Synopsis
An SCCE Podcast
Episodes
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Hemma Lomax on Legacy-Driven Leadership [Podcast]
17/07/2025 Duration: 10minBy Adam Turteltaub Dr. Hemma R. Lomax, Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Global Head of Ethics and Compliance for DocuSign thinks a lot about leaving a legacy, not just for herself but in general. She’ll be addressing the topic Beyond the Rules: The Future of Compliance is Legacy-Driven Leadership at the SCCE 24th Annual Compliance & Ethics Institute, which takes place September 14-17, 2025 in Nashville. She is a strong advocate for thinking beyond quarterly goals and looking to operationalize best intentions to leave something behind that is more enduring. Getting there, she explains, requires first helping leaders understand that they know that a legacy is not out of reach, if they focus on doing the right thing and for the long run. Done correctly, the legacy they create can be an enduring strategic asset. For compliance teams it means recognizing that every human has a survivor and a sage brain. And, while we in compliance need to embrace that survivor brain and embrace bad scenarios, we canno
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Hassan Chaudry on Compliance in a Joint Venture [Podcast]
15/07/2025 Duration: 08minBy Adam Turteltaub Joint ventures are created to capitalize on a business opportunity, but they come with challenges. Each partner may have a different experience with or attitude towards compliance. They may have distinctly different cultures, and, in the worst case, may each be expecting the other to be watching compliance when, in fact, no one is. Hassan Chaudry, a member of the SCCE & HCCA Board and Chief Compliance Officer of POSCO JV, a General Motors joint venture, recommends several keys to success in JVs. First, having meaningful conversations with leadership right at the start is important, especially if it is face-to-face. This helps establish rapport and makes top management more comfortable with the role of compliance. Look to commonalities between the partners, not just the difference. In his case, with one party being from North America and the other from South Korea, there were different approaches and laws, but both countries are members of the OECD, and its guidance for compliance program
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Matt Kelly on the Compliance Job Market [Podcast]
10/07/2025 Duration: 15minBy Adam Turteltaub Don’t take it personally if it’s taking you forever to find a new compliance job. According to Matt Kelly (LinkedIn), Editor and CEO at Radical Compliance, you’re far from alone. It’s not that there aren’t jobs out there, he explains. There is just a hesitancy to hire due to the macro-economic environment. With so much economic instability and unpredictability, organizations are slower to hire. Adding to the challenge is technology. A job posted on LinkedIn can generate hundreds or thousands of applications, making it more difficult for organizations to wade through them. So how do you make yourself stand out and become a must-hire? He recommends moving beyond showcasing your ability to manage regulatory issues and instead focus on how your skills can help the organization navigate the range of operational risks that they face. Be sure to also shift from focusing on what you can do to defend the company to how you can help the company grow. Finally, he advises showcasing your certifica
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Professors Todd Haugh and Suneal Bedi on Treating Compliance Like an Asset [Podcast]
08/07/2025 Duration: 12minBy Adam Turteltaub Professors Todd Haugh (LinkedIn) and Suneal Bedi (LinkedIn) of the Institute for Corporate Governance & Ethics at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University recently published a paper: Retheorizing Corporate Compliance. In it they argued strongly that compliance needs to be seen not just as a defense against potential corporate legal liability. It also needs to be recognized as a proactive offensive tool for building market share and competitive advantage. On this podcast they explain that compliance creates numerous non-market strategies for helping the business. For example, organizations with stronger programs can demonstrate to regulators that they would be a good choice to acquire a troubled company. Leading compliance programs can also help to set the standard of practices for their industry, giving their organizations an advantage over those with lagging compliance practices. In sum, by thinking of how compliance can help the business, not just protect it, there are signi
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Jillian Willis and Melissa Scott on the HHS OIG’s Nursing Facility: Industry Segment-Specific Compliance Program Guidance [Podcast]
01/07/2025 Duration: 11minBy Adam Turteltaub In November 2024, the Office of Inspector General at Health and Human Services released its Nursing Facility: Industry Segment-Specific Compliance Program Guidance. The document is part of an effort to modernize how HHS OIG is communicating to industry and providing information about risks, how to mitigate them and best practices for compliance programs. Jillian Willis (LinkedIn/Firm Page) and Melissa Scott (LinkedIn/Firm Page) of Nelson Mullins explain that the new guidance contains four main sections: quality of care and quality of life, Medicare and Medicaid billing requirements, Federal anti-kickback statute and other risk areas such as physician self-referral, HIPAA and related-party transactions. It shares best practices. Notably, the guidance, complements other guidance out there, including the Department of Justice’s. And, in addition to focusing compliance efforts, it can be helpful for promoting operational efficiency. Listen in and then spend some time reading the Nursing Fa
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Professors Guido Palazzo and Ulrich Hoffrage on the Dark Patterns Behind Corporate Scandals [Podcast]
26/06/2025 Duration: 20minBy Adam Turteltaub Professors Guido Palazzo and Ulrich Hoffrage are skeptical. When they hear that there was a bad apple at the core of a scandal, they are hesitant to accept that explanation. Instead, they argue in this podcast and in their new book, The Dark Pattern: The Hidden Dynamics of Corporate Scandals, that the problem is typically much deeper and wider. There are dark patterns, as they call them, that lead to bad behavior. Underlying the patterns are nine building blocks. They explain: Rigid ideology is a shared belief system that narrows the view of decision-makers at the expense of other views, risking them losing sight of ethical dimensions. Toxic leadership can create fearful contexts when narcissistic, Machiavellian, or psychopathic leaders abuse their power and cause harm, be it through direct orders, leading by example, or a carrot- and- stick approach. Manipulative language restricts how things are perceived and evaluated, influencing people’s judgments, decisions, and behaviors in
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Jordan Domash on Using AI to Further Your Compliance Program [Podcast]
24/06/2025 Duration: 11minBy Adam Turteltaub So you’ve got a case of AI fever and want to put the technology to work for your compliance team. What should you do? Jordan Domash, Founder of Rersponsiv, urges you to first take a deep breath and think through the process starting with defining your goals. Interestingly, he shares, the goals can be affected by the solution you choose, whether you go with a solution that is homegrown or out of the box. Either way, once the goal is set, expect an iterative process and regular testing to ensure that the solution is delivering what you were looking for, free from hallucinations and other problems. To make that process work it’s essential to have an evaluation plan in place, which includes identifying all the potential failure points. Make a part of it conducting some manual tests to see if the AI is delivering the results it should. In sum, AI can be invaluable to your program, but only if you put in the work to ensure that it is well designed and truly performing as it should. Listen n
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Amy Matsuo on the DOJ’s Recent Policy Changes [Podcast]
19/06/2025 Duration: 11minBy Adam Turteltaub On May 12, 2025 the head of the Criminal Division at the US Department of Justice issued a memo to all Criminal Division personnel with the subject: Focus, Fairness and Efficiency in the Fight Against White Collar Crime. To understand what the document means for compliance programs, we spoke with Amy Matsuo, leader for both Regulatory Insights and Compliance Transformation at KPMG. Overall, she sees the document as being good news for compliance programs. It reiterates the importance and value of quickly finding and remediating violations. The DOJ also outlines some very favorable terms for organizations that self-disclose. These can include a declination with no requirement to enter into a criminal resolution, a non-prosecution agreement and a 75% reduction in potential fines. The Department of Justice will also be reviewing settlements that are already in place and may provide relief if the organization is found to have made substantial progress, has a reduced risk profile and self-r
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Andres Cuevas on Compliance, Culture and Latin America [Podcast]
17/06/2025 Duration: 12minBy Adam Turteltaub Andres Cuevas, Compliance Director LATAM for EmergentCold explains from Chile that for compliance officers to be successful in Latin America they need to stop thinking about Latin America as a whole and start thinking much more about each country and its culture. And, of course, we must be mindful that each company also has a culture of its own. To navigate the differences and build consistency, he advocates for having a strong set of baselines rules that are common across your enterprise and the region. Establish what is non-negotiable. But, at the same time, it’s important to work with local leaders to have an understanding of what the local realities are, work with them and respond accordingly when variations are necessary. Compliance leaders also need to be mindful of the legal requirements of each country. In Chile, for example, he reports that there are more than 250 crimes that the company can be found liable for. Listen in to learn more about how to navigate your compliance eff
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Mark Diamond on Rethinking Records Retention [Podcast]
12/06/2025 Duration: 14minBy Adam Turteltaub Mark Diamond wants you to stop thinking of records retention as a chore and start thinking of it as a driver of compliance. In this podcast the President & CEO of Contoural shares that retention schedules have grown in importance with increased requirements for privacy and safeguarding personal data. That, in turn, is having an enormous impact on the risks and costs of ediscovery. Proper retention schedules also have significant impact on employee productivity and collaboration, as well as using AI in less risky ways. Organizations are now increasingly treating records based on their business value and are developing retention schedules that reflect their worth. One of the greatest challenges they face, though, is the tendency of employees to want to hold onto everything just in case. While it’s understandable, it adversely affects efficiency, as employees are forced to wade their way through obsolete records. Part of the solution, he suggests, is to develop a “super schedule” for docu
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Nick Gallo on the Controls Paradox [Podcast]
10/06/2025 Duration: 12minBy Adam Turteltaub In a recent issue of Compliance & Ethics Professional ®, Nick Gallo, Chief Servant and Co-CEO of Ethico addressed the control paradox, a situation in which the controls designed to prevent misconduct, actually encourage it. Think of it like the person whose car has so many airbags that they no longer fear an accident and drive quicker. So what’s the solution? He argues it’s creating an environment where we have faith in controls, but not too much, and focus on helping those on the front line make the right decisions. That includes, he says, teaching not just what you should do but why. It also means encouraging ownership of ethical issues, not outsourcing it. Listen in to learn more about how to get better control on your controls. Listen now Sponsored by Case IQ, a global provider of whistleblowing, case management, and compliance solutions.
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Chris Audet on Third Party Risk [Podcast]
05/06/2025 Duration: 10minBy Adam Turteltaub Recently, Gartner released very intriguing research into third party risk. Chris Audet, Vice President and Chief of Research in the Gartner Assurance Practice tell us that they found business has it’s spending all wrong. Too much is invested in due diligence, and not enough time and effort is spent on monitoring. There research found that the business unit knows the risks third parties pose and is seeing it firsthand. When relationship managers were surveyed, 84% had seen changes to the risk profile and 76% found a third party had provided materially inaccurate information. In fact, 95% had seen something troubling in the past year. So why aren’t they reporting this information to the compliance team and what would get them to share more? There were three main answers, Chris reports: Creating more relationship ownership objectivity. Too many feel too strong a tie to the third party. Confidence in identifying red flags. Encouraging objectivity and providing reassurance that compli
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Robert Stratton on Healthcare Enterprise Risk Management [Podcast]
03/06/2025 Duration: 10minBy Adam Turteltaub Risk assessments are not new in healthcare, and in specific regulatory areas are required. But, that doesn’t mean things aren’t changing. More and more organizations are embracing enterprise risk assessments (ERM) as a way to assess the range of risks that they face, including legal and regulatory concerns. Getting the risk assessment right is particularly challenging for healthcare organizations, explains Robert Stratton, Executive Director – Enterprise Risk and Security; Corporate Compliance Official and Senior Counsel for Northwest Permanente. Robert is also the author of the chapter “Enterprise Risk Management in Healthcare” in the latest edition of the Complete Healthcare Compliance Manual. The mix of insurance, patient care professionals, large sums of money and complex structures makes the risk map challenging. On the positive side, electronic health records can provide a wealth of information to inform your ERM efforts, as can frontline employees who can provide insights into w
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Ryan Redman and Brett Sommers on AI and Cybercrime [Podcast]
29/05/2025 Duration: 11minBy Adam Turteltaub As if ransomware and phishing attacks weren’t enough to keep us up at night, now AI is enabling a whole new range of cyber threats. Ryan Redman, Product Manager, Marketing and Brett Sommers, Director of GRC Products at Onspring warn that the nature of attacks is evolving. Vishing, in which criminals use technology to imitate the voices of colleagues and organization leaders, is being used to trick people into revealing passwords, share data or send money. Employees need to learn to be wary and even confirm requests, even from trusted voices, via email or other means. Healthcare and manufacturing are two industries that have been singled out by bad actors for this kind of attack. Aside from training, what else can compliance teams do? They recommend: Focusing your resources on high value risk areas Ensuring your cyber defenses are as strong as they need to be Reviewing your third parties to ensure that a compromise won’t come from someone hacking into their systems Understandin
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Anna Romberg on Compliance Amidst a Global Consensus Breakdown [Podcast]
27/05/2025 Duration: 11minBy Adam Turteltaub These are fractious times, and it’s often difficult to figure out what to do, what comes next and keep people with divergent views working together. Despite these challenges, Anna Romberg, Executive Vice President, Sustainability, Legal and Compliance for Getinge, doesn’t believe that things are hopeless. In an article she co-authored with Richard Bistrong for Harvard Business Review, they laid out several strategies for successfully navigating the current era. In this podcast, she reminds us that ethics and compliance programs are about more than following the law. They are also about encouraging good behavior, which includes following the company’s values, no matter how the political winds are blowing. With that said, now is a good time to do what organizations need to do, which is assess their values periodically to ensure that they are relevant, and the organization is living up to them. At the same time, she encourages the compliance team to embrace friction. It is inevitable wh
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Lisa Beth Lentini Walker on Resiliency and Changing Times [Podcast]
22/05/2025 Duration: 14minBy Adam Turteltaub Do you ever wish you were made of rubber, especially nowadays with so much change? Do you wish that you could be flexible enough to handle every new legal regulatory change or every business demand without breaking? It’s not likely to happen, but compliance industry veteran Lisa Beth Lentini Walker believes that we can become more resilient. Resilience, she observes, is a mindset. We can work to become more adaptable and open to change by framing it in the right way. If you look at it with dread, you are less likely to succeed. But, if you recognize that nothing is permanent, change is inevitable and focus on what needs to be done, the chances of success are much greater. Look at change as an opportunity to shine and show leadership. Become the person who management trusts to look to the future and find the path forward for the organization. The workforce, too, wants to know that they can count on you to keep them safe and the company operating strongly. Listen in to learn more about beco
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Timur Khasanov-Batirov on Compliance in the Former Soviet Central Asian Republics [Podcast]
20/05/2025 Duration: 10minBy Adam Turteltaub Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan were all born out of the dissolution of the Soviet Union. With large energy deposits of national gas, many global companies and their suppliers are operating within these countries. To better understand the compliance risks there, we spoke with Timur Khasanov-Batirov, a compliance officer with deep and wide roots in the region. While we may think of this area as one region, he warns that there are substantial differences by country. Kazakhstan is the most developed, and compliance has gained significant traction in large companies, primarily in the oil and gas sector. Uzbekistan saw three major FCPA cases, and, as a result, compliance has garnered a great deal of attention. The other three countries have much smaller economies and less developed compliance cultures. In addition, Turkmenistan has a fairly-closed economy, which complicates the picture. While it is easy to focus on the anticorruption risk in the region, there
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Rachel Gerstein on Trade Sanctions [Podcast]
15/05/2025 Duration: 11minBy Adam Turteltaub It’s not a good time to be a manufacturer of ten-foot poles. That’s because with the growing number of sanctions regimes, there are an increasing number of companies and individuals that businesses shouldn’t touch with a poll of ten feet, or any length for that matter. Rachel Gerstein, who most recently served as Vice President, Global Ethics and Compliance Counsel for Gartner, explains in this podcast that trade sanctions are laws and regulations designed to prevent and punish engaging with countries, organization and individuals who the government has deemed a threat to national and international security, or has committed human rights violations. Many countries have sanctions regimes, although the United States tends to have the strongest. The US, for example, has countrywide sanctions against Iran, Cuba, Syria and North Korea, as well as numerous sanctions against Russian individuals and entities. The government’s enforcement arm is the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign
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Colleen Gianatasio on Value-Based Care and Compliance [Podcast]
13/05/2025 Duration: 08minBy Adam Turteltaub The current fee-for-services model in healthcare has challenges, to say the least. Value-based care, explains, Colleen Gianatasio, Vice President of Compliance, CoventBridge, takes a different approach by asking four questions: What are the needs for both patients and providers? What are the challenges and barriers to meeting them? What technology and other resources are available? How will providers be measured for success, and when will they be reimbursed? In answering these questions there is an underlying emphasis on a much more collaborative and transparent approach among patients, providers and payers. There is also a commitment to understanding the community as a whole. For those looking for advice on how to pursue value-based care, she offers several thoughts, including: Be thoughtful in your use of technology solutions Give all your stakeholders a seat and voice at the table Break down the silos, and communicate openly and frequently Listen in to more about the
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Leyla Erkan on the Top Compliance Priorities for US Healthcare Companies [Podcast]
08/05/2025 Duration: 10minBy Adam Turteltaub Recently Protiviti released an intriguing report: Top Compliance Priorities for U.S. Healthcare Organizations in 2025. In this podcast their Global Healthcare Compliance Leader, Leyla Erkan, shares some of the key priorities they revealed: Managing technology. This includes wearable devices, AI, telehealth platforms and more. All have great promise, but each comes with significant risk. Privacy and security. Many organizations are struggling with right of access issues, reproductive health data, and using data more effectively to deliver care. Not to mention the issues of data breaches and ransomware. Integrating quality and safety into compliance programs. As with value-based care, expectations have grown for compliance to play a key role in ensuring quality and safety. Billing and coding. Cloning of documentation remains a key risk area along with lack of documentation. New technologies hold great promise but there are challenges in areas such as using AI. Listen in to learn mo