities with the ordering organization . . . ($95K),” as well as other expenses. KT Corp. paid the construction company approximately $200,000 to settle all the claims, including reimbursement for the bribe payment, and it booked the payment as “Support/consulting for performance of the business (completed).”
b. Vocational College Project
KT Corp. participated with a consortium to bid on the Vocational Colleges Project. KT Corp. learned from its original consortium partner (“Partner 1”), which was to pay the agent fee, that 10% of the project cost would go to the agent, who would pass on 7% of the project cost to Official 1. However, Partner 1 informed KT Corp. that it did not want to be responsible for the agent’s fee due to the risk involved. KT Corp. agreed to reorganize the consortium and assume responsibility for paying the agent’s fee. KT Corp. and a corrupt agent agreed that the fee would be 8.5%, which included $550,000 for Official 1.
KT Corp. then arranged for a subcontractor in the consortium to become a consortium partner (“Partner 2”) and KT Corp. “tasked Partner 2 with the responsibility of paying the agent fee. The purpose of the arrangement was to distance KT from the agent, as well as to conceal the agent from KT’s agent review process. While the agent review process was a financial risk review, not an anticorruption review, the KT managers involved preferred to avoid any questions about KT’s relationship with the agent. Paying the agent through Partner 2 enabled KT managers to bypass the review.”
As I said at the start of this post, you need a flow chart to follow the bribery schemes and a scorecard to follow the players.
Join us tomorrow where we look at some lessons learned for the compliance professional.