In an article published by The FCPA Report (subscription required), business & securities litigation partner Nicholas Berg examines a decision by Johnson Controls (JCI) to pay $14 million to resolve SEC charges related to allegations of loose internal controls. The article also examines DOJ’s decision not to prosecute JCI by issuing a declination letter, the third such declination under the FCPA Pilot Program. Speaking about JCI’s internal controls, Mr. Berg notes that JCI’s “…Chinese subsidiary’s employees appear to have engaged in a carefully orchestrated effort to evade those controls in a way that was extremely difficult to detect.” Mr. Berg continued, explaining that “while it is certainly a good idea to implement corporate oversight of a higher-risk local subsidiary, managers reviewing key records for fraud and compliance with policies have to know enough about the business to adequately identify problems.”
Attorneys
Stay Up To Date with Ropes & Gray
Ropes & Gray attorneys provide timely analysis on legal developments, court decisions and changes in legislation and regulations.
Stay in the loop with all things Ropes & Gray, and find out more about our people, culture, initiatives and everything that’s happening.
We regularly notify our clients and contacts of significant legal developments, news, webinars and teleconferences that affect their industries.