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Compliance & Ethics Program Assessments: Part 4 – Anti-Bribery Reviews

by Jeff Kaplan, Mar 15, 2010

The importance of C&E program assessments was underscored earlier this month when a working group of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (“OECD”) representing the thirty OECD member nations and eight other countries issued its much-awaited Good Practice Guidance for anti-bribery compliance programs, a set of C&E standards which seems likely to become the global equivalent of the Corporate Sentencing Guidelines.

Among other things, the Guidance provides that companies should undertake “periodic reviews of the ethics and compliance programmes or measures, designed to evaluate and improve their effectiveness in preventing and detecting foreign bribery, taking into account relevant developments in the field, and evolving international and industry standards.”

Of course, the notion of assessing anti-bribery programs is not entirely new. Indeed, in the Siemens prosecution the government faulted the company for (among other things) not having reviewed its FCPA program.

Additionally, the general logic of C&E program assessments has long had a special force in the anti-bribery realm. That is because the breadth, depth and complexity of anti-bribery compliance programs make them particularly prone to operational failure. An informed and independent program assessment can help identify possible weaknesses and prevent such failures. Indeed, earlier this year, KPMG’s Audit Committee Institute listed anti-bribery compliance program reviews among its ten recommended “to do’s” for audit committee members.

What, then, should an anti-bribery compliance review entail?

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Fraud, Bribery & Corruption: What Will Happen in 2010?

by Paul J. McNulty, Dec 31, 2009

My anti-corruption enforcement prediction for 2010 is that the Department of Justice will undergo a major leadership transition within the section responsible for FCPA enforcement. Therefore, while the four-year surge in enforcement will continue for at least the next few years, we’ll be well into the summer before

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The Era of Mega Fines – Implications for Directors and Officers

by Jeff Kaplan, Feb 02, 2009

While the Corporate Sentencing Guidelines went into effect in 1991, it was not until 1996 that the real punitive potential of the law was realized – with the imposition of a $340 million criminal fine in a case against Daiwa Bank. Writing that same year in the Caremark decision,

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