By Adrianne Appel2025-06-17T15:17:00
The Criminal Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ), continuing its aggressive, pro-business stance, has revamped key, white-collar crime enforcement policies, including clarifying fine reductions in its self-disclosure program and curbing its use of monitorships, Matthew Galeotti, head of DOJ’s criminal division, announced on Monday.
The DOJ is also reviewing its corporate whistle-blower awards program to bring it more in line with the priorities of the current administration, Galeotti said during the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association’s Anti-Money Laundering and Financial Crimes program, in Washington, D.C.
2025-11-18T14:51:00Z By Adrianne Appel
Ten Mexican cartels will be severed from the U.S. financial system for laundering money for the Sinaloa Cartel criminal organization, according to the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).
2025-11-06T19:06:00Z By Jaclyn Jaeger
Compliance Week recently interviewed Charles Duross, former Chief of the DOJ’s Fraud Section’s FCPA Unit, to talk about the Department of Justice’s recently revised monitorship policy.
2025-08-15T18:59:00Z By Aly McDevitt
As regulators shift toward rewarding transparency, self-regulation and self-reporting, the way PFS Investments handled a longstanding problem serves as an example of how proactive remediation can turn a costly compliance error into a manageable regulatory outcome.
2025-12-12T18:25:00Z By Adrianne Appel
President Donald Trump has issued an executive order aimed at dismantling the artificial intelligence (AI) laws of California, Colorado and three other states with comprehensive laws.
2025-12-12T17:44:00Z By Neil Hodge
The U.K. Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has updated its guidance about how it evaluates corporate compliance programs when considering whether to prosecute or offer leniency to companies that have breached bribery and corruption laws.
2025-12-12T16:58:00Z By Adrianne Appel
Financial firms seeking guidance on AI, the threat of cyberattacks, market manipulation, or fraud targeting senior clients can turn to annual guidance issued by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
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