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This Week in FCPA

This Week in FCPA-Episode 156 – the Farewell to May edition

As the lads wish a fond farewell to May, enjoy the Astros still leading the MLB with the best record and looking forward to the start of summer, they return to discuss both events some of this week’s top compliance and ethics stories which caught their collective eyes.

  1. Dave Lefort’s Top 10 takeaways from Compliance Week 2019. (sub req’d) Tom, Mary Shirley, Lisa Fine and Amii Bernard-Bahn provide their reflections on a cross-posted podcast.
  2. Why ethics matters at the top.
  3. Can UNCAC help Mozambique recover funds stolen through corruption? Rick Messick explores.
  4. What is cooperation and remediation? Matt Kelly explores.
  5. Why is pre-acquistion DD from the compliance perspective now critical in France? Antoine F. Kirry, Frederick T. Davis, and Alexandre Bisch discuss.
  6. How much does a monitorship cost? Jay continues his multipart series on monitorships .
  7. How do you audit your investigative protocol? Mike Volkov explains in a 3-part series on his blog site Corruption, Crime and Compliance.
  8. Why is visibility key for compliance? Elsa Chan explores.
  9. CITGO now part of PdVSA/Venezuelan corruption scandal. Dick Cassin reports. Marissa Luck.
  10. Is there a legal duty to set the right ‘tone at the top?”
  11. This week Tom had a special 5-part podcast series sponsored by Hanzo on using AI and data analytics in compliance investigations. Check out the following: Part 1-Current State of Investigations; Part 2-Using AI and Web-Based Evidence; Part 3– Overcoming Investigative Challenges; Part 4-Improving Investigative Efficiencies; Part 5-Where are investigations headed? The podcast is available on multiple sites: the FCPA Compliance Report, iTunes, JDSupra, Megaphone,YouTube,  Spotifyand Corporate Compliance Insights. The Compliance Podcast Networkjoins C-Suite Radio.
  12. Join Tom in Boston for industry leading Compliance Master Class at the offices on AMI on June 11 & 12. Listeners who attend will receive a complimentary copy of The Compliance Handbook. Registration and Information is here. Join Tom, Eric Feldman, Vin DiCianni and Jay at the AMI Roundtable in Boston on June 13 for a deep dive into the DOJ’s new Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs-2019 Guidance. Information and registration is here.

Tom Fox is the Compliance Evangelist and can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Jay Rosen is Mr. Monitor and can be reached at jrosen@affiliatedmonitors.com.
For more information on how an independent monitor can help improve your company’s ethics and compliance program, visit our sponsor Affiliated Monitors at www.affiliatedmonitors.com.

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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report-Episode 429, James Koukios on MoFo’s February Anti-Corruption Newsletter

In this episode I have back with me, fan favorite James Koukios, partner at Morrison and Foerster.  This is Part 2 of a two-part series where we discuss the firm’s always great Top 10 International Anti-Corruption Developments newsletter. In this episode, we take a look at some of the key highlights from the February newsletter. In the most recent episode, we detailed some of the key developments from the January newsletter. We also have a special segment on the FCPA Opinion Release Procedure. Some of the highlights from the podcast include:

  • DOJ Files $38 Million Civil Forfeiture Action in Connection with Malaysia Sovereign Wealth Fund Scandal
  • What is the role of civil forfeiture in anti-corruption enforcement?
  • 9thCircuit Court of Appeals Vacates Federal Whistleblower Retaliation Verdict Against Bio-Rad. What does this mean for whistleblower cases going forward?
  • UK Serious Fraud Office Closes Two Foreign Bribery Cases. Gutless move on the part of the new director or is something else going on?
  • What is the Opinion Release Procedure? How a company can use it? What happens on the DOJ side once a request comes into the DOJ?

For further reading, see the Morrison and Foerster Top 10 International Anti-Corruption Developments for February 2019, by clicking here.

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This Week in FCPA

This Week in FCPA-Episode 151 – the World Domination edition

Is the US utilizing FCPA enforcement for world domination? Recovering screenwriter Jay Rosen and frustrated novelist Tom Fox consider this while they also take a look at some of this week’s top compliance and ethics stories which caught their collective eyes this week. Stories include:

  1. Does the statute of limitations run while Trump is in office? Sara Kropf on Grand Jury Target.
  2. What is the compliance response to the Varsity Blues scandal? Sandra Erez reports on Corporate Compliance Insights.
  3. NYDFS cybersecurity requirements are live, is your organization ready? Michael McGrath in Corporate Compliance Insights.
  4. Matt Kelly has a twitter storm on Boeing, sales strategy and ethics. Check out the full storm on Radical Compliance. Tom and Matt take a deep dive into the imbroglio on Episode 120 of Compliance into the Weeds.
  5. Is the US using FCPA to garner world domination? Henry Astier opines on BBC.com.
  6. What are the best practices for managing employee hotline reports? Jaclyn Jaeger reports in Compliance Week. (sub req’d)
  7. What do the WME companies have in common? Aarti Maharaj in the FCPA Blog.
  8. Transparency challenges in CSR. Dunstan Allison-Hope in BSR.org.
  9. Tom is speaking at ECI’s IMPACT 2019 next week in Dallas about the importance of measuring the quality and maturity of your high quality E&C program. Regisration and information is availablehere.
  10. Join Tom and Jay at Compliance Week 2019 on May 20-22, in Washington DC. Listeners to this podcast can receive a $300 discount by using the code TOM300. You can check out the full agendasee who’s speaking, and review registration information
  11. This week Tom visits with the team from Assent Compliance on Supply Chain Risk Management. Check out the following: Part 1-Who is Assent?; Part 2– Introduction to Supply Chain risk management; Part 3– Development of Supply Chain risk management; Part 4-Supply Chain failures; and Part 5-Market drivers for continued development. The podcast is available on multiple sites: the FCPA Compliance Report, iTunes, JDSupra, Panoplyand YouTube. The Compliance Podcast Network is now also on Spotify and Corporate Compliance Insights.
  12. Sarah Hadden joins the Everything Compliance as our latest panelist. Listen in on Episode 45, the Drinkin’ the Kool-Aid

Tom Fox is the Compliance Evangelist and can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Jay Rosen is Mr. Monitor and can be reached at jrosen@affiliatedmonitors.com.
For more information on how an independent monitor can help improve your company’s ethics and compliance program, visit our sponsor Affiliated Monitors at www.affiliatedmonitors.com.

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This Week in FCPA

This Week in FCPA-Episode 149 – the White Privilege edition

After a week hiatus, the lads are back. While debating white privilege and the Varsity Blues scandal, they also take a look at some of this week’s top compliance and ethics stories which caught their collective eyes this week.

  1. Guilty pleas begin in the Varsity Blues scandal. Antonio Blumberg report in the Huffington Post. For those who did not plead guilty, additional charges filed. Melissa Korn reports in the Wall Street Journal. Jay interviews Justin Paperny about the Varsity Blues sting, in Corporate Compliance Insights. For one of the best and fullest explanations of the white privilege component, see Caitlan Flanagan’s article in The Atlantic.
  2. Does your company lack integrity? Mike Volkov gives 5 signs which show it does, on Corruption, Crime and Compliance.
  3. Standard Chartered joins the $1 bn fine club. Emily Flitter reportsin the New York Times. Jon Rusch takes a deep dive in Dipping Through Geometries.
  4. What is the intersection of DD and AI? Merritt Smith considers in the FCPA Blog.
  5. OFAC enforcement action demonstrates need for pre-acquisition due diligence? Lawyers from Paul, Weiss in the NYU Compliance and Enforcement Blog.
  6. What is ethical AI? Tom Austin explores on the Analyst Syndicate.
  7. What are the shifting reasons for FCPA enforcement? Kevin Keller on the Global Anti-corruption Blog.
  8. What are the risks to investors in Uber? Shannon Bond reports in the Financial Times. (sub req’d)
  9. This week Tom explores the intersection of Shakespeare and Compliance through the lens of King Lear. Check out the following: Part 1-Innovation;Part 2– Changing Your Focus; Part 3– Engaging Your Audience; Part 4-a Different Interpretation; and Part 5-The Fool.The podcast is available on multiple sites: the FCPA Compliance Report, iTunes, JDSupra, Panoplyand YouTube. The Compliance Podcast Network is now also on Spotify and Corporate Compliance Insights.

Tom Fox is the Compliance Evangelist and can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Jay Rosen is Mr. Monitor and can be reached at jrosen@affiliatedmonitors.com.
For more information on how an independent monitor can help improve your company’s ethics and compliance program, visit our sponsor Affiliated Monitors at www.affiliatedmonitors.com.

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Shakespeare on Compliance

Shakespeare on Compliance – A Different Interpretation

I recently saw the performance of King Lear with Glenda Jackson as the mad king. It was a magnificent production and if you have the chance to see, I would certainly urge you to do so. The production had many interesting features and interpretations which seemed to be great entrees into several compliance topics. The play was directed by Sam Gold and it was scored by Phillip Glass but the star power was derived from Jackson as King Lear. It was a fabulous take on the story and one that will resonate directly to our turbulent times. Therefore, inspired by octogenarian Jackson and her performance, I am going to use King Lear as a deep dive into several compliance topics this week. In this episode, I want to discuss how Jackson, starring in the role of King Lear, added a new level of complexity, nuance and interpretation to the entire play.

Jackson is an octogenarian, the oldest person I have ever seen play Lear. Having seen my two parents age, I have some understanding that a person does not gain in stature, power or strength after they cross the 80-birthday mark. In other productions I have seen Lear roar and rail at Cordelia however, Jackson played it understated with nary a raised voice.
Even after the intermission, one of the most powerful scenes is when Lear carries of the lifeless body of Cordelia. Lear is in shock, bereaving and clearly quite mad. Yet to pull this off this scene requires an actress playing Cordelia to be of a size that the actor playing Lear can physically carry. Jackson is far too frail to do so. In this penultimate scene she sat on the stage with Cordelia’s head cradled in her lap, gently stroking her dead daughter’s hair. It was one of the most tender, loving and affectionate presentations I have ever seen in Lear.
The same week as the Mobile TeleSystems PJSC (MTS) Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement action was announced there were two significant speeches by Department of Justice officials. The first was by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. The second was by Assistant Attorney General Brian Benczkowski.
I want to focus on how both speeches explain what many found to be the stunning result Cognizant Technology Solutions Corporation (CTSH) received when it obtained a declination for its FCPA violations, both from the strategic and tactical levels.
Taken together, these two speeches made clear the reasons why the DOJ handed a declination to CTSH. The company engaged in the type of conduct, after it discovered its FCPA violation, that the DOJ wanted to reward and encourage going forward. Rosenstein made this crystal clear in his remarks, when he stated, “We aim to incentivize companies to report crimes, disgorge illegal proceeds, take remedial actions, and identify accountable officials so we can prosecute them – and do it all promptly. That will result in less corporate crime in the future.” This is not going soft on corporate crime; this is bringing corporate America into a role in the global fight against bribery and corruption.
Yet the Benczkowski speech had equal import for the compliance professional. The DOJ rewarded CTSH for not only its quick decision to self-disclose and then doing so; they also rewarded the company for having a robust pre-existing compliance program even though C-Suite executives led the bribery effort. This recognition by the DOJ makes even more important the corporate compliance function and a corporate compliance program to protect an organization if nefarious actors arise.

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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report-Episode 425, the Fresenius FCPA Enforcement Action

In this episode I have back fan fav Mike Volkov. We break down the recently released Fresenius FCPA enforcement action. Some of the highlights from the podcast include:

  • A detailed discuss of the underlying facts.
  • What were the bribery schemes? Some old and some new but every compliance professional should study them.
  • How and why did Fresenius let the conduct go on for so long.
  • How was the company able to garner a NPA?
  • How did the company obtain its 40% discount for its fine and penalties?
  • Why was a monitor required?
  • What are the lessons learned from this enforcement action?

To take a deeper dive into the Fresenius FCPA enforcement action, check out Mike Volkov’s three-part series on his blog site, Corruption, Crime and Compliance. You can also check out my multi-part series on the FCPA Compliance Report.

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This Week in FCPA

This Week in FCPA-Episode 148 – the Hope Springs Eternal edition

As Opening Day near and the Astros are predicted to unseat Jay’s Red Sox to win the 2019 World Series, both lads are eternally hopeful for their hometown heroes. While debating this issue, they also take a look at some of this week’s top compliance and ethics stories which caught their collective eyes this week.

  1. Former Hong Kong official sentenced for FCPA violations. Harry Cassin reports in the FCPA Blog. Matthew Goldstein reports on how to reduce your FCPA sentence in the New York Times.
  2. SEC awards two whistleblowers $50MM. Kristin Broughton in the WSJ Risk and Compliance Journal. Matt Kelly takes a deep dive in Radical Compliance. Doug Cornelius gets snarky in Compliance Building. Jonathan Marks weighs in on Board and Fraud.
  3. Jonathan Ruschand William Weaver debate whether corruption can be measured. Both on the FCPA Blog.
  4. Was it fraud or was it incompetency? The HP v. Autonomy civil trial begins in London. The BBC
  5. What is the difference in whistleblowing and extortion? Joe Mont explains in Compliance Week. (sub req’d)
  6. What are your supply chain risks? Russ Berland explores in Part 1 of a two-part blog post series on Corporate Compliance Insights.
  7. Looking at enforcement of financial market crimes in Canada and UK. Anita Anand reports in NYU’s Compliance and Enforcement Blog.
  8. What steps can you take to reduce whistleblower retaliation? Matt Kelly opines in Navex Global’s Ethics and Compliance Matters
  9. OECD slams Canadian government for interfering in SNC-Lavalin corruption investigation. Jonathan Rausch reports in Dipping Through Geometries.
  10. Join Tom and AMI’s Jesse Caplan for a 5-part exploration of emerging issues in healthcare compliance and monitoring. Check out the following: Part 1-Opioid Crisis-Legal issue; Part 2– Opioid Crisis-compliance solution; Part 3– the regulators; Part 4-the monitoring healthcare organizations; and Part 5-proactive monitoring. The podcast is available on multiple sites: the FCPA Compliance Report, iTunes, JDSupra, Panoplyand YouTube. The Compliance Podcast Network is now also on Spotifyand Corporate Compliance Insights.
  11. In Houston on April 11? Join the Greater Houston Business and Ethics Roundtable for a presentation for one year look back on GDPR. Registration and information are here.
  12. Check out the latest edition of Great Women in Compliance where Mary Shirley visits with Marianne Ibrahim.

Tom Fox is the Compliance Evangelist and can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Jay Rosen is       Mr. Monitor and can be reached at jrosen@affiliatedmonitors.com.
For more information on how an independent monitor can help improve your company’s ethics and compliance program, visit our sponsor Affiliated Monitors at www.affiliatedmonitors.com.

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This Week in FCPA

This Week in FCPA-Episode 146 – Ides of March (formerly St. Patty’s Day) edition

On this Ides of March tAs the St. Patrick’s Day weekend is upon, and we are all Irish at least for a day, Tom and Jay are joined by our favorite Irishman (and the Coolest Guy in Compliance), Matt Kelly to take a look at some of this week’s top compliance and ethics stories which caught their collective eyes this week.

  1. Massive corruption scandal rocks college admissions across the country. Dana Goldstein and Jack Healy in the NYT. Douglas Belkin and Jennifer Levitz in the WSJ. Nick Anderson in the Washington Post.
  2. FARA, FARA, FARA. Katie Brenner in the NYT. Dan Packel in Law.com.
  3. Former KPMG national practice leader convicted in PCAOB scandal. Michael Rapaport reports in the Wall Street Journal.
  4. Will the US finally clamp down on shell companies? Matthew Stephenson is cautiously optimistic in the Global Anti-Corruption Blog. General David Petraeus and Sheldon Whitehouse explain why it’s a national security issue in an Op-Ed piece in the Washington Post.
  5. Head coaches behaving badly as LSU head basketball coach suspended indefinitely in NCAA recruiting scandal. Ross Dellenger reports in Sports Illustrated.
  6. DOJ quietly modifies Corporate FCPA Enforcement Policy. Clare Hudson and Adam Dobrik report in GIR. (sub req’d) DOJ policy of self-disclosure making headway. Mingqi Sun in the WSJ Risk and Compliance Journal.
  7. Did Oracle violate the FCPA? (Tech Central)
  8. 1MDB scandal back in the news as former Goldman Sachs banker Timothy Leissner and Roger Ng banned from banking industry for life. David Simpson reports in Law360. (sub req’d) Also-did Jho Low contribute to Trump campaign? Tom Wright and Bradley Hope in the Wall Street Journal.
  9. How can you engage a BOD on cyber risks? Deloitte’s Khalid Kark, Tonie Leatherberry and Debbie McCormack in the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance.
  10. Tom continues with fan fav podcast series this week, the Adventures in Compliance this week.Check out the following: Part 1-The Red Circle; Part 2-The Abbey Grange; Part 3– The Priory School; Part 4-The Six Napoleons; and Part 5-The Empty House. The podcast is available on multiple sites: the FCPA Compliance Report, iTunes, JDSupra, Panoply and YouTube. The Compliance Podcast Network is now also on Spotify. It is now on Corporate Compliance Insights.
  11. In a special guest segment, Matt Kelly reports on the highlights from Ethisphere’s Global Business Ethics Summit, which was held this past week in New York.
  12. Check out the latest edition of Popcorn and Compliance where Tom and Jay look at Captain Marvel. It posts Saturday, March 16 on the Compliance Podcast Network.

Tom Fox is the Compliance Evangelist and can be reached at tfox@tfoxlaw.com. Jay Rosen is       Mr. Monitor and can be reached at jrosen@affiliatedmonitors.com.
For more information on how an independent monitor can help improve your company’s ethics and compliance program, visit our sponsor Affiliated Monitors at www.affiliatedmonitors.com.

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FCPA Compliance Report

FCPA Compliance Report – Episode 343 – James Koukios on Morrison & Foerster’s Top Ten International Anti-Corruption Developments for May 2017

Top Ten International Anti-Corruption Developments for May 2017. Our topics include:

  1. FCPA Assistant Chief BJ Stieglitz has been selected for detail to UK Financial Enforcement Authorities. We discuss how a prosecutor works overseas, what this might mean for prosecutions going forward in the US and UK, and the relationship of the DOJ with its British counterparts.
  2. The DOJ has moved to terminate its DPA over Hewlett-Packard. We discuss what it means to have a DPA terminated and the DOJ’s role in this phase. We also consider the decision-making process if a DPA has to be extended due to continued or new conduct by a company under such an agreement.
  3. Finally, we consider some of the difficulties of the DOJ’s Challenges in Obtaining Foreign Evidence through a recent ruling in the Civil Forfeiture Case. On May 9, 2017, In the case of United States v. Prevezon Holdings Ltd., Southern District of New York Judge William H. Pauley III ruled that certain evidence obtained by prosecutors from foreign sources was admissible in a civil asset forfeiture case, notwithstanding that the documents lacked the requisite certifications under the Federal Rules of Evidence. We consider the process for getting information from overseas; why it takes so long, and what happens if it does not meet US evidentiary or even admissibility standards?

Click here to see a full copy of the firm’s Top Ten International Anti-Corruption Developments publication for May 2017. James Koukios returns to discuss MoFo’s Top Ten International Anti-Corruption Developments for May 2017. 

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Blog

Day 22 Of One Month to More Effective Internal Controls-Lessons in Failures of Internal Controls

Cease and Desist Order also covered former employee Jeannot Lorenz, and the SEC spelled out a bribery scheme facilitated by both a failure and override of company internal controls. The matter involved Halliburton’s work in Angola with the national oil company Sonangol, which had a local content requirement. The nefarious acts giving rise to the FCPA violation involved a third-party agent for Halliburton’s contracts with the state-owned enterprise. According to the SEC Press Release, this matter initially began in 2008 when officials at Sonangol, Angola’s state oil company, informed Halliburton management it had to partner with more local Angolan-owned businesses to satisfy local content regulations. The company was successful in meeting the requirement for the 2008 contracting period. However, when a new round of oil company projects came up for bid in 2009, Sonangol indicated, “Halliburton needed to partner with more local Angolan-owned businesses to satisfy content requirements.” Halliburton’s prior work on local content was deemed insufficient, and “Sonangol remained extremely dissatisfied” with the company’s efforts. Sonangol backed up this dissatisfaction with a potential threat to veto further work by Halliburton for Sonangol. Under this backdrop, the local business team moved forward with a lengthy effort to retain a local Angolan company (Angolan agent) owned by a former Halliburton employee who was a friend and neighbor of the Sonangol official who would ultimately approve the award of the business to Halliburton. In each of these attempts, the company bumped up against its internal controls around third parties, both on the sales side and through the supply chain. The first attempt to hire the Angolan agent was as a third-party sales agent, which under Halliburton parlance is called a “commercial agent.” In this initial attempt, internal control was held as the business folks abandoned their efforts to contract with the Angolan agent. The first attempt to hire the Angolan agent was rejected because the local Business Development (BD) team wanted to pay a percentage fee based, in part, upon work previously secured under the 2008 contract and not new work going forward. Additional fees would be paid on new business secured under the 2009 contract. This payment scheme for the Angolan agent was rejected as the company generally paid commercial agents for work they helped obtain and not work secured in the past. Further, the company was not seeking to increase its commercial agents during this time frame (Halliburton had entered into a Deferred Prosecution Agreement (DPA) for FCPA violations in December 2008 for the actions of its subsidiary KBR in Nigeria). Finally, “As outlined by Halliburton’s legal department, to retain the local Angolan company as a commercial agent, it would be required to undergo a lengthy due diligence and review process that included retaining outside U.S. legal counsel experienced in FCPA compliance to conduct interviews. Halliburton’s in-house counsel noted that “[t] he is undoubtedly a tortuous, painful administrative process, but given our company’s recent US Department of Justice/SEC settlement, the board of directors has mandated this high level of review.” In other words, the internal controls held and were not circumvented or overoverriddene Angolan agent was then moved from commercial agent status to supplier so the approval process would be easier. The proposed reason for this switch in designations was that the Angolan agent would provide “real estate maintenance, travel, and ground transportation services” to the company in Angola. However, the internal controls process around using a supplier also had rigor as they required a competitive bidding process which would take several months to complete. Over-riding this internal control, the local business team could contract with the Angolan agent for these services in September 2009 and increase the contract price without the Angolan agent going through the internal procurement controls. A second internal control overridden was the procurement requirement that the supplier procurement process begins with “an assessment of the critically or risk of a material or services”; not with a particular supplier and certainly not without “competitive bids or providing an adequate single source justification.” However, as the Order noted, the process was taken backward, with the Angolan agent selected and then “backed into a list of services it could provide.” Finally, a separate internal control required “contracts over $10,000 in countries with a high risk of corruption, such as Angola, to be reviewed and approved by a Tender Review Committee.” Inexplicably this internal control was also circumvented or overoverriddent. This arrangement was not deemed sufficient local content by Sonangol officials. After all of this and further negotiations, Halliburton entered into another agreement with the Angolan agent, where the company would lease commercial and residential real estate and then sublease the properties back to Halliburton at a substantial markup and also provide real estate transaction management consulting services (the “Real Estate” contract). This Real Estate contract also had to go through an internal control process. Initially, there were questions the company about the Real Estate contract as a single source for the procurement function, the upfront payment terms to the Angolan agent, the high costs, and the rationale for entering into subleases for properties that would cost less if leased directly from the landlord. Indeed, “One Finance & Accounting reviewer at headquarters noted that he could not think of any legitimate reason to pay the local Angolan company over $13 million under the Real Estate Transaction Management Agreement and that it would not have cost that much to run Halliburton’s entire real estate department in Angola.” Halliburton’s internal controls required that it had to be justified when the company used a single source. This justification would require a showing of preference for quality, technical, execution, or other reasons, none of which were demonstrated by the Angolan agent. Finally, if such a single source was used, the reasons had to be documented in Halliburton’s internal controls language “identified and justified.” The company documented none. Finally, as the internal controls were either circumvented or over-ridden, “As a consequence, internal audit was kept in the dark about the transactions, and its late 2010 yearly review did not examine them.” This was yet another internal control failure built on the previous failures noted above. So how many internal controls failures can you spot? Whatever the number, the lesson for the compliance practitioner is that you must do more than have internal controls. They must be followed and be effective. If you are doing business in high-risk regions, you have to test the controls and back up your testing by seeing if payments are being made in those regions. Perhaps the best concept would be Reaganian, trust but verify.  

Three Key Takeaways

  1. Internal controls must be shown to be effective.
  2. Circumvention and management override of internal controls must be documented to pass muster.
  3. Internal controls must be tested, and that testing must be verified with an independent source of investigation.

Internal controls must be tested and verified to demonstrate effectiveness. For more information on improving your internal controls management process, visit this month’s sponsor Workiva at workiva.com.