Compliance, investigations and corporate governance
CGU creates an instrument to solve cases of the Anti-Corruption Law that allows a different negotiation route from the leniency agreement and replaces early judgment.
The European Federal Government publishes a directive on human rights and the environment. Rule comes into force on July 26 and is expected to affect Brazilian companies.
Agreement with BNDES creates compliance requirements for borrowers.
In addition to monitoring internal processes, companies must be aware of the conduct of third parties involved with their business.
CGU and AGU edit ordinance listing objective and measurable criteria to limit the power of authority in negotiations.
What changes in practice with Decree 11.129/22?
New rule applies to administrative accountability proceedings involving violations of the Anti-Corruption Act.
Recognition boosts credibility and values branding, but should be seen as a consequence of effective and effective integrity practices, not as a purpose in itself.
Among the actions taken this year to combat corruption, one of the main goals of the federal government, the promulgation of Decree No. 9,764/19 certainly represents one of the most relevant milestones in improving public-private interaction and dialogue. In summary, the decree regulated how bodies and entities that are part of the structure of the direct federal Public Administration can receive donations of movable goods and services from private individuals or legal entities without costs or charges.
The professionals who work in the area of corporate integrity have raised great expectations regarding the beginning of the new federal government this year, especially regarding the performance of the new justice minister, former magistrate Sergio Moro, who became known for the judgments in the largest corporate corruption case in Brazil, Operation Carwash.
Effective since January of 2014, the Anti-Corruption Law (Law No. 12,846/13) has built a legacy of changes in corporate culture over the past five years. The scenario today is very different from the one observed at the beginning of its enactment, when corruption risks seemed far from the corporate reality, and companies still saw megaoperations of the Federal Police and the Public Prosecutor’s Office as episodes restricted to political agents.
In September, the Ministry of Transparency and Comptroller-General of the Union (MTCGU) published the Practical Handbook for the Evaluation of Integrity Programs in the Administrative Accountability Procedure of Legal Entities (PAR). The document seeks to provide guidance and assurance for public servants with the Federal Executive Branch responsible for conducting the PAR, instituted by Law No. 12,846/2013 (the Anti-Corruption Law), especially members of the Administrative Accountability Procedure Committee (CPAR).
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