To Our Clients and Friends Memorandum friedfrank.com The PCAOB’s 2013 Enforcement Program – A 2014 Update In January 2012, as the ten-year anniversary of the creation of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (the ―PCAOB‖ or ―Board‖) under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (―Sarbanes-Oxley‖) was 1 approaching, we stepped back and reviewed the initial decade of the Board’s enforcement program. This article provides our annual review of the PCAOB’s enforcement program over the prior year, as reflected in Board proceedings made public in 2013. Our update focuses on PCAOB proceedings ―made public‖ during 2013, because Sarbanes-Oxley restricts the Board’s ability to publicize enforcement actions against registered public accounting firms or their associated persons. In particular, Sarbanes-Oxley and Board rules prohibit the PCAOB from announcing or making its enforcement proceedings public until (1) the parties consent to a public hearing 2 (which rarely occurs); (2) the Board has imposed sanctions and the time to file an appeal with the 3 Securities and Exchange Commission (the ―SEC‖ or ―Commission‖) has expired; or (3) the SEC, on 4 appeal, issues an order regarding the sanctions imposed. In 2013, the PCAOB continued to express frustration with its inability to make its enforcement proceedings public, with Board Member Jeannette Franzel arguing that the current process is ―not sufficiently informative to investors, audit committees, auditors, or others interested in understanding audit 5 risks and challenges.‖ She further asserted that existing restrictions ―provide [ ] an incentive for respondents to litigate matters regardless of whether they believe they ultimately will prevail, in order to delay public disclosure.‖ Even so, the Board has been unable to persuade Congress to amend Sarbanes-Oxley to eliminate the existing confidentiality requirements. 1 See ―An Assessment of the PCAOB’s Enforcement Program to Date Under Sarbanes-Oxley‖ (Jan. 10, 2012), available at http://www.friedfrank.com/index.cfm?pageID=25&itemID=6458. 2 Section 105(c)(2) of Sarbanes-Oxley; PCAOB Rule 5203. 3 Section 105(d)(1)(C) of Sarbanes-Oxley; PCAOB Rule 5204. 4 Section 105(e)(1) of Sarbanes-Oxley; PCAOB Rule 5206. The SEC has taken the position, however, that Board proceedings on appeal to the Commission are public proceedings unless ordered otherwise by the SEC pursuant to a party’s request for a protective order. In addition, the SEC can lift a stay of PCAOB sanctions before ruling on the merits of an appeal, in which case the PCAOB may also make its prior ruling on sanctions public. See Corrected Order Partially Lifting Stay, In the Matter of the Application of Davis Accounting Group, P.C., et al, Admin. Proc. File No. 3-14370 (June 14, 2011). 5 See Jeanette M. Franzel, PCAOB Board Member, Protecting Investors Through Reliable Audits, Wayne State University George R. Husband Distinguished Lecture Series (Feb. 26, 2013). Copyright © 2014 Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP A Delaware Limited Liability Partnership 04/07/14 1 Fried Frank Client Memorandum As a result, the Board can only provide general information regarding its current inventory of non-public enforcement investigations and contested matters. For example, the PCAOB stated last year that it had 23 contested proceedings pending as of December 31, 2012 against registered public accounting firms 6 and individual auditors, but could not publicly disclose the specific allegations. Board Member Franzel also stated in July 2013 that the Board had approximately 90 informal inquiries, formal investigations and 7 non-public litigated proceedings currently in process. In contrast, the PCAOB made public 17 enforcement proceedings in 2013, an increase from 11 in 2012. They include 13 proceedings that were settled with the consent of the parties, and four adjudicated cases where the respondents had exhausted their right to file further appeals or the time for the respondents to file additional appeals had expired. While the 17 enforcement proceedings made public by the PCAOB in 2013 provide an imperfect window into the Board’s enforcement program, they nevertheless offer valuable insight into the PCAOB’s recent priorities. They include: Several proceedings alleging that registered firms or their personnel had improperly interfered with Board inspections or investigations, most notably by taking steps to modify or backdate audit workpapers; A number of cases alleging violations of basic auditing standards, including several proceedings in which the Board determined that the failures were so severe as to warrant findings that the auditors had engaged in fraud, in violation of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ―Exchange Act‖); A case in which the PCAOB alleged that a ―Big Four‖ accounting firm had improperly allowed a former partner to consult with engagement teams assigned to audits of the firm’s public company clients, while that partner was subject to a one-year suspension from association with a PCAOBregistered firm; Several proceedings alleging violations of auditor independence requirements, including the performance of prohibited internal audit outsourcing services and a failure to comply with rules that require the mandatory rotation of the lead audit partner on a public company engagement; and Several proceedings that serve as a reminder that the PCAOB may bring enforcement actions against registered firms that fail to pay their annual PCAOB support fees or file annual reports with the Board on a timely basis. The most notable features of the PCAOB’s 2013 public enforcement proceedings are described below. Taken as a whole, the proceedings suggest that most PCAOB enforcement actions involve serious and repeated failures, often by smaller firms with limited public company experience, to comply with the 6 See PCAOB, 2012 Annual Report (July 1, 2013), at 28. 7 See Jeanette M. Franzel, PCAOB Board Member, Accountability: Protecting Investors, the Public Interest and nd Prosperity, Association of Government Accountants 62 Annual PDC: Big Challenges, Bigger Thinking (July 17, 2013). 2 Fried Frank Client Memorandum Board’s auditing standards and other requirements, while the most severe financial penalties are imposed 8 in cases involving larger firms. Notable Features of PCAOB Enforcement Proceedings Announced in 2013 Interference with Board Inspections and Investigations As part of the Board’s initial standard-setting activities, the PCAOB adopted enhanced audit documentation standards in 2004. These standards – now contained in AS 3 – require engagement teams to document their audit procedures within 45 days of authorizing a client to make use of an audit report in a required SEC filing, retain such documentation for a seven-year period, and carefully note any 9 subsequent additions to, or modifications of, their documentation. Although this standard has now been in effect for almost a decade, the PCAOB continues to identify instances in which firms or auditors fail to comply with these requirements, and then seek to cover up the deficiencies by backdating or modifying audit workpapers in the face of a Board inspection or enforcement inquiry. The PCAOB views the submission of altered or backdated audit documentation to the Board as a threat to the integrity of its processes, and has aggressively pursued cases against firms or individual CPAs who have sought to cover up a failure to perform or document required audit procedures. Specifically, there were seven proceedings made public in 2013 – more than one-third of the proceedings announced during the year – that included allegations that registered firms or auditors had improperly backdated or modified 10 audit workpapers. Of the cases finding such misconduct made public in 2013, the most egregious fact pattern included allegations that the respondents, who were associated with two PCAOB-registered firms, coordinated the backdating of workpapers for the 2007 audits of three clients at a ―firm retreat,‖ after learning of an 11 upcoming PCAOB inspection of one of the firms. According to the Board, the respondents then proceeded to backdate and sign workpapers that purported to document audit procedures that had not been performed, added a handwritten list of supplemental audit procedures to the workpapers, and 8 As in prior years, the Board’s latest ―Strategic Plan‖ states that the PCAOB ―seeks to exercise its enforcement authority strategically‖ by ―focusing on serious violations of PCAOB standards or securities laws by auditors.‖ The Board also projects that roughly 75% of the Board’s investigations in 2014 will involve ―high-priority‖ investigations that involve ―significant investor protection considerations such as improving audit quality by strengthening skepticism, objectivity and independence of the audit profession, as well as the protection of Board regulatory processes.‖ PCAOB Strategic Plan 2013-2017: Improving the Quality of the Audit for the Protection and Benefit of Investors (Nov. 26, 2013) at 42. 9 See PCAOB Auditing Standard No. 3, Audit Documentation (effective with respect to fiscal years ending on or after November 15, 2004). 10 See In the Matter of Rehan Saeed, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-004 (May 21, 2013); In the Matter of Gruber & Co., LLC, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-005 (June 27, 2013); In the Matter of Nathan M. Suddeth, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-007 (Sept. 10, 2013); In the Matter of Hood & Associates CPAs, P.C., et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-012 (Nov. 21, 2013); In the Matter of David T. Svoboda, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-011 (Nov. 21, 2013); In the Matter of Acquavella, Chiarelli, Shuster, Berkower & Co. LLP, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-010 (Nov. 21, 2013); In the Matter of Stan Jeong-Ha Lee, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2012-001 (Notice of Finality of Initial Decision, June 19, 2013). 11 In the Matter of Gruber & Co., LLC, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-005 (June 27, 2013); In the Matter of Stan Jeong-Ha Lee, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2012-001 (Notice of Finality of Initial Decision, June 19, 2013). 3 Fried Frank Client Memorandum prepared and backdated letters required under PCAOB rules confirming the firm’s independence from two of the three clients. These materials, in turn, were subsequently provided to the Board’s Inspection Staff by the respondents, without acknowledging that the materials had been backdated. Following an investigation by the Enforcement Division, the Board permanently revoked the registration of the two firms with the PCAOB and permanently barred two individuals who had participated in the backdating from association with a PCAOB-registered firm. The Board also ordered one of the individuals to pay a $50,000 civil penalty. In addition to the Gruber and Lee proceedings, the PCAOB announced several other actions against registered firms and individual CPAs in 2013 that involved allegations of backdated or modified workpapers. In two additional proceedings that involved PCAOB-registered firms, the Board revoked the 12 firms’ registration, but authorized them to reapply in two and three years, respectively. The PCAOB also 13 censured and imposed a $10,000 civil penalty on each firm. In the other matters announced in 2013 in which individual CPAs were charged, the auditors were barred from association with a PCAOB-registered firm, subject to the right to petition for reinstatement after periods ranging from 18 months to three 14 years. With one exception, the backdating cases announced by the PCAOB in 2013 involved conduct by auditors associated with smaller accounting firms, rather than with ―Big Four‖ firms. The exception was the Suddeth case, in which a former Deloitte & Touche LLP (―Deloitte‖) engagement partner—but not 15 Deloitte—was charged with backdating three workpapers relating to a 2010 audit. The Board’s Order noted that Deloitte had uncovered the improprieties on its own, investigated the matter, voluntarily selfreported to the PCAOB, and relieved Suddeth of any audit-related responsibilities prior to his retirement in 2013. Notably, the PCAOB announced the Suddeth proceeding roughly five months after the Board had released a ―Policy Statement‖ addressing the circumstances under which the PCAOB may consider the 16 extent of a firm or associated person’s cooperation in determining the outcome of a Board investigation. In that Statement, the Board describes ―voluntary and timely‖ self-reporting, remedial or corrective action and/or substantial assistance to the Board’s investigative processes or to other law enforcement authorities as ―extraordinary cooperation‖ that may influence the PCAOB’s enforcement decisions. The 12 In the Matter of Acquavella, Chiarelli, Shuster, Berkower & Co. LLP, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-010 (Nov. 21, 2013) (revocation with right to reapply in two years); In the Matter of Hood & Associates CPAs, P.C., et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-012 (Nov. 21, 2013) (revocation with right to reapply in three years). 13 Each of these proceedings included findings of audit deficiencies by the respondents in addition to the alleged backdating of audit workpapers, but the PCAOB made particular note of the backdating activities in the respective orders imposing sanctions. 14 See In the Matter of Rehan Saeed, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-004 (May 21, 2013) (permitting respondent to petition for Board consent to associate with a registered firm 18 months after the date of the order); In the Matter of Nathan M. Suddeth, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-007 (Sept. 10, 2013) (bar with right to petition two years after the date of the order); In the Matter of David T. Svoboda, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-011 (Nov. 21, 2013) (bar with right to petition three years after the date of the order). The respondents in these proceedings were also censured by the Board. 15 In the Matter of Nathan M. Suddeth, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-007 (Sept. 10, 2013). 16 See Policy Statement Regarding Credit for Extraordinary Cooperation in Connection with Board Investigations, PCAOB Release No. 2013-003 (April 24, 2013). 4 Fried Frank Client Memorandum Suddeth case provides an example of a recent proceeding in which a registered firm’s self-reporting to the Board of violations of professional standards by an associated person may have favorably impacted the PCAOB’s assessment of the firm’s own conduct. Significant Audit Deficiencies in Audits of U.S. and Foreign Issuers During 2013, the Board announced several enforcement proceedings involving what the PCAOB viewed 17 as serious failures to satisfy basic auditing requirements. These proceedings reflect: (1) the Board’s continued focus on alleged audit deficiencies involving audits of foreign issuers; (2) cases in which the PCAOB alleged that the misconduct was so severe as to warrant findings that violations of the antifraud provisions of the Exchange Act had occurred; and (3) cases holding individual CPAs personally responsible for firms’ failures to implement adequate systems of quality controls. Allegations Involving Audits of Foreign Issuers: In 2013, the Board stated that its international program 18 remains a ―key focus‖ for the PCAOB. It also reached a significant Memorandum of Understanding on 19 cooperation with Chinese authorities last year. At the same time, the Board acknowledged that it still ―face[s] challenges in this arena, including persistent obstacles to inspections and enforcement in some 20 countries,‖ which the PCAOB avowed ―cannot continue indefinitely.‖ Despite these limitations, the Board has sought to make its presence known in a number of matters involving audits of foreign issuers by PCAOB-registered firms based in the United States and abroad. For example, in a settled proceeding announced in 2013, the PCAOB alleged that P. Parikh & Associates, a Mumbai-based firm registered with the Board, had committed ―numerous and repeated violations of PCAOB rules, quality control standards, and auditing standards‖ in connection with its audits 21 of an SEC registrant based in New Delhi. The Board noted that the firm, which had 17 partners and 14 offices (including seven offices outside India), had staffed the audits over a multi-year period with partners who lacked formal training in either U.S. GAAP or PCAOB auditing standards. Finding the audits wholly deficient, the PCAOB revoked the firm’s registration, subject to the right to petition the Board to reapply for registration in two years. The Board also announced two related enforcement actions in November 2013 that involved multijurisdictional audits of foreign issuers. These proceedings involved a U.S. accounting firm that had agreed to serve as the external auditor of several issuers with their primary operations in the People’s Republic of China or Hong Kong, and then looked to a Chinese firm to perform a significant portion of the 17 See, e.g., In the Matter of P. Parikh & Associates, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-002 (April 24, 2013); In the Matter of Lake & Associates, CPA’s LLC, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-006 (Aug. 13, 2013); In the Matter of Hood & Associates CPAs, P.C., et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-012 (Nov. 21, 2013); In the Matter of Harris F. Rattray CPA, PL, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-009 (Nov. 21, 2013). 18 Jay D. Hanson, PCAOB Board Member, ―Statement on Proposed 2014 Budget and Strategic Plan,‖ PCAOB Open Board Meeting (Nov. 25, 2013). 19 See Memorandum of Understanding on Enforcement Cooperation Between The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board of the United States and The China Securities Regulatory Commission and the Ministry of Finance of China (May 2013). 20 See supra n.18. 21 In the Matter of P. Parikh & Associates, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-002 (April 24, 2013). 5 Fried Frank Client Memorandum 22 audit procedures for those registrants. As in the Parikh proceeding, the Board found that the accounting firm had taken inadequate steps to ensure that the individuals conducting the audit procedures had 23 adequate training in U.S. GAAP or PCAOB auditing standards. The Board also questioned the U.S. firm’s capability to assume final responsibility for audits of China-based companies, noting that the individual at the firm assigned such final responsibility did not speak, understand or read Chinese, and instead ―relied on lower level accounting assistants with Chinese language skills‖ to review documents and engage in critical communications with client management. The Acquavella and Svoboda proceedings underscore that PCAOB-registered firms must take steps to satisfy themselves that they either possess or have ready access to necessary resources, before agreeing to serve as the auditors of companies that are headquartered or have significant operations in foreign jurisdictions with which they 24 may have limited experience. Findings of Section 10(b) Violations: Securities practitioners typically look to the SEC and the federal courts, rather than to the PCAOB, to define the scope of auditor liability under Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5. Both Sarbanes-Oxley and the Board’s rules provide, however, that the PCAOB may investigate and sanction registered firms and associated persons found to have violated 25 provisions of the federal securities laws that relate to the ―preparation and issuance of audit reports.‖ The Board relied upon this authority in several 2013 proceedings in which the PCAOB found that firms or their associated persons had violated Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. According to the PCAOB, an auditor violates Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 ―by issuing an audit report stating that the audit has been performed in accordance with PCAOB standards when he or she knows, 26 or is reckless in not knowing, that the statement is false.‖ In practice, it appears that the Board seeks to apply a standard analogous to that articulated by the Southern District of New York in SEC v. Price 27 Waterhouse. In that leading decision, Judge Sprizzo held that, to establish that an auditor violated Section 10(b), the SEC ―must prove that the accounting practices were so deficient that the audit amounted to no audit at all * * * or an egregious refusal to see the obvious, or to investigate the doubtful, * * * or that the accounting judgments which were made were such that no reasonable 28 accountant would have made the same decisions if confronted with the same facts.‖ 22 In the Matter of David T. Svoboda, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-011 (Nov. 21, 2013); In the Matter of Acquavella, Chiarelli, Shuster, Berkower & Co. LLP, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-010 (Nov. 21, 2013). 23 See In the Matter of Acquavella, Chiarelli, Shuster, Berkower & Co. LLP, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-010 (Nov. 21, 2013) (noting that the U.S. firm ―failed to adequately assess the [Chinese firm’s] assistants’ competency in accounting principles generally accepted in the United States * * * and knowledge of PCAOB rules and standards [* * * * or] provide any training to the [Chinese firm’s] assistants in PCAOB standards‖ prior to the audits in question. 24 In addition to finding that the respondents in the Acquavella and Svoboda proceedings (the U.S. accounting firm and one of its associated persons) had failed to structure the audit engagements properly, the PCAOB concluded that the respondents had engaged in independence violations and backdated workpapers, and imposed significant sanctions. See supra nn. 12-14. 25 See Sections 105(b)(1) and 105(c)(4) of Sarbanes-Oxley; PCAOB Rules 5100(a)(3) and 5300(a). 26 In the Matter of P. Parikh & Associates, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-002 (April 24, 2013). 27 797 F. Supp. 1217 (S.D.N.Y. 1992). 28 Id. at 1240 (internal quotations omitted). 6 Fried Frank Client Memorandum Specifically, in the proceedings made public in 2013 in which the Board alleged Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 violations, the PCAOB emphasized that there were intentional or reckless failures by auditors to perform basic audit procedures that any reasonable accountant would have understood were necessary. In one case, the Board found that a registered firm had issued an audit report that falsely stated that a client’s 2006 and 2007 audits had been performed in accordance with PCAOB standards, when in fact 29 the firm had not performed any audit procedures before releasing its report. In another 2013 case where the Board found that a registered firm had violated the antifraud provisions, the PCAOB alleged that the firm either knew, or was reckless in not knowing, that ―few substantive audit procedures were 30 performed‖ before the issuance of audit reports for three registrants. And, in a third case involving alleged Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 violations, the Board found that, among other things, the respondents had issued reports on an issuer’s internal controls over financial reporting (―ICFR‖) without familiarizing themselves with the relevant PCAOB auditing standards or performing any required ICFR procedures, and in other cases failed to obtain engagement quality reviews required under PCAOB 31 standards before issuing audit reports. Findings that a firm or associated person violated the antifraud provisions of the Exchange Act carry particular weight, as they may be especially likely to trigger additional collateral consequences and disclosure obligations for the respondents. While the cases announced by the Board in 2013 demonstrate that the PCAOB does not regularly allege violations of antifraud provisions under the federal securities laws, they also show that the Board may do so if it identifies repeated failures to comply with basic requirements. Imposition of Secondary Liability on Individuals for Firm Violations: The most recent standard-setting agenda issued by the PCAOB’s Office of the Chief Auditor (―OCA‖) notes that the OCA expects to recommend that the Board issue a concept release in the second half of 2014 discussing potential improvements to current quality control standards, including those addressing supervisory responsibilities 32 within PCAOB-registered firms. In the interim, however, the Board has continued to cite violations of Rule 3502 (―Responsibility Not to Knowingly or Recklessly Contribute to Violations‖) in proceedings where it concluded that individual CPAs were responsible for their firms’ alleged failures to implement adequate 33 quality control systems and procedures. 29 See supra n.26. 30 In the Matter of Hood & Associates CPAs, P.C., et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-012 (Nov. 21, 2013). The Board also found in this proceeding that the firm knew or was reckless in not knowing that it lacked independence from two of the registrants and that it had obtained required engagement quality reviews for the audits in question. In addition to sanctioning the firm, the PCAOB also sanctioned one of the firm’s associated persons (imposing a censure and permanent bar), whom the Board found had directly and substantially contributed to the firm’s violations of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. 31 In the Matter of Harris F. Rattray CPA, PL, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-009 (Nov. 21, 2013). In that proceeding, the Board permanently revoked the registration of the firm and barred its sole owner and associated person from association with a PCAOB-registered firm, with no leave granted for the respondents to petition for reinstatement at a later date. 32 See OCA Standard-Setting Agenda (Dec. 31, 2013) at 6 (stating that ―[i]mprovements of * * * firms’ systems of quality control could have significant potential to improve audit quality‖). 33 Under Rule 3502, associated persons of a PCAOB-registered firm may not take, or omit to take, actions while knowing or recklessly not knowing that the act or omission would ―directly and substantially‖ contribute to a firm’s violation of Board rules or relevant securities laws. 7 Fried Frank Client Memorandum Three such proceedings were announced in 2013. In the first, the Board found a Rule 3502 violation where a senior partner was responsible for designing, communicating and monitoring his firm’s system of quality controls, yet was aware that firm personnel responsible for several public company audit engagements lacked relevant training or experience conducting audits in accordance with PCAOB 34 auditing standards. In the second proceeding, the PCAOB sanctioned the managing member of a small accounting firm in Florida, who also had overall responsibility at the firm for promoting compliance with Board standards, after engagement teams under his supervision had failed to perform required audit 35 procedures to address fraud risks at their clients. And, in the third proceeding, the Board found that the sole audit partner at a small accounting firm had ―directly and substantially‖ contributed to his firm’s violation of AS 7 by permitting the firm to issue audit reports without previously having obtained an 36 engagement quality review by another auditor who concurred in the engagement team’s conclusions. The Rule 3502 violations alleged in these proceedings underscore both the importance which the PCAOB attaches to firms’ systems of quality controls and the potential risk assumed by senior individuals at PCAOB-registered firms with quality control or risk management responsibilities. Failure to Monitor the Post-Suspension Activities of a Former Partner In the only 2013 proceeding in which a ―Big Four‖ firm was named as a respondent, the PCAOB sanctioned Deloitte for allowing a former partner who was subject to a bar on association with a PCAOBregistered firm to participate in various consultations with Deloitte audit teams working on public company 37 engagements. This proceeding raises important issues as to what it means to be an ―associated person‖ of a registered public accounting firm, as well as what steps firms need to take when one of their partners or employees becomes subject to a Board suspension. The 2013 case arose as a result of a prior Board action in 2008, in which the PCAOB had barred Deloitte partner Christopher Anderson from association with a PCAOB-registered firm, with a right to petition the 38 Board for reinstatement in one year. In anticipation of the Board’s sanction, Deloitte restructured Anderson’s responsibilities at the firm, and Anderson also stepped down as a Deloitte partner and became a salaried employee of the firm. These steps were apparently taken with the goal of ensuring that Anderson’s post-suspension activities at Deloitte would not cause him to remain an ―associated 39 person‖ of the firm under the Board’s rules or run afoul of the 2008 Order. Moreover, Deloitte had some discussions with the PCAOB’s Staff regarding its plan to retain Anderson as a salaried employee during the term of his Board-ordered suspension. 34 In the Matter of P. Parikh & Associates, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-002 (April 24, 2013). 35 In the Matter of Lake & Associates, CPA’s LLC, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-006 (Aug. 13, 2013). 36 In the Matter of Hood & Associates CPAs, P.C., et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-012 (Nov. 21, 2013). 37 In the Matter of Deloitte & Touche LLP, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-008 (Oct. 22, 2013). 38 In the Matter of Christopher E. Anderson, CPA, PCAOB Release No. 105-2008-003 (Oct. 31, 2008). 39 Under PCAOB Rule 1001(p)(1), subject to limited exceptions for individuals who perform ministerial functions or are associated with another registered public accounting firm, an ―associated person‖ of a registered firm is defined as ―any individual proprietor, partner, shareholder, principal, accountant, or professional employee of a public accounting firm, or any independent contractor that, in connection with the preparation or issuance of any audit report – (1) shares in the profits of, or receives compensation in any other form from, that firm; or (2) participates as agent on behalf of such accounting firm in any activity of that firm.‖ 8 Fried Frank Client Memorandum Nevertheless, the Board found that Deloitte violated Section 105 of Sarbanes-Oxley and PCAOB Rule 5301 by allowing Anderson to work in a National Office position in Deloitte’s Audit and Assurance Services Group, which handled consultations with engagement teams and developed firm-wide audit policies and guidance. Deloitte affirmatively restricted Anderson’s activities in numerous respects; for example, he was prohibited from signing audit reports for public company audit clients, accepting new public company audit engagements, or serving as a ―concurring reviewer‖ on such engagements. According to the Board, however, Anderson, in his new National Office role, participated directly in developing firm-wide guidance made available to engagement teams working on issuer audits. In addition, Anderson consulted directly with engagement teams assigned to the audits of three public company clients of the firm while still subject to the prior suspension. In the Board’s opinion, such activities were inconsistent with the 2008 Order, and a result of Deloitte’s not having developed adequate procedures to define and monitor Anderson’s post-suspension activities at the firm. As part of its settlement, Deloitte agreed to be censured and to pay a $2.0 million civil monetary penalty (tying the highest penalty ever assessed by the Board against a registered firm in a settled proceeding). In addition, Deloitte confirmed that it had adopted new procedures, including an undertaking to communicate the job responsibilities of Board-restricted individuals ―to the PCAOB staff in advance of or contemporaneously with the term of any suspension.‖ Accordingly, the Deloitte case indicates that firms can retain valued professionals who become subject to PCAOB suspensions, but that they must monitor their activities (and may wish to pre-clear the scope of their activities during the suspension period with the PCAOB’s Staff). Independence Violations While the PCAOB launched no new standard-setting initiatives in 2013 relating to auditor independence, Chairman Doty questioned in a December 2013 speech whether the recent growth of accounting firms’ 40 consulting practices may impact firms’ independence. Further signaling the Board’s continued interest in auditor independence, the PCAOB alleged violations of existing independence rules in two enforcement proceedings made public during 2013. In the first proceeding, the Board found that a registered firm and one of its associated persons provided prohibited internal audit outsourcing services to an issuer, in violation of Section 10A(g) of the Exchange 41 Act and PCAOB Rule 3520. In the second proceeding, the PCAOB found that a partner at a firm had served as the lead engagement partner on audits for two issuers for more than five consecutive years, in violation of the partner rotation requirements under SEC and PCAOB independence rules. Accordingly, the Board held the partner and his firm responsible for violations of Exchange Act Section 10A(j) and Rule 42 10A-2 thereunder, as well as for violations of Board rules. In both proceedings, the PCAOB imposed significant sanctions on the firms and individual partners, although the independence violations were not the sole basis for those sanctions. 40 James R. Doty, PCAOB Chairman, ―Enhancing Capital Formation, Investor Protection and Our Economy,‖ AICPA National Conference on SEC and PCAOB Developments (Dec. 9, 2013). 41 In the Matter of P. Parikh & Associates, et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-002 (April 24, 2013). 42 In the Matter of Hood & Associates CPAs, P.C., et al, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-012 (Nov. 21, 2013). 9 Fried Frank Client Memorandum Failures to File Annual Reports and Pay Annual Dues on Timely Basis The PCAOB has been announcing several enforcement cases every year against registered public accounting firms that fail to file annual reports, or pay required annual support fees, on a timely basis. 2013 was no exception. In two of the four cases involving such allegations made public in 2013, the Board settled with the delinquent firms, each of which paid the overdue fees, filed the overdue annual reports, and filed Form 1-WDs with the PCAOB seeking to withdraw their registration with the Board. The 43 two firms also agreed to a censure and the imposition of modest fines. In comparison, the other two cases made public in 2013 were adjudicated proceedings. They are notable primarily because they indicate how the relief sought by the PCAOB’s Enforcement Division may differ from the sanctions judged appropriate by a Hearing Officer. In one of the proceedings, which involved a sole proprietorship, the Enforcement Division had sought a one-year suspension of the respondent’s registration with the Board, but the Hearing Officer found this sanction insufficient, in light of the repeated opportunities that the PCAOB had given him to comply with his obligations and avoid disciplinary 44 sanctions. Instead, the Hearing Officer found that the respondent engaged in intentional or knowing misconduct, permanently revoked his registration with the Board, and imposed a $5,000 civil monetary penalty. In the other adjudicated proceeding made public in 2013 involving a failure to file required annual reports or pay support fees, the Enforcement Division recommended a one-year suspension and a $7,500 penalty. The Hearing Officer agreed that the respondent had engaged in ―repeated instances of negligent conduct‖ and suspended the respondent for one year, as recommended by the Enforcement Division, but 45 reduced the civil penalty to $2,500. The respondents in these two adjudicated proceedings did not appeal the Hearing Officer’s decision to the full Board. Had they done so, however, the Board also could have increased or reduced the sanctions recommended by the Hearing Officer, or decided to impose no sanctions at all. The proceedings thus suggest that, depending upon the stakes and the findings made by a Hearing Officer, either or both parties to a contested Board proceeding – the respondent or the Enforcement Division – may have an incentive to pursue appeals to the full Board (and then possibly to the SEC as well). 43 In the Matter of Baumgarten & Company LLP, PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-001 (Feb. 21, 2013) (imposition of a $2,000 civil monetary penalty); In the Matter of Iter Audit S.R.L., PCAOB Release No. 105-2013-013 (Dec. 17, 2013) (imposition of a $1,000 civil monetary penalty). Both of these cases were settled after the Board had already issued an Order Instituting Proceedings to commence an enforcement action. 44 Initial Decision (Default), In the Matter of Kenneth J. McBride, PCAOB Release No. 105-2012-007 (Mar. 15, 2013) (noting that respondent was ―notified and given options that would have allowed him to avoid disciplinary action, yet after representing that he would file a Form 1-WD to withdraw from registration, he failed to file the delinquent reports and pay the required fees). 45 Initial Decision, In the Matter of Eric C. Yartz, P.C., PCAOB Release No. 105-2012-006 (Mar. 15, 2013). It appears that, in reducing the sanctions requested by the Enforcement Division, the Hearing Office took into account the fact that the respondent paid its past-due support fee obligations, filed its delinquent reports, and filed a Form 1-WD seeking to withdraw its registration with the Board after the issuance of the Order Instituting Proceedings in the matter. 10 Fried Frank Client Memorandum Conclusion The number of enforcement proceedings announced by the PCAOB in 2013 increased over the number in 2012, and the Board has publicly stated that it currently has a large inventory of both investigations and contested proceedings in the pipeline. A review of the proceedings made public in 2013 indicates that the PCAOB’s Enforcement Division is continuing to pursue a range of cases and also looking to further expand its reach, both substantively and territorially. Substantively, the Board’s expanded authority to regulate auditors of SEC-registered broker46 dealers is likely to generate additional enforcement cases in the future. From a geographic standpoint, the Board’s continued focus on the qualifications and performance of U.S. firms auditing foreign issuers and its entrance into new cooperation agreements with foreign regulators also can be expected to give rise to additional investigations and enforcement proceedings. At the same time, the Enforcement Division likely will continue to pursue ―bread-and-butter‖ cases involving, for example, situations where auditors interfere with Board inspections or investigations by backdating or altering audit workpapers or fail to satisfy basic requirements under existing standards. * * * Authors: David B. Hardison Nathan M. Erickson This memorandum is not intended to provide legal advice, and no legal or business decision should be based on its contents. If you have any questions about the contents of this memorandum, please call your regular Fried Frank contact or the authors listed below: Contact: David B. Hardison 46 +1.202.639.7029 david.hardison@friedfrank.com In 2010, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act amended Sarbanes-Oxley to provide the Board with oversight authority with respect of audits of all SECregistered broker-dealers, including those that are not issuers. The Board subsequently adopted interim inspection rules with respect to such broker-dealer auditors, with a view towards developing a permanent inspection program after it has gained additional experience. See Temporary Rule for an Interim Program of Inspection Related to Audits of Brokers and Dealers, PCAOB Release No. 2011-001 (June 14, 2011). The Board did not foreclose the possibility, however, of pursuing enforcement actions against broker-dealer auditors prior to adopting a permanent inspection program. 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