Posted inAnti-Bribery

Will Olympus see FCPA trouble in China?

Trouble seems to follow Japan-based Olympus. The company, which admitted in 2011 to a $1.7 billion accounting fraud, is once again facing corruption allegations. Olympus hired China-based Anyuanto to help turn it around, despite the fact that Anyuan’s chairman had previously been convicted of fraud; Olympus’ contract wasn’t with Anyuan directly; and Olympus made $180,000 in payments upfront for “unspecified services.” So far an internal probe has turned up nothing interesting. We’ll have to wait to see what regulators uncover.

Posted inAnti-Bribery

The Butcher, the Baker and the Candlestick Maker … in Cuba, they are all covered under the FCPA

The winds of change are coming to Cuba, and U.S. businesses are slowly, but surely, beginning to get their long-awaited opportunities to set up shop in one of the world’s last truly socialist states. But this brings with it a most unusual FCPA liability that makes doing business in Cuba impossible without a really good compliance program. Tom Fox discusses.

Posted inAnti-Bribery

FCPA enforcement ramps up in Q1 2016

If it looks like FCPA enforcement is at a low ebb, judging by the amount of activity we saw in 2015, don’t be fooled. The SEC is prosecuting FCPA cases with vigor, and if some of the current enforcement actions underway are any indicator, we will not see a significant downturn of FCPA investigations any time soon. CW’s Tom Fox looks at the trend inside.

Posted inAnti-Bribery

Brazilian corruption investigation goes supernova

As billionaire construction magnate Marcelo Odebrecht prepares to turn state’s evidence in the corruption investigation that covers Petrobras, Odebrecht SA, and the Brazilian presidency itself, it seems that we might finally get some insight on just how pervasive Brazil’s  so-called “cartel of corruption” really was. Is anybody ready to handle the truth?

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Is FIFA entitled to restitution as a victim?

Image: It appears the Fédération Internationale de Football Association is trying to shed its corrupt image in favor of playing the victim. The international governing body of football has asked the Justice Department for its share of monies it obtains through forfeiture and penalties from individuals prosecuted around the FIFA corruption scandal. But has the entity put any work into cleaning up its own house before seeking help? FCPA blogger Tom Fox explores.

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Weekends are for … fraud?

The recent $101M heist from the Central Bank of Bangladesh would have been impossible had it not occurred over a weekend, and had weekends themselves not been observed on different days of the week in Bangladesh than they are in the United States. One thing’s for sure: Whenever the weekend happened, everybody was unhappy by Monday.

Posted inAnti-Bribery

Petrobras fallout into the private sector continues

A 19-year prison sentence handed down in connection with Brazil’s widening “Car Wash” scandal is a wake-up call for any company that has done business with Odebrecht SA, the largest construction company in Brazil and, indeed, South America. The scandal, which began with energy firm Petrobras, should enforce that it’s time to begin reviewing the whole of your contractual relationships to see if there are any FCPA, U.K. Bribery Act, or other anti-corruption issues you need to address.

Posted inAnti-Bribery

VimpelCom and the conscious indifference of a board under the FCPA

Image: The joint Justice Dept., SEC settlement with telecom giant VimpelCom resolving a longstanding FCPA violation will cost the company more than $795 million, say reports. But there’s a bright side, says CW Columnist Tom Fox. The multiple bribery schemes seem to have been supported by top management and will provide a wealth of case studies for companies hoping to avoid VimpelCom’s fate.

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