
Venable LLP’s Nancy Grunberg Discusses
Securities Fraud Ethics with Smith
Students
Nancy
Grunberg, head of Venable’s Securities
and Exchange Commission and white collar
defense practice group, shared her
experiences as a securities law and
financial disclosure lawyer with 75
Smith students on Oct. 15, 2007. Her
lecture was the second installment of
the Robert H. Smith School of Business’s
Business Ethics Lecture Series for the
fall semester.
Grunberg has worked on both sides of
securities fraud as a defense lawyer and
for the SEC. She was with the SEC from
1988-1992 and from 1996-2002. She earned
a bachelor's degree from Stanford
University and a J.D. from Columbia
University.
Grunberg discussed the changes she
has seen in the SEC throughout her
career. “In the late ‘80s, everyone was
paying attention to Wall Street and
insider fraud,” she said. “And when I
came back to the SEC in 1996, I was told
that the high priority cases were
accounting and financial fraud.”
These changes in focus are
particularly important for students,
since new legislation such as the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) impacts all
public businesses, she said. Grunberg
described the current statutory
environment businesses operate in;
including accounting and disclosure
irregularities she has seen firsthand,
high-profile corporate corruption and
Sarbanes-Oxley’s stipulations.
“In the old days, a 10-year jail
sentence would have been considered a
harsh sentence in white collar crime,”
she said. “But in the world we’re facing
today, it’s the norm.” The indicted
executives from the three companies
received sentences ranging from 10-25
years in prison.
Grunberg also said client-auditor
relationships have changed drastically
since SOX was passed. “It’s much more
common to see an auditor blowing the
whistle on some kind of discrepancy now
than it used to be,” she said. “But we
are better off now then we were before,
pre-Enron and pre-Sarbanes-Oxley.”
She closed the lecture with a
question-and-answer session with Smith
students.
The next session this fall in
the "Business Ethics Lecture Series"
Date: November 7, 2007
Speaker: James M. Lager, Deputy
Ethics Counselor, GAO
Topic: "Honoring Values in a Compliance-based World"
Time: 5: 30PM – 7 PM
Room: Frank Auditorium, 1524 Van
Munching Hall, College Park
Related Stories:
►Highlights
from the Fall 2007 Ethics Lecture Series
►Spring 2007
Ethics Experiential Learning Module for
MBAs
►Fall
2006 Ethics Lecture Series
►Spring 2006
Ethics Lecture Series
▓ Donna Lin, MBA
Candidate 2009, Smith Media Group
|