All China articles
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         News Brief News BriefHong Kong securities regulator hits repeat offender Deutsche Bank with $3M fineDeutsche Bank has agreed to pay a $3 million fine and has returned $5 million in fee overcharges to customers as part of a resolution with Hong Kong’s financial services regulator. 
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         Article ArticleChinese money-laundering networks moved $312B in dirty money through the U.S.Suspicious activity reports filed by U.S. financial institutions show that Mexican drug cartels and human traffickers are laundering dirty funds through Chinese money laundering networks (CMLNs) operating in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). 
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         Article ArticleDOJ, SEC end Investigations of GE HealthCare for possible FCPA violations in ChinaThe Securities and Exchange Commission and Department of Justice ended a seven-year review of GE HealthCare Technologies’ China unit for possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. 
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         News Brief News BriefU.S. regulators scrutinizing American companies’ transactions with Chinese firmsRecent enforcement actions by U.S. agencies overseeing customs payments and export control laws indicate increased scrutiny of business transactions between U.S. and Chinese companies. 
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         News Brief News BriefInteractive Brokers to pay $11.8M to settle thousands of U.S. sanction violationsA brokerage and investment firm will pay $11.8 million for providing services to individuals under U.S. sanctions, as well as people located in countries sanctioned by the U.S. 
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         Basic Page Basic PageConsumer electronic supply chain at risk, FCC says in proposing new rulesThousands of computers and other consumer electronic devices imported into the U.S. that were certified as safe by foreign laboratories have been identified as having links to the Chinese government or military, Brendan Carr, chair of the Federal Communications Commission, said Thursday in announcing an order to close the security ... 
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         Premium PremiumWhen it comes to trust, make sure to verifyThe increasing efforts to fight modern slavery across the globe are getting a boost from EU rules that require companies to track and report on the issue. But compliance executives can’t lean on easy databases and automated solutions, experts increasingly say, that supply chain companies may ignore or lie to. 
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         Premium PremiumU.K. Employment Rights Bill promises to thwart forced labor through new consolidated regulatorFor the past decade, the United Kingdom has tried to make companies more directly accountable for forced labor in their supply chains. But lawyers warn that the government’s latest plans to beef up protections against worker violations risk being heavily watered down and poorly policed by regulators. 
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         News Brief News BriefTrump gives TikTok 75-day reprieve after ban goes into effectPresident Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday delaying the Department of Justice (DOJ) from enforcing the long-awaited TikTok ban. While the social media platform’s fate is still up in the air, Trump signaled his support for it being sold, with the U.S. as a “partner.” 
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         News Brief News BriefTop 5 risks for 2025: U.S. uncertainty, global trade war, digital attacksA prominent risk management firm has issued its predictions for the top five risks for business in 2025, along with guidance for how organizations should prepare and respond. 
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         Opinion OpinionFive more compliance triumphs of 2024Whether you’re a multinational telecommunications company looking to certify your anti-corruption program post-settlement, or a biochemical company victimized by a “rogue” employee, seeing the light at the end of the enforcement tunnel isn’t always easy. 
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         Premium PremiumEvolving sanctions rules make continuous screening, due diligence essential in 2025The EU and U.K. have rushed to commit themselves to intensifying action on sanctions evasion after U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s victory, but any compliance managers who believe Trump will make global sanctions compliance easier in 2025 are likely to be disappointed. 
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         Premium PremiumU.K., EU enforcement regimes set to escalate, but critics question sanctions’ effectivenessWith a new political regime ready to take over in the U.S., the effectiveness of sanctions against malign foreign actors like Russia, North Korea, and Iran have come into question. While the European Union and U.K. have increased sanctions pressure, critics have publicly asked: Is it enough? 
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         News Brief News BriefTreasury set to block investment flow on American AI, semiconductor tech to ChinaThe U.S. Treasury Department has issued a final rule–and created a new division to oversee it–that will attempt to limit outbound investments to China related to sensitive technologies with military applications. 
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         News Brief News BriefDOJ proposes rule that would block sale of Americans’ personal data to Chinese, Russian firmsThe Department of Justice (DOJ) has proposed a new rule that would regulate the use of Americans’ personal information by foreign companies and foreign persons in six “countries of concern,” prohibiting and restricting the sale of data to thwart the use of data for cyber-enabled activities, espionage, coercion, influence and ... 
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         Premium PremiumRaytheon parent RTX settles false claims, defective pricing, Qatar FCPA violations for $950MThe other shoe finally dropped for Raytheon and parent company RTX, as two U.S. regulators announced nearly $1 billion in penalties to settle defective pricing in defense contracts, false claims related to inflated prices on government contracts, and bribes paid to government officials in Qatar that violated the FCPA. 
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         Premium PremiumDOJ steps up enforcement approach against AI-powered cybercrimeThe Criminal Division of the Department of Justice plans to heighten its focus on cybercrime, according to division head Nicole Argentieri. 
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         News Brief News BriefChinese steel, artificial sweetener from Xinjiang now banned under UFLPASteel and an artificial sweetener made by two Chinese companies using forced labor have been banned from entering the U.S. under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. 
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         Premium PremiumHow lax compliance led three defense companies to give military secrets to U.S. adversariesThere are dozens of ways foreign countries can get their hands on U.S. military secrets, including cyberhacking, espionage, theft, and more. But one increasingly concerning way has been through unintentional disclosures by trusted defense contractors, including Boeing, 3D Systems Corp., and RTX Corp., parent company of Raytheon. 
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         Premium PremiumChinese regulators impose six-month ban, $62M fine on PwC’s China unitChinese authorities banned PwC’s Chinese unit from performing audits in the country for six months, labeling the subsidiary’s flawed audit work as complicit in the failure of giant property developer Evergrande. 
 
             
 
            

