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FCPA Compliance Audits: Lessons from Recent Investigations Monitoring and Improving the Effectiveness of FCPA Compliance Programs
Today’s faculty features:
1pm Eastern | 12pm Central | 11am Mountain | 10am Pacific
The audio portion of the conference may be accessed via the telephone or by using your computer's speakers. Please refer to the instructions emailed to registrants for additional information. If you have any questions, please contact Customer Service at 1-800-926-7926 ext. 10.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2013
Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A
Peter Viksnins, Director in the Forensic Services, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Washington, D.C.
Albert A. Vondra, Partner, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Cleveland
David A. Wilson, Partner, Thompson Hine, Washington, D.C.
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Continuing Education Credits
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David A. Wilson Thompson Hine Albert A. Vondra PricewaterhouseCoopers Peter Viksnins PricewaterhouseCoopers, Washington, D.C.
• U.S. Sentencing Guidelines • DPA/Plea Agreement terms • US/International/UK Bribery Act Guidance • Evolving concept of “best practices”
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§8B2.1. Effective Compliance and Ethics Program • The organization shall take reasonable steps—
₊ to ensure that the organization’s compliance and ethics program is followed, including monitoring and auditing to detect criminal conduct;
₊ to evaluate periodically the effectiveness of the organization’s compliance and ethics program; and
• The organization shall periodically assess the risk of criminal conduct and shall take appropriate steps to design, implement, or modify [program elements] to reduce the risk of criminal conduct identified through this process.
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"Periodic review and testing of the compliance code, standards and procedures designed to evaluate and improve their effectiveness in preventing and detecting violations of anti-corruption laws and [company's] compliance and ethics program, taking into account relevant developments in the field and evolving international and industry standards.“
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• In addition to discussion of auditor obligations, SEC & DoJ mention internal audits several times in the guidance, including:
• “DOJ and SEC encourage companies engaging in mergers and acquisitions to: … conduct an FCPA-specific audit of all newly acquired or merged businesses as quickly as practicable” (page 29)
• “As a company’s risk for FCPA violations increases, that business should consider increasing its compliance procedures, including due diligence and periodic internal audits.” (page 59)
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“Periodic reviews of the ethics and compliance programmes or measures, designed to evaluate and improve their effectiveness in preventing and detecting foreign bribery, taking into account relevant developments in the field, and evolving international and industry standards.” OECD Good Practice Guidance on Internal Controls, Ethics, and Compliance
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MOJ Guidance regarding Adequate Procedures under UKBA • Principle 3: The commercial organisation assesses the nature and extent
of its exposure to potential external and internal risks of bribery on its behalf by persons associated with it. The assessment is periodic, informed and documented.
• Principle 6: The commercial organisation monitors and reviews procedures designed to prevent bribery by persons associated with it and makes improvements where necessary.
• Recent SFO guidance on self-reporting: “no guarantee that a prosecution will not follow.”
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Compliance Program Assessment • Company-wide • Review of program components
Risk Assessment • Company-wide or site-specific • Identify corruption risk areas
Compliance/FCPA Audits • Site-specific • Evaluate site’s compliance with laws and policies • Transactional testing and interviews
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Pfizer DPA (August 2012) • Risk Assessments
+ Risk-based program of annual reviews of high-risk markets based on business and location
+ Five markets identified and reviewed annually
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Each FCPA Audit shall include: • On-site visits by a team from Compliance and, when appropriate, Legal
and qualified auditors who have received FCPA and anticorruption training. • Review representative sample of contracts, payments to government
officials, healthcare providers and other high-risk transactions. • Creation of action plans resulting from issues identified during audits with
undertakings designed to enhance anticorruption compliance, repair process weaknesses, and deter violations.
• Where appropriate, feasible, and permissible under local law, review of the books and records of distributors
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Pfizer DPA (August 2012) ($15MM Criminal Penalties, $45.2 in disgorgement and interest) • Nine-point compliance program mandated, requiring:
₊ corporate policy against violations; ₊ application to all employees and outside parties acting on company’s
behalf; ₊ appointment of responsible executives who report to Board ₊ training and certifications ₊ reporting system for violations ₊ disciplinary procedures; ₊ due diligence on agents and business partners; ₊ standard contract provisions; ₊ periodic testing of code, standards and procedures
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• In a recent (August 2012) SEC settlement, the regulators alleged that a company “…failed to audit and compare the distributor's margin against the end user price to ensure excess margins were not being built into the pricing structure…” and “failed to seek transparency in or audit third party payments made by distributors…”
• This case was also the first time the SEC made an FCPA Books & Records and Internal Controls charge without an attendant allegation of bribery, for “creating the potential for bribery or embezzlement.” 15
• Detect and deter violations • Reassess risk profile • Test compliance program effectiveness • Satisfy government expectations
₊ Involvement of senior management
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• A risk-based process that can be consistently and systematically applied to operations across the globe
• Appropriate depth and scope in light of resources and risks • Cost-effective and non-disruptive to business • Preserve privilege where appropriate
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I. Why conduct an anti-corruption risk assessment? II. Measuring risk factors III. Scope of an FCPA audit IV. Operations compliance assessment V. FCPA Compliance – Course of action for companies VI. Questions and answers
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Downside of forgoing risk assessment • Fines and Penalties • Reputational risk • Shareholder litigation • Corollary prosecution • Wasting resources on low-risk
areas/focusing on the wrong areas
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Upside of performing a risk assessment • Cost effective program • Business partner competitive
advantage • UK Bribery Act Adequate
Procedures Defense • Insurance claims
• Industry’s Compliance Problems • Company’s Compliance History, Audit Findings • Senior Management – involvement and commitment • Nature and locations of business/transactions • Use of third parties, vendors, suppliers • Documentation and support – books and records • Business with government entities
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GEOGRAPHY Operating locations and export destinations 2012 Transparency International Corruption Perception Index: Scores countries 1-100 scale, with 100 representing least perception of corruption and 1 being highest perception of corruption. World Bank’s World Wide Governance Index: Measures regulatory quality, control of corruption, political stability, and absence of violence.
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Top Five Score Bottom Five Score
Denmark 90 Myanmar 15
Finland 90 Sudan 13
New Zealand 90 Afghanistan 8
Sweden 88 North Korea 8
Singapore 87 Somalia 8
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• Contacts with Government, for example ₊ Customs ₊ Immigration ₊ Tax Authorities ₊ Litigation ₊ Customers ₊ Regulators
• Industry-specific risks • Channels to market: third parties
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• Compliance - policies and procedures • Third party agreements and payments • Payments to foreign officials • Charitable contributions/donations • Payments - gifts, T&E, hospitality, facilitation • Sponsorships • Opening and maintenance of bank accounts • Cash – petty cash/advances • Import and export
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• Finance and Accounting —Discussions to be held with, but not limited to, Accounting Manager —Analyze Chart of Accounts for other high risk accounts; and where high risk
transaction could be recorded —Analyze Local Policies and Procedures —Payment testing
• Gifts and Hospitality —Discussions to be held with, but not limited to, Accounting Manager —Analyze Chart of Accounts
—Gifts —Gratuities —Entertainment
—Analyze Local Policies and Procedures —Payment testing
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• Expense Reports + Obtain policies regarding employee expense reimbursement + Determine whether reimbursements are made to non-employees
– Obtain explanation and purpose + Select representative reports for individuals including but not limited to
– Director, managers, sales representatives – Examine approval and documentation for reimbursements – Assess adequacy of documentation – Assess validity of business purpose – Assess compliance with expense reimbursement policies – Identify employee reimbursements where a government official was
present + Identify travel or other expenses paid to vendors, representatives or agents on
behalf of a government official
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• Tenders and Contracts + Meetings should be held with, but not limited to, head of sales and/or
operations manager. + Obtain an understanding of company’s revenues stream
– Main customers – Government (direct or indirect sales) – Contracts
+ Anything of value provided + Tender process
– Responsibility and involvement in participation + Assess policies and procedures related to discounts, rebates, allowances, and
commissions, and how they are recorded. + Contract testing + Payment testing
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• Third Parties + Discussions should be held with personnel dealing with distributors /sales
agents and others used as channels to government customers (third parties). + Obtain and analyze a third party listing + Obtain an understanding of policies related to payments to third parties + Is due diligence performed by Company prior to retaining third parties
– Are there periodic updates and knowledge of dealings? + Are there any “above average” commissions or discounts? + Approval process for certain third party activities. + Right to audit? Is it exercised? + Does Third Party makes disbursements on behalf of the Company? How are
they reimbursed + Contract testing + Payment testing
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• Assignment of a corporate official to oversee compliance with policies, standards, and procedures regarding anticorruption laws. Reports directly to AC and BOD.
• Issuing clear company policies (in each jurisdiction) on what constitutes unacceptable behavior and enforcing the prescribed consequences.
• Installation of a mechanism which is accessible and provides anonymity to report concerns. • Performing frequent risk assessments/field tests/audits to determine whether employees
understand company policies and testing the adequacy of existing programs and controls. • Streamlining and integrating payment systems to easily see where, why, and how much
money is being spent. • Regularly testing payment systems and controls to gain transparency into high risk
expenditures. • Thoroughly and regularly training employees to address the enforcement of international
anticorruption standards. Implementation of annual certification process for senior management.
• Routinely conducting due diligence on third parties, such as agents, sales consultants, distributors, and vendors.
• Completion of due diligence by legal, accounting and compliance prior to acquisition.
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• Scope • Resources • Control • Costs • Access to Information • Handling the results • Collateral consequences
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• Tailoring scope • Board and senior management involvement to define scope
and allocate resources (internal and external) • Business segments; foreign subsidiaries; JVs; third parties • Defining audit period
+ scale, resources, time to completion
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• Many levels of audit depending on risks, audit history • Tailor to company’s circumstances • Define clearly up front; refine if warranted • Draft plan before starting with goals, scope, processes,
responsibilities and categories of tasks defined • Build in accountability and reporting
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• Disruption to business • Costs • Internal personnel • External consultants, lawyers
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• Outside auditors • Internal audit • Resource constraints? • Consultants • Counsel • Outside lawyers have expertise but are costly • In-house lawyers know the company but their objectivity can
be questioned • What, if any, privilege can be maintained
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• Board/Audit Committee • Internal audit/Compliance • In-house counsel • Critical component of cost-effectiveness
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• Develop budget with input from all participants • Break down tasks and align responsibilities with expertise • Combine audit with training to minimize travel • Stick to audit plan unless explicitly revised • Reporting and accountability
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• Local laws on privacy • Interviews • Email collection • Uncooperative or reluctant employees • Third parties • Availability of information on agents, business partners
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• Consult local counsel on privacy issues • Communicate goals of audit to employees • Invoke contractual rights with third parties or revise contracts • Must be even-handed
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• Critical for effectiveness and credit • Disciplinary action • Changes in business partners • Training • Process changes • Preserve information • Reporting out • To board/audit committee • To government authorities (based on advice of counsel) • Value of self-disclosure, remediation
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• Plan for corrective action as part of audit • Regular reporting up when issues arise
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• Swift action is key • Heightens need for frequent audits • Whistleblower dangers
₊ Incentive to report before company does • Must show company takes compliance seriously
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• Government investigations • Shareholder and derivative litigation • Disgorgement and penalties • Attorney’s fees • Reputational damage
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David A. Wilson Thompson Hine, Washington, D.C. 202.263.4161 [email protected] Albert A. Vondra PricewaterhouseCoopers, Washington, D.C./Cleveland 703.918.1534/216.363.5812 [email protected] Peter Viksnins PricewaterhouseCoopers, Washington, D.C. 703.918.1514 [email protected]
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Slide Number 1Tips for Optimal QualityContinuing Education CreditsImplementing Audits to Bolster Effective FCPA Compliance Programs�PART I:�Compliance LandscapeU.S. Sentencing GuidelinesCommon DOJ Settlement TermsSEC/DoJ FCPA Resource GuideInternational GuidanceUK Bribery ActTypes of Compliance Reviews and AuditsExample of Assessment/Audit Approach Endorsed by DOJExample of Assessment/Audit Approach Endorsed by DOJ (con’t)�Pfizer DPACompliance Program Components Endorsed by DOJEvolving Regulatory ExpectationsBenefits of Compliance Reviews and AuditsGoals in Designing Testing ProtocolPART II:�Conducting an AuditWhy assess corruption risk?�Upsides and DownsidesRisk assessment – Items to considerRisk assessment: �Measuring risk factorsRisk assessment: �Measuring risk factorsRisk assessment: �Measuring risk factorsRisk assessment: �Measuring risk factorsAreas of FocusScope of an FCPA Audit Includes:Operations Compliance AssessmentOperations Compliance AssessmentOperations Compliance AssessmentOperations Compliance AssessmentFCPA Compliance �Things companies should be doingPART III:�Some Challenges of Compliance ReviewsIdentifying ScopeDefine appropriate scopeResource managementWho conducts the review?Who Controls the ReviewControlling CostsRestrictions on AccessOvercoming Access ChallengesWhat to do with the resultsOvercoming InertiaDodd-Frank ImplicationsCollateral ConsequencesSlide Number 45Slide Number 46Slide Number 47Slide Number 48