Category: Uncategorized

The First Step in Any Due Diligence Inquiry

The First Step in Any Due Diligence Inquiry

[T]here are known knowns; there are things we know we know.  We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know.  But there are also unknown unknowns – there are things we do not know we don’t know. — former Secretary of the Defense, Donald Rumsfeld It is getting pretty crowded these days out in...

Corporate Governance and Compliance — The Disconnect

Corporate Governance and Compliance — The Disconnect

For those who like to focus on anti-corruption enforcement and compliance issues, I am sure there are times readers wonder why I post articles about corporate governance. In any company, “tone-at-the-top,” requires good corporate governance.  Senior management can do everything necessary to make a compliance program work but without effective governance at the board level, the tone at the top may be drowned out by other problems...

Lawyers, Bribes and Money

Lawyers, Bribes and Money

It is surprising how often companies rely on outside auditors to detect and then investigate suspected bribery.  I have nothing against outside auditors — the Big 4 and other auditing companies are indispensable as part of an internal review team.  But companies are making a strategic error when they rely solely on auditors to review the company books, identify potential suspicious payments, and then help the company...

Asking Too Much from the Justice Department?

Asking Too Much from the Justice Department?

The Justice Department has promised to issue guidance on the meaning of the FCPA and the application of the law to infinite permutations in the real world.  As I try to remind everyone, there is little chance that such guidance will resolve many of the more nettlesome issues facing companies, Audit Committees, compliance officers, general counsels and other professionals. The most important point may be the...

Simplifying the US Criminal Code

Simplifying the US Criminal Code

The US Criminal Code continues to grow.  Each year the Code grows in complexity and sheer number of pages and provisions.  As it grows, the boundaries between federal crimes and state and local crimes is blurred.  Multiple statutes now apply to any given act and prosecutors have greater discretion to charge defendants with single or multiple crimes. Good government requires that the code be simplified...

The Responsible Corporate Officer

The Responsible Corporate Officer

Prosecutors are under the gun – and rightfully so.  Whether they have engaged in deliberate misconduct or just plain sloppy, there is no excuse for their recent conduct.  What is equally troubling is how prosecutors are stretching the law to achieve unfair results.  As a former supervisor used to tell me in the US Attorney’s Office, there are plenty of cases to bring and no reason...

Phasing-In Your Company's New Anti-Corruption Compliance Program

Phasing-In Your Company's New Anti-Corruption Compliance Program

With all the hysteria surrounding anti-corruption compliance programs, companies try to react quickly, adopt a compliance program and then implement it.  If done too quickly, it is certain to “fail.” An anti-corruption program needs to be phased in, while assuring adequate buy-in, modification and monitoring.  With a phased-in and continuous monitoring approach, a compliance program will be securely established and in the end, more successful. ...

Punishing the Wrongdoer: Environmental Crimes and the Lack of Criminal Intent

Punishing the Wrongdoer: Environmental Crimes and the Lack of Criminal Intent

I wish I didn’t know now what I didn’t know then — Toby Keith  It is an axiom of criminal law – punishment is meted out to punish wrongdoers when they consciously engage in wrongful conduct. In the white collar context, an action becomes criminal when the actor possesses the requisite state of mind, i.e. the actor knows what he or she is doing is...

Lindsey and the FCPA

Lindsey and the FCPA

I am sorry to burst everyone’s bubble but the Lindsey decision does not reflect any repudiation or cut back in FCPA enforcement.  To the contrary, Judge Matz’s decision was in response to “standard” prosecutorial misconduct violations. Nothing in Judge Matz’s decision had anything to do with the Justice Department’s aggressive FCPA enforcement program.   Putting all this aside, the Lindsey decision will have an impact on the...

Jon May Argues for FCPA Reform

Jon May Argues for FCPA Reform

In an interesting article in the National Journal, Jon May argues for FCPA reform.  The text of the article and a link is attached: The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is lobbying Congress to amend the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act to lessen the financial burden on U.S. companies doing business in foreign countries. That burden has cost U.S. companies upwards of a trillion dollars and has...