Whether its laundering money for drug cartels, manipulating
benchmarks or trading insider information, we have already seen a fair share of
scandals and frauds this year. Our economic condition has made it crucial to provide
increased transparency, due diligence and regulations to increase investor
trust and to begin repairing the finance industry’s damaged reputation. So what
measures are being taken to spot and prevent such acts of fraud from occurring
again?
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, signed into federal law by President Obama in 2010, has a section
specifically dedicated to the “Whistleblower Program”. This program’s goal is
to encourage employees and corporate insiders to report any fraud or wrongdoing
they come across in their companies.
However, this law is nothing new- Sarbanes–Oxley Act of 2002
also had a “False Claims Act”, which provided employees financial incentives to
report fraud to the SEC. However, the newer version has increased the scale of
the financial incentive. The ‘whistleblower’, the individual that reports a wrongdoing,
could receive an award that amounts to 10-30 percent of the penalties faced by
the company accused (in excess of $1 million). So how many whistles have been
blown?
Well, just last month the SEC reported the first
whistleblower award of $50,000 to an individual that reported information that
was critical in stopping a Ponzi scheme. And yesterday, a former UBS banker,
Bradley Birkenfeld, received a whooping $104 million from the SEC for providing
insider information regarding UBS's illegal practice of encouraging secret
offshore accounts.
Such enormous monetary incentives ought to shed light on
more frauds and wrongdoings, right? Not necessarily. According to a new study
by Ethics Resource Center, the percentage of employees that experienced
backlash, or retaliation, for reporting misconduct increased from 15% in 2009
to 22% in 2011. Such retaliation decreases the likelihood of employees reporting
misconduct or reaching out to the SEC. But we can hope that the recent rewards encourage
more individuals to rise above the potential backlash and come forth to do the
right thing, even if it is for a purely monetary reason.
Written by: Ritika Gawande
Photo credit: http://www.darkgovernment.com/
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