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The Man From FCPA

The Man From FCPA is a blog about enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and other anti-bribery statutes around the world, written primarily by Compliance Week columnist Tom Fox plus other occasional contributors. Fox is now an independent consultant assisting companies with FCPA and compliance issues, after many years as in-house counsel and outside counsel on anti-bribery and corruption issues. Fox also hosts a weekly podcast, “The FCPA Compliance and Ethics Report,” and writes an in-depth monthly column for Compliance Week as well.
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The Man From FCPA Blog
On the death of the ‘rogue engineer’
Tom Fox | January 13, 2017
For The Man from FCPA Tom Fox, the most interesting thing about the Volkswagen indictments were not that ‘rogue engineers’ were charged but that executives who participated in the cover-up were indicted.
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The Man From FCPA Blog
Study shows effects of whistleblowers on enforcement
Tom Fox | December 18, 2016
The Man From FCPA Tom Fox explores a recent academic study that found a link between information provided by whistleblowers and “heightened enforcement outcomes.”
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The Man From FCPA Blog
Tell us everything you know
Tom Fox | October 18, 2016
Getting credit for cooperating with the Department of Justice is getting a whole lot tougher. Tom Fox explores.
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The Man From FCPA Blog
A step toward the light of transparency, but only a small step
Tom Fox | May 9, 2016
The U.S. government is now requiring banks to obtain the identifies of those they do business with—a rule, notes Tom Fox, that is long overdue. But criticism of the rule could point to a greater need for legislation to streamline the current system around the creation of corporations. Will Congress step up to the plate?
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The Man From FCPA Blog
Run, don't walk, from CEO conflicts of interest
Tom Fox | March 9, 2016
When embattled energy executive Aubrey McClendon apparently took his life one day after a federal grand jury indicted him on conspiring to rig the prices of oil and gas leases in Oklahoma, he ended a particularly sad chapter in a long tale of CEO misbehavior that shows, once again, that no executive is above ethics and compliance.
Displaying 5 results