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Chris works for Autonomy Corporation - the innovative leader behind meaning-based computing.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Government Rewarding Whistleblowers and Effective Whistleblower Policies

A little publicized provision in the new Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, “…requires the Commission to pay an award…to eligible whistleblowers who voluntarily provide the Commission with original information about a violation of the federal securities laws that leads to the successful enforcement of a covered judicial or administrative action…” 

In the end, the provision allows the commission to pay between 10 to 30 percent of any recovery over $1 million to whistleblowers who give original information of fraud. As the Wall Street Journal’s Law Blog points out, “It opens companies up to more scrutiny from the SEC, and will likely raise costs.

Corporate compliance systems will be under increased scrutiny internally, as employees are given incentive to tell on their employers, and externally, from the SEC itself. It is of importance to develop a system to quickly conduct internal investigations and to develop a set of whistleblower policies conducive to such an environment.

An effective whistle blower policy will:
·         prohibit employees from interfering with the right of another employee to blow the whistle
·         prohibit employees from retaliating against an employee for having made a protected disclosure or for having refused an illegal order
·         provide a procedure for raising a concern to the corporate legal department
·         provide a procedure for filing and addressing complaints of retaliation for whistleblowing

Once these policies have been enforced, it is then vital to implement a robust investigation process – a process which manages internal reports of fraud and investigations directed by the SEC itself. The ability to quickly launch a thorough investigation, to identify areas of risk or to take action against open cases, becomes increasingly important as scrutiny increases. The Dodd-Frank bill pushes to light the mandate to create an environment of corporate transparency – an order now directly from Washington.

Investigations can take months to complete - disparate data sources and an incomplete data map can make collection a logistical nightmare. By deploying ZL Technologies’ Unified Archive, enterprises can manage and search through all of their unstructured data (including email and file shares) from one platform. This cuts down collection from days or weeks to seconds. With the Unified Archive, responding to an allegation of misconduct has never been simpler.