Compliance & Ethics

OFAC Fines FTI Consulting $1.05 Million Over Prohibited Dealings With Russian State-Owned Bank VTB

The U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has reached a $1.05 million settlement with consulting giant FTI Consulting over apparent violations of U.S. sanctions targeting Russia's financial sector, concluding that the firm indirectly extended prohibited debt to Russian state-owned lender VTB Bank on multiple occasions.

EU Hits Temu With €200 Million DSA Fine Over Illegal Product Risks

The European Commission has fined Temu €200 million for violating the European Union's Digital Services Act (DSA), concluding that the online marketplace failed to properly assess and address the risks posed by illegal products offered through its platform.

FCA Finds Stronger Sanctions Controls but the Same Old Weaknesses Behind Breaches

The UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said this week that firms have made meaningful progress in strengthening sanctions controls since February 2022, when Russia's invasion of Ukraine triggered an unprecedented expansion of sanctions requirements and compliance expectations across the financial sector.

CFTC Moves to Block Rhode Island’s Prediction Market Crackdown as Jurisdiction Fight Continues to Spread

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's battle with state regulators over prediction markets has reached Rhode Island, the latest front in what is becoming one of the most consequential jurisdictional disputes in modern financial regulation. The CFTC moved to intervene in litigation in the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island, seeking to stop the state from applying its gambling laws against a CFTC-registered designated contract market.

Norion Bank Fined $8.3 Million Over Anti-Money Laundering Due Diligence Failures

One of the details buried in Sweden’s enforcement notice against Norion Bank is that the regulator specifically examined customers that were legal entities, not just individuals or companies. That distinction tends to matter. Corporate structures are where anti-money laundering programs become less about identity verification and more about whether a bank actually understands who is sitting behind the paperwork.

Finland’s Wild Berry Industry Lands in the Middle of a €9.4 Million Cartel Case

Finland's FCCA recently proposed roughly €9.4 million in penalty payments against companies tied to what it described as a long-running purchasing and information-exchange cartel in Finland’s wild berry sector. The alleged conduct stretched from 2013 through 2023 and involved five of the industry’s largest companies: Arctic International, Kaskein Marja, Kiantama, Marja Bothnia Berries, and Polarica.

Italy Opens Competition Probe Into Biogen Over Multiple Sclerosis Drug Practices

Italy’s competition watchdog said this week it has opened a probe into Biogen and its Italian subsidiary over allegations the company used control of a critical screening test to box out a lower-cost rival in the market for multiple sclerosis drugs containing natalizumab. The accusation is technical. The implications are not.