Historical overview of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and broad SEC findings on corporate bribery
Historical overview of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and broad SEC findings on corporate bribery The passage provides a general summary of anti‑bribery legislation and cites SEC statistics that more than 400 U.S. companies paid hundreds of millions in bribes, but it lacks specific names, dates, transactions, or concrete allegations that could be directly pursued. It therefore offers low‑to‑moderate investigative value and limited novelty, with only generic references to powerful institutions. Key insights: SEC reported >400 U.S. companies paid hundreds of millions in bribes to foreign officials.; Companies allegedly used secret “slush funds” for illegal U.S. campaign contributions and foreign payments.; FCPA was enacted in 1977 after Watergate‑era corruption revelations and amended in 1988 with two affirmative defenses.
Summary
Historical overview of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and broad SEC findings on corporate bribery The passage provides a general summary of anti‑bribery legislation and cites SEC statistics that more than 400 U.S. companies paid hundreds of millions in bribes, but it lacks specific names, dates, transactions, or concrete allegations that could be directly pursued. It therefore offers low‑to‑moderate investigative value and limited novelty, with only generic references to powerful institutions. Key insights: SEC reported >400 U.S. companies paid hundreds of millions in bribes to foreign officials.; Companies allegedly used secret “slush funds” for illegal U.S. campaign contributions and foreign payments.; FCPA was enacted in 1977 after Watergate‑era corruption revelations and amended in 1988 with two affirmative defenses.
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