Categories
This Week in FCPA

Episode 289 – the Brady Retires edition

 
As the GOAT of pro football, Tom Brady retires, Brian Flores sues the NFL and the Bengals/Rams make the Super Bowl, Tom and Jay are back look at some of the week’s top compliance and ethics stories this week in the Brady Retires edition. 
Stories

  1. DOJ issues first Opinion Release of 2022. DOJ website. Tom in FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog. Bill Steinman in the FCPA Blog.
  2. Do BODs have unrealistic expectations on compliance? Dick Cassin explores in the FCPA Blog.
  3. KPMG mislead FRC through forged docs. Risk and Compliance Platform Europe.
  4. LRN releases 2022 Program Effectiveness Report. Download report here. Matt Kelly in Radical Compliance.
  5. A ‘how-to’ on remediating. The HeadSpin enforcement action. Tom in FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog. Aaron Nicodemus in Compliance Week. (sub req’d)
  6. Learning to scale up ethically. Hemant Taneja in CCI.
  7. Why compliance should lead ESG. Carrie Penman in Ethics and Compliance Matters.
  8. The Boardroom agenda in 2022. Deloitte in Harvard Law School forum on Corporate Governance.
  9. Changes in antitrust enforcement and its impact on compliance. Mike Volkov, Matt Kelly and Tom in Compliance into the Weeds. Mike Volkov with a 3-part blog series in Corruption Crime and Compliance.
  10. Unclear values can lead to unethical behavior. Brett Beasley in Center for Ethical Leadership.

 Podcasts and More

  1. In February on The Compliance Life, I visit with Ellen Smith, a former Director of Trade Compliance who recently started her own consulting firm. In Part 1, she discussed her academic background and early professional career.
  2. Aly McDevitt with a multipart series in Compliance Week on the end-to-end story of a ransomware attack. Here more about the series on this month’s edition of From the Editor’s Desk, with Tom and Dave Lefort. A subscription is required but Compliance Week is running a membership special of $199 for the year. Use Promo Code RNSM199. For information and details click here.
  3. CCI releases new e-book from Tom “FCPA 2021 Year in Review”. Available free from CCI.
  4. Trial of the Century-the Enron Trial. This week, Tom premiered a 5-part podcast series on the Enron Trial with Loren Steffy, who covered the trial for the Houston Chronicle. In Part 1, run up to the trial. In Part 2, the trial begins. In Part 3, the star witnesses and key testimony. In Part 4, the Verdict comes in. In Part 5, what did it all mean. It is be available on the Compliance Podcast Network, Megaphone, iTunes, Spotify and all other top podcast platforms.
  5. Looking for a quick daily bite of trade compliance? Check out the Compliance Kitchen with Silvia Surman, who gives a short 3-5 minute update on one trade compliance topic each day. On the Compliance Podcast Network.

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

February 2, 2022 the NFL Sued Edition

In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • SEC flags ESG risks for ratings firms. (Reuters)
  • Former Miami coach sues NFL for racial discrimination.  (WSJ)
  • Alberto Salazar was banned for assault. (NYT)
  • International Anti-Corruption Court? (National Post)
Categories
Daily Compliance News

January 29, 2022 the Mike Lynch Guilty Edition

 
In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
·      ESG expertise in short supply.  (FT)
·      If Russia invades…  (WSJ)
·      VW unceremoniously fired whistleblower. (SecurityWorld)
·      Mike Lynch found guilty. (BBC)

Categories
This Week in FCPA

Episode 288– the 13 Second edition

How long does it take to win a NFL playoff game? Patrick Mahomes says 13 seconds. After perhaps the most thrilling NFL playoff game ever,  Tom and Jay are back look at some of the week’s top compliance and ethics stories this week in the 13 Seconds edition.

Stories

1.     TI-CPI 2022 Report out. Results not good. TI-CPI Press Release. Rick Messick says make it useful in GAB. Jaclyn Jaeger is disheartened in Compliance Week (sub req’d).
2.     Compliance officer burnout? Dick Cassin explores in the FCPA Blog.
3.     Emphasizing the ‘G’ in ESG. David Simon in LinkedIn.
4.     Investor demand driving ESG risk and compliance initiatives? Valerie Charles and Tracy Groves in CCI.
5.     Human Rights Due Diligence. James Reardon and Tomas Navarro look at Switzerland’s new law  in FCPA Blog. Tom considers your corporate Human Rights strategy in a 2-part blog series in the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog.
6.     Monaco Speech and Compliance in 2022. Stephanie Yonekura and Rupinder Garcha  in CCI.
7.     DOJ announces shift in antitrust policy. DOJ Press Release. Matt Kelly in Radical Compliance.
8.     ESG and M&A in 2022. Wachtel lawyers in Harvard Law School forum on Corporate Governance.
9.     FTC compliance risk re: cyber and privacy. Debevoise lawyers in Compliance and Enforcement.
10.  Cultural and ESG to-do list for 2022 for CCO. Mike Volkov in Corruption Crime and Compliance.

Podcasts and More

11.  In January on The Compliance Life, I visited 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 discussed her move to ComTech. In Part 3, Valerie moved into the consulting world. In the concluding Part 4, Valerie looks down the road for what’s ahead.
12.  The Everything Compliance gang took a deep dive into the Microsoft acquisition of Activision Blizzard in a special episode.  Check out the Shout Outs and Rants. Finally the gang had a special tribute to Meatloaf here.
13.  CCI releases new e-book from Tom “FCPA 2021 Year in Review”. Available free from CCI.
14.  Trial of the Century-the Enron Trial. This week, Tom premiered a 5-part podcast series on the Enron Trial with Loren Steffy, who covered the trial for the Houston Chronicle. In Part 1, run up to the trial. In Part 2, the trial begins. In Part 3, the star witnesses and key testimony. In Part 4, the Verdict comes in. In Part 5, what did it all mean. It is be available on the Compliance Podcast Network, Megaphone, iTunes, Spotify and all other top podcast platforms.
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 25, 2022 the Kuwait ABC Edition


In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:

  • Kuwait pursues corruption charges. (Defense News)
  • Activision bad ESG bet? (WSJ)
  • Engage in a hate crime, lose your job. (NYT)
  • Latham Watkins hires partners for its ESG practice. (Retuers)
Categories
This Week in FCPA

Episode 287 – the Activision Blizzard Sold edition


As both of their teams are unceremoniously knocked out of the playoffs, Tom and Jay are back looking at some of the week’s top compliance and ethics stories this week in the Activision Blizzard Sold edition.
Stories

  1. Activision Blizzard was sold to Microsoft. Check out articles on how the NYT happened, the parameters of the deal in the  WSJ, the compliance mess in Bloomberg, and legal issues in  Reuters.
  2. Did the pandemic undo corruption risk models? Dick Cassin explores in the FCPA Blog.
  3. KPMG spanked yet again in the UK. Jaclyn Jaeger in Compliance Week (sub req’d).
  4. Person of the Year in Compliance? ESG. Mike Volkov in Corruption Crime and Compliance.   
  5. Is Abby Normal next? Banks using behavioral science. Vera Cherepanova in FCPA Blog.
  6. Businesses and Strategy on Countering Corruption. Sara Paul, Andrea Gordon, and Dane Sowers in the CCI.  
  7. Climate change compliance. Jeff Kaplan in Conflicts of Interest Blog.
  8. Trust has its moment. Stewart Levine in Forbes.com
  9. Institutional investors on ESG voting. Lawrence Heim in PracticalESG.
  10. The virtual Board Room. Jeffrey Karpf and Fernando Martinez in Compliance and Enforcement

Podcasts and More

  1. 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
  2. In January on The Compliance Life, I visited Valerie Charles, a 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. In Part 3, Valerie moves into the consulting world. 
  3. What is the intersection of Joel Coen’s Macbeth and organizational issues in compliance? Tom explores in a 4-part blog series on the FCPA Compliance and Ethics Blog
  4. CCI releases a new e-book from Tom, “FCPA 2021 Year in Review”. Available free from CCI.
  5. Trial of the Century-the Enron Trial. On Monday, January 4, Tom premiers a 5-part podcast series on the Enron Trial with Loren Steffy, who covered the trial for the Houston Chronicle. You can check out the preview here. It will be available on the Compliance Podcast Network, Megaphone, iTunes, and other top podcast platforms. 
  6. Check out 31 Days to a More Effective Compliance Program returns, which runs from January 1 to January 31. Available on the Compliance Podcast NetworkMegaphoneiTunes, and 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
Everything Compliance

Episode 92 – the Issues in 2022 Edition


Welcome to the only roundtable podcast in compliance. The entire gang was also thrilled to be honored by W3 as a top talk show in podcasting. In this episode, we have the sextet of Karen Woody, Jonathan Armstrong, Matt Kelly and Jay Rosen. We discuss some of the key issues we will be watching in 2022.

1. Karen Woody will be watching the legal evolution around SPACs and expansion of insider trading laws. Karen shouts out to workers in the travel industry for getting travelers home during the holidays.

2. Jay Rosen reviews the considers the Holmes verdict, Tyler Schultz/whistleblowers and the celebrity BOD failure at Theranos. Rosen shouts out to Antonio Brown.

3. Matt Kelly considers the Log4j cybersecurity threat and the SEC move to regulate ESG. Kelly rants about Elon Musk selling his Tesla stock immediately before the company announces a massive product recall.

4. Jonathan Armstrong tackles several topics; ransomware, Safe Harbor, EU Whistleblower Directive, Supply Chain & China. Armstrong shouts out Nicholas Burk and synthetic ransomware attacks.

5. Jonathan Marks looks at the intersection of crypto, currency and crime. Marks rants about the inconsistent information emanating from the CDC.

6. Tom Fox rants about Novak Djokovic.  

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 jonathan.armstrong@corderycompliance.com
•       Jonathan Marks is Partner, Firm Practice Leader – Global Forensic, Compliance & Integrity Services at Baker Tilly. Marks can be reached at jonathan.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
Blog

How Compliance Can Lead an ESG Effort

David Povey, in Why compliance must play part in sustainability initiatives, reported that in an International Compliance Association survey, over 64% of respondents said compliance must tackle the issue, one respondent stated, “These issues represent the biggest risks for humanity but also the greatest opportunities. The sooner ethics & compliance get on board with tackling these, the better!” I believe that compliance must led the Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance (ESG) initiative. Kristy Grant Hart lays out in some detail about why a corporate compliance function should take the lead in a corporate ESG effort.
What is it compliance officers do every day? They perform risk assessments. They then build out Codes of Conduct, policies and procedures and internal controls based upon the assessed risks. They train on all of these sets of written procedures. They incentivize the doing of compliance and discipline employees who engage in non-compliant behavior. They monitor and enhance compliance programs based upon this monitoring. They create reports around their efforts and report to Boards of Directors about compliance and work with Boards and senior management to move the compliance program forward. These are the basic components of a corporate ESG effort.
In a 2021 cross-industry survey, entitled ESG Clarity: Benchmark Your Initiative from Compliance Week and Fulcrum, a UK based multidisciplinary firm, found strong compliance support for ESG initiatives, but a lack of understanding about how to monitor and measure results. Aaron Nicodemus, writing in Compliance Week, reported, “respondents said while their organizations were largely successful in launching ESG strategies and goals in their business plans, they were less successful in understanding ESG-related risks and applying those lessons to their initiatives. Only 13 percent of respondents said their companies have fully implemented and embedded an ESG strategy. Nearly 70 percent said their firms were either in the process of implementation (40 percent) or that it was more ad hoc at this point (29 percent).” Further, Pam Shearing, a managing partner at Fulcrum, said of these findings, “People are really trying to find their way with ESG, but there is some confusion as to how to measure it. ESG is an evolving conversation and, as such, companies need to continue to work on their ESG strategies. For some companies, there is still a lot of work to do.”
Clearly ESG, like compliance, all starts that the top of an organization. ESG must have full buy-in from senior management in any organization. Shearing also related, “clear goals would become part of the company’s culture, with everyone from the C-suite to the shop floor understanding what ESG is and how to apply it to everyday practices. Employees should be encouraged to report what parts of the initiative are working and what are not so companies can implement remedial steps. You really have to involve everyone to have a culture across the firm that everyone understands what ESG is and how to bring it into their everyday practices.”
But ESG is not simply driven by senior management. There are multiple other stakeholders who are driving this business initiative. You can start with the Business Roundtable’s Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation, with its list of at least five stakeholders in every corporation; shareholders, employees, localities, business relationships and customers. ESG is being driven in multiple ways on multiple fronts. In the Survey, “40 percent of respondents listed employees as a driver of corporate ESG initiatives. Companies are finding promoting and adhering to ESG initiatives is helpful for retaining employees and attracting new ones. Companies that weathered the pandemic and stuck to their ESG goals can see a competitive advantage in hiring.” Shearing said, “It goes back to ESG-related risks and opportunities. If your firm is doing the right thing for the environment, for society, for employees, and across its supply chain, it really can attract the best talent.”
But having an ESG program can also be a business positive. The Survey found that nearly 20 percent of respondents said their organization had refused to work with a party on ESG grounds over the past three years. As we saw in compliance in the final years of the first decade of the 21st Century and well into the second decade, this business-to-business driver of ESG will be one of the most potent reasons for the acceptance and incorporation of ESG into corporate portfolios.
Additionally, looking back the Update to the Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs, released by the Department of Justice (DOJ) in June 2020, you can see how the DOJ presaged this discuss about compliance leading the corporate ESG effort with its requirement that a Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) and compliance function have access to all corporate data. With no other corporate function mandated by the DOJ to have access to such data, this is yet another reason compliance should lead the corporate ESG effort.
The bottom line is that the design, creation, implementation and enhancement of a corporate ESG program is a natural extension of a corporate compliance program. Every CCO and compliance professional should be looking at their company to see how they can work on an overall ESG strategy. There are no other corporate functions which have been the overall reach of compliance, together with the government-mandated access to data and information. Further, the work of setting up and running a corporate ESG program involves skills and know how that a corporate compliance officer uses day-in and day-out. I hope you will join me by taking the lead at your organization.

Categories
This Week in FCPA

Episode 284 – The Holmes Found Guilty Edition


Jay returns from a lengthy holiday assignment to join Tom to look at some of the week’s top compliance and ethics stories this week in the Holmes Found Guilty edition.
Stories

  1. Elizabeth Holmes was found guilty. The Verdict (WSJ), What does it mean for Silicon Valley? (NYT), What about the victims? (Bloomberg), Will Holmes serve any time? (Fortune)
  2. 2022 to be a critical year in ESG reportingMike Munro and Guido Van Druen in a CCI.
  3. Top D&O stories from 2021. Kevin LaCroix in D&O Diary
  4. Airbnb spanked over Cuba. Mengqi Sun in WSJ Risk & Compliance Journal.   
  5. MorganStanley fined $60MM over a data breach? Aaron Nicodemus in Compliance Week (sub req’d).
  6. China’s new ABC guidelines. Andrew Reeves and Rongxin Huang in the FCPA Blog.  
  7. The ‘G’ in ESG. Lawrence Heim in PracticalESG.
  8. Key areas for BOD oversight in 2022. Holly Gregory in Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance
  9. Audrey Harris joins AMI.
  10. Broadcat sold. Broadcat Press Release.

Podcasts 

  1. Want some fun? Join Tom and One Stone Creative co-founder Megan Dougherty to explore the full MCU. In their most recent posting, check out Episode 3, Iron Man.  
  2. In January on The Compliance Life, I visited Valerie Charles, a partner at StoneTurn. Val has one of the most interesting journeys in compliance. In Part 1, she discusses her academic background and early professional career. 
  3. The Compliance Podcast Network welcomes Professor Karen Woody and her new podcast, Classroom Insider. Karen interviews some of her students to tell insider trading history in this unique pod. Check out Episode 1, where they discuss the history of insider trading. In  Episode 2, the disclosure or abstain rule. Episode 3 will take up narrowing the scope of the disclose or abstain rule. 
  4. Mikhail Reider-Gordon returns in Lies, Spies & Corporate Crimes: The Wirecard Saga, with Season 2, Episode 2 The Vagabond Rapping At Your Door.
  5. Check out 31 Days to a More Effective Compliance Program returns, which runs from January 1 to January 31. Available on the Compliance Podcast NetworkMegaphoneiTunes, and 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
The ESG Report

ESG – From the Board to the Front Line with Dan Zitting


Dan Zitting, CEO of Galvanize (now Diligent), is back on this week’s episode of the ESG Report. He and Tom Fox check in about the progress of his company’s M&A with Diligent, reporting on ESG to the board, and ESG trends for 2022.

Becoming Diligent
Dan tells Tom how Galvanize’s M&A with Diligent is progressing. “We’ve had a big year,” he says. Galvanize being part of Diligent means that they can now bring a truly integrated GRC solution from the board to the front line. “We are working really hard on technology capability that brings what GRC professionals do directly into the boardroom,” Dan remarks. “…We’re creating the ability to say, ‘Hey, alongside that board book sits information dashboards and information and analytics about how other areas of governance and risk and compliance in the front line are working’.” Real-time reporting on ESG will help the board engage in governance more proactively, he comments. 
Tom asks how the acquisition strengthens Galvanize. We have the opportunity to elevate our work all the way to the boardroom, Dan responds. Also, Diligent’s global scale means that Galvanize now has access to more resources and a bigger client market. 
The Proactive Approach
What are some of the key changes you’ve seen in the GRC space, Tom asks Dan. 2021 has accelerated progress toward an integrated risk management approach, he replies. Global pressure to take ESG seriously has also spurred this on. Both Tom and Dan agree that companies need to be nimble enough to pivot in anticipation of rapid change. “Traditional approaches just don’t work,” Dan points out. “If the way we’re going to evaluate these events is by auditing past history or looking at how we complied with controls in the past, it’s just not good enough anymore.” The better, more proactive approach to risk management involves using leading indicators rather than historical auditing activity. He describes how an automated GRC platform can help companies achieve this goal. We encourage our clients to think about creating structures and systems rather than just focusing on the software as the solution, he tells Tom.
Reporting to the Board and ESG Trends
“Particularly on ESG topics, the board is looking for the answers to simple questions,” Dan advises. Keep your report to just 5 points and their relevant benchmarks. Currently, two hot topics boards want to know about are carbon emissions and gender diversity. Dan believes the conversation will expand to other issues in the coming years, and that we’ll see ESG becoming more important throughout the organization. “I think a lot of organizations are going to be setting up a sustainability function that will ultimately have responsibility for doing that kind of accounting. We should be concentrating on that and then in turn connecting it to standards and compliance programs which is exactly what we know how to do as GRC professionals,” he remarks.
Dan shares his view on ESG trends for 2022 and beyond. The rapidly increasing pay rate for GRC professionals is a sign of how important and necessary this role has become. Boards and audit committees are also asking more questions and looking for guidance on ESG. That’s a good indication of what’s to come, Dan says.
Resources
Dan Zitting on LinkedIn | Twitter
Diligent Institute