Posts Tagged ‘SEC enforcement’
Philips Settles FCPA Case With SEC
Manufacturing giant Philips has agreed to pay $62 million to settle FCPA charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission, for a rather ho-hum corruption scheme in China that compliance officers have seen many times before. The case is still interesting, however, because this is Philips’ second FCPA settlement in 10 years. That raises the question…
Read MoreAnother Cyber Disclosure Sanction
Words matter in SEC filings. The Securities and Exchange Commission gave us another example of that point recently when it fined a technology company $3 million for misleading disclosures about a ransomware attack the company had suffered — and the confusion arose from how the company used the word “could.” The company in question is…
Read MoreOn Boards, Disclosures, and Corporate Ethics
The Securities and Exchange Commission dropped a subtle hint this week about its latest expectations for corporate boards and what they disclose to investors. Corporate governance professionals might want to take a look, since I suspect we’ll be hearing more on this issue in the future. The case involves McDonalds and its former CEO, Stephen…
Read MoreHoneywell Pays $160M on FCPA Case
Industrial manufacturing giant Honeywell International has agreed to pay $160 million to settle civil and criminal FCPA charges that the company bribed foreign government officials in Brazil and Algeria. The case has lingered like a cloud over Honeywell’s head for years. The misconduct itself happened in the early 2010s, and Honeywell first disclosed more than…
Read MoreSEC Eyes More Use of Penalties
Brace yourselves, compliance officers: the head of enforcement at the Securities and Exchange Commission delivered a speech today promising a continued emphasis on monetary penalties as part of corporate settlements, until people and corporations “realize that compliance with securities laws is cheaper than violating them.” SEC enforcement director Gurbir Grewal delivered his remarks at the…
Read MoreOracle Hit 2nd Time on FCPA Violations
The Securities and Exchange Commission has sanctioned Oracle for violations of the FCPA, the software giant’s second such incident in 10 years and one that provides a chance for the rest of us to talk about recidivist FCPA offenders. What happened? In one sense, the usual. Throughout the 2010s, Oracle subsidiaries in India, Turkey, and…
Read MoreMorgan Stanley Fined on Data Destruction
We have quite the reminder on IT risk today courtesy of the Securities and Exchange Commission. The agency just fined a subsidiary of Morgan Stanley for poor data protection practices, which even led to one incident where the bank’s old IT equipment was sold at auction with customer data still on the hard drives. The…
Read MoreBig Wall Street Settlement Coming Soon
Heads up, compliance officers! Word on the street is that regulators are poised to announce a billion-dollar settlement with numerous Wall Street banks for employees’ improper use of messaging apps and associated record-keeping failures, a case bound to give us more clues about the enforcement appetite among the SEC and other agencies these days. The…
Read MoreE&Y, the SEC, and ‘Gatekeepers’
The saying in Washington is that it’s not the crime that ruins you; it’s the coverup. Ernst & Young is learning this week how true that is, with the Securities and Exchange Commission’s $100 million fine against the firm for cheating on CPA exams and then failing to be forthcoming about the breadth of that…
Read MoreCohnReznick Dinged $1.9M on Sloppy Procedures
The Securities and Exchange Commission has fired a shot across the bow of the auditing world, charging audit firm CohnReznick and three of its partners on Wednesday with improper professional conduct involving two corporate clients that had previously faced charges of accounting fraud. The companies in question are Sequential Brands, which the SEC charged with…
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