Compliance & Ethics

JPMorgan to Pay $330 Million in 1MDB Settlement as Swiss Unit Convicted in Money Laundering Case

JPMorgan Chase will pay $330 million to Malaysia to settle claims linked to the country’s 1MDB sovereign wealth fund scandal, even as its Swiss private banking arm faces a criminal conviction for failing to prevent aggravated money laundering.

CMA Opens Initial Investigation into Getty Images’ Planned Acquisition of Shutterstock

The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has confirmed it will launch an initial investigation into the proposed acquisition of Shutterstock by Getty Images, two of the world’s largest stock image providers.

OCC’s August Actions Show Banking Missteps Come in All Sizes

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) has published its latest round of enforcement actions, and the list makes for a telling snapshot of the different ways trust in the banking system can fray. On one end, a small Illinois bank is under pressure to fix fundamental weaknesses in capital and planning. On the other, a string of former tellers and managers from some of the country’s biggest banks have been banned from the industry for dipping into customer funds.

ACMA Issues Guidance to TV Manufacturers Ahead of 2026 Prominence Rules

Australia’s communications watchdog has released new guidance to help television manufacturers adapt to the nation’s forthcoming TV prominence framework, a regulatory shift designed to ensure Australian audiences can more easily find free-to-air channels and their digital counterparts.

CVS Ordered to Pay $290 Million for Medicare Fraud

A federal court has handed down a major financial blow to CVS Caremark, ordering the pharmacy benefit manager to pay nearly $290 million in damages and penalties for defrauding the Medicare Part D program. The ruling caps a whistleblower case that began more than a decade ago and underscores the steep consequences companies face for overbilling federal health programs.

FTC Takes LA Fitness to Court Over Allegedly Onerous Membership Cancellations

The Federal Trade Commission has filed suit against the operators of LA Fitness, accusing the company of making it unnecessarily difficult for consumers to cancel gym memberships and related services that continued indefinitely unless cancelled.

Dallas Importer Pays $12.4 Million After Quartz Duty-Evasion Allegations

Allied Stone, a Dallas-based supplier of countertops and cabinetry, has agreed to pay $12.4 million alongside its president, Jia “Jerry” Lim, to resolve allegations that they skirted U.S. trade laws by dodging duties on Chinese quartz imports.