Articles Tagged: Corporate Governance
The former chief financial officer of The Epoch Times Association, Inc., Weidong Guan, has pleaded guilty in the Southern District of New York to participating in a conspiracy involving at least $67 million in illicit funds. The case is notable not only for the size of the alleged laundering operation, but also because it involves a senior finance executive at a media organization and is being prosecuted in one of the country’s most prominent white-collar enforcement venues.
For legal professionals, the plea is a reminder of how aggressively federal prosecutors continue to pursue anti-money-laundering cases tied to corporate insiders.
PayPal has agreed to waive roughly $30 million in fees to resolve a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into a 2020 program aimed at supporting Black- and minority-owned businesses. According to the government, the program unlawfully favored certain businesses on the basis of race, making the settlement a notable marker in the ongoing legal scrutiny of corporate diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.
The matter is significant because it shows how civil-rights enforcement is being applied outside the traditional employment setting.
The SEC is pushing back after a federal judge raised concerns about its proposed settlement with Elon Musk, with the agency arguing the deal is lawful, appropriate, and consistent with its enforcement discretion. The dispute puts a spotlight on a recurring question in securities enforcement: how much scrutiny should courts apply when regulators negotiate resolutions with high-profile defendants?
At issue is the SEC’s effort to defend a settlement arrangement after the judge reportedly cited “red flags” in reviewing the proposal.
Elon Musk reportedly sought to settle his dispute with OpenAI before a scheduled trial in Oakland, but the effort failed, leaving one of the most closely watched AI-related business cases on course for a courtroom fight. The case centers on Musk’s claims over OpenAI’s structure, mission, and relationship with Microsoft, and it has become a proxy battle over how artificial intelligence ventures can evolve from nonprofit-rooted organizations into dominant commercial players.
That failed settlement attempt is legally significant for at least two reasons.


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