News | Compliance Week – Page 45
-
News Brief
CPPA sets sights on connected vehicles in first review
The California Privacy Protection Agency is probing the data privacy practices of connected vehicle manufacturers and their technologies as part of its first enforcement review.
-
News Brief
SEC risk alert flags staffing, policy weaknesses in AML compliance exams
Broker-dealers complying with anti-money laundering/countering the financing of terrorism requirements put forward by the SEC must be mindful of the resources they are providing for their programs during the current heightened risk environment.
-
News Brief
Martin’s Point Health Care to pay $22.5M to settle false claims case
Martin’s Point Health Care will pay nearly $22.5 million to settle allegations it violated the False Claims Act by knowingly submitting inaccurate diagnosis codes for Medicare enrollees to increase reimbursements.
-
News Brief
Senator pushes for probe into Microsoft’s ‘negligent cybersecurity practices’
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) is calling on federal agencies to hold Microsoft accountable for “negligent cybersecurity practices” that played part in a Chinese hacking campaign that targeted U.S. government email addresses.
-
News Brief
UAE approves plan to establish AML prosecutor
The United Arab Emirates has moved forward with plans to establish federal prosecution entities specializing in economic crimes and money laundering.
-
News Brief
PCAOB fines five in audit committee communications sweep
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board announced penalties ranging from $30,000-$50,000 against five firms for violations regarding communications with audit committees as part of its latest enforcement sweep.
-
News Brief
BNP Paribas nearing settlements with SEC, CFTC over off-channel comms
BNP Paribas disclosed it reached proposed settlements with the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission regarding alleged use of off-channel communications for business by employees.
-
News Brief
Banking regs seek enhanced resilience with large bank capital reforms
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal Reserve Board, and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency proposed rulemaking designed to increase capital requirements for large banks and large-scale traders.
-
News Brief
Reports: Germany targeting 2024 for new AML agency
Germany is set to establish its new Federal Bureau of Financial Intelligence as the country’s office overseeing monitoring and analysis of money laundering and sanctions enforcement, according to multiple reports.
-
News Brief
Guidance sets self-disclosure expectations for sanctions, export control lapses
Companies seeking credit for voluntarily self-disclosing potential violations of sanctions or export control laws must be mindful of the regimes at play from agencies including the DOJ, BIS, and OFAC and their differing expectations.
-
News Brief
Amex banking unit fined $15M for poor third-party oversight
American Express National Bank agreed to pay a $15 million penalty levied by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for alleged oversight failings regarding a third-party affiliate and its efforts to retain small business customers.
-
News Brief
LPL Financial fined $3M by FINRA over supervision lapses
LPL Financial was fined $3 million as part of a settlement with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority over alleged supervision failures related to transmittal of customer funds and forged signatures by employees.
-
News Brief
SEC adopts rule requiring cyber incident disclosures within four days
The Securities and Exchange Commission finalized its controversial rule requiring public companies to disclose the nature, scope, timing, and impact of cybersecurity incidents deemed to be material within four business days.
-
News Brief
PCAOB chair: Rising audit deficiency rates ‘completely unacceptable’
A steady increase in the rate of deficiencies observed by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board during audit inspections the past three years has the head of the agency calling on firms to “make changes to turn things around.”
-
News Brief
SEC appoints interim acting co-directors of exams division
The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the appointments of Natasha Vij Greiner and Keith Cassidy as interim acting co-directors of the Division of Examinations while Director Richard Best is on medical leave.
-
News Brief
Fed fines UBS $269M for Credit Suisse’s Archegos failures
The Federal Reserve Board fined UBS $268.5 million regarding recent acquisition Credit Suisse’s credit risk management failures at collapsed U.S. hedge fund Archegos Capital Management. UBS also settled matters with U.K. and Swiss authorities.
-
News Brief
Booz Allen to pay $377.5M in improper billing case
Booz Allen Hamilton agreed to pay approximately $377.5 million as part of a settlement with the Department of Justice regarding alleged False Claims Act violations stemming from improper billing of commercial and international costs in government contracts.
-
News Brief
U.K. corporate governance reforms target resilience, fraud assessment
The United Kingdom introduced for debate corporate reporting reforms that would require the country’s largest companies to set out their risk management and resilience strategies as part of required annual reporting.
-
News Brief
FTC, HHS warn hospitals over use of online tracking tech
The Federal Trade Commission and Department of Health and Human Services sent letters to approximately 130 hospital systems and telehealth providers regarding potential patient privacy violations and security risks stemming from online tracking technologies.
-
News Brief
Trump-linked SPAC settles SEC fraud charges for proposed $18M
Digital World Acquisition Corp. faces a penalty of $18 million as part of a settlement reached with the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding fraud allegations related to its dealings with Trump Media & Technology Group.