{
  "$type": "site.standard.document",
  "bskyPostRef": {
    "cid": "bafyreiafos5776g5z7jnhwhdd3fqlta33ins3adrfqmun5syxnindknxj4",
    "uri": "at://did:plc:luswc5clj7d5sc356y7qkttb/app.bsky.feed.post/3mj3rq7qjmtr2"
  },
  "coverImage": {
    "$type": "blob",
    "ref": {
      "$link": "bafkreigdrqgufa5l3brshrtygdugpsacw6n7ujgd2qq5wpwib4vf46cpr4"
    },
    "mimeType": "image/png",
    "size": 6037520
  },
  "description": "The Black Executive Journal — Afternoon Edition | Thursday, April 9, 2026",
  "path": "/enforcement-is-getting-faster-not-fairer-compliance-has-become-the-product/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-09T21:44:33.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.blackexecutivebrief.com",
  "tags": [
    "Lowenstein Sandler's Crypto Brief",
    "Holland & Knight",
    "reporting on the Bank of Namibia's announcement",
    "Caribbean Export project page",
    "Lowenstein Sandler's April 9 Crypto Brief",
    "Subscribe now"
  ],
  "textContent": "## KEY TAKEAWAYS\n\n  * The SEC reported **456 enforcement actions** in FY2025 and **$17.9 billion** in total monetary relief, signaling that volume remains high even as the agency reframes what \"investor protection\" should mean, per Lowenstein Sandler's Crypto Brief.\n  * The SEC's internal critique flagged **95 book-and-record cases** and **$2.3 billion in penalties** since FY2022 that it said showed **\"no direct investor harm,\"** plus **seven crypto registration cases** and **six dealer-definition cases** it characterized as misallocated enforcement.\n  * FinCEN assessed an **$80 million** civil money penalty against a broker-dealer for BSA/AML failures, crediting **$20 million** penalties from each of the SEC and FINRA and suspending **$5 million** pending a lookback review — leaving **$35 million** due immediately, per Holland & Knight.\n  * The same FinCEN matter alleged chronic underinvestment in compliance, with regulators pointing to program breakdowns across onboarding and ongoing monitoring, plus governance failures that turned known weaknesses into a penalty-maximizing enforcement narrative.\n  * The Bank of Namibia is targeting a **June 2026** rollout for a national instant payment system, underscoring that real-time rails are becoming sovereign infrastructure, not merely a private-sector product cycle, per reporting on the Bank of Namibia's announcement.\n  * Caribbean Export is running a **2025–2026** initiative to simplify business formation in the Caribbean with development-bank funding, reinforcing a practical thesis for operators: paperwork is still a material cost of capital in small markets, per the Caribbean Export project page.\n\n\n\n* * *\n\n## STORIES THAT MATTER\n\n* * *\n\n## UNITED STATES — The SEC Is Rewriting the Story on \"Regulation by Enforcement\" While Keeping the Case Machine Running\n\nThe SEC's latest enforcement framing matters less for the press release tone and more for the signal it sends to operators who build in regulated adjacency: the agency wants discretion over which violations count as harm, and which are \"process.\"\n\nThe agency's FY2025 results cited **456 enforcement actions** and **$17.9 billion** in monetary relief — a headline that still reads like an institution built for scale, per Lowenstein Sandler's April 9 Crypto Brief.\n\n### This post is for subscribers only\n\nBecome a member to get access to all content\n\nSubscribe now",
  "title": "Enforcement Is Getting Faster, Not Fairer — Compliance Has Become the Product",
  "updatedAt": "2026-04-09T21:44:33.592Z"
}