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Further Reading
  • Whistleblowers: Broken Lives and Organizational Power
    Whistleblowers: Broken Lives and Organizational Power
    by C. Fred Alford
  • Whistleblowing: When It Works-And Why
    Whistleblowing: When It Works-And Why
    by Roberta Ann Johnson
  • The Whistleblower: Confessions of a Healthcare Hitman
    The Whistleblower: Confessions of a Healthcare Hitman
    by Peter Rost
  • Extraordinary Circumstances: The Journey of a Corporate Whistleblower
    Extraordinary Circumstances: The Journey of a Corporate Whistleblower
    by Cynthia Cooper
  • Giantkillers: The Team and the Law that Help Whistle-blowers Recover America's Stolen Billions
    Giantkillers: The Team and the Law that Help Whistle-blowers Recover America's Stolen Billions
    by Henry Scammell
  • Undercover: How I Went from Company Man to FBI Spy -- and Exposed the Worst Healthcare Fraud in US History
    Undercover: How I Went from Company Man to FBI Spy -- and Exposed the Worst Healthcare Fraud in US History
    by John W. Schilling
  • Reward: Collecting Millions for Reporting Tax Evasion, Your Complete Guide to the IRS Whistleblower Reward Program
    Reward: Collecting Millions for Reporting Tax Evasion, Your Complete Guide to the IRS Whistleblower Reward Program
    by Joel D. Hesch
  • Whistleblowing: A guide to government reward programs (How to collect millions for reporting fraud)
    Whistleblowing: A guide to government reward programs (How to collect millions for reporting fraud)
    by Joel Hesch
  • At What Cost?: A Whistleblower's Story
    At What Cost?: A Whistleblower's Story
    by Paul Grauber
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Thursday
Jun092011

Whistleblowers Bolster SEC's Fight Against Financial Crimes

The SEC is about to get reinforcements in its fight against white-collar crime: employees with inside knowledge of misdeeds. On May 25, the SEC adopted bold new rules that will provide whistleblowers with major incentives to report corporate frauds and other financial crimes.

The new rules were mandated as part of Dodd-Frank, and show the long reach of that historic law. Whistleblower programs -- which provide huge cash rewards to employees who can document corporate wrongdoing -- have been successful in other sectors, such as pharmaceuticals and healthcare, in providing government prosecutors with enough evidence to impose penalties on corporations for major wrongdoing. Bringing this tool to the financial sector is long overdue.

Needless to say, Wall Street hates the new whistleblower rules. The Business Roundtable blasted the rules saying they don't provide companies with the opportunity to "self-regulate and self-correct." "Our member companies, as well as other regulated public companies, have devoted substantial resources to establishing a culture of compliance and integrity within their organizations."

I'm all for self-regulation -- when it works. But obviously it hasn't in the financial sector, which is why the government is stepping in.

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