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Borrowers, investors, vendors, customers and employees all represent a degree of risk to your organization. Knowing
who you are doing business with has never been more important. The potential risk of doing business with someone
who you do not know goes well beyond simple economic loss. Legal liability; including civil law suits, law enforcement
and regulatory action, as well as a loss of shareholder value can result from doing business with the wrong people. YOUR DUE DILIGENCE NEEDS
Your organization can mitigate these risks through
investigative due diligence. For years, legal practitioners,
mergers and acquisition advisors and commercial bankers
have utilized financial and legal due diligence to reduce
risk. These categories of due diligence, while extremely
important, seldom provide information about a persons
character, integrity or past conduct. Investigative due
diligence is the application of exploratory techniques
developed by law enforcement agencies to minimize
relationship risk by analyzing publicly available information
and discovering any red flags that can serve as a predictor
of future derogatory behavior. HOW CAN DAYLIGHT HELP
Daylight regularly performs services ranging from C-level
background investigations to searches surrounding the
principals and entities involved in complex sales, mergers
or acquisitions. We perform these services for government
agencies, commercial and investment banks, private equity
firms, broker-dealers, venture partners, initial public
offering candidates, hedge funds and a variety of other
business entities. Daylight has extensive investigative tools
consisting of online access to a wide variety of commercial
research databases, experienced public record researchers,
and investigative professionals located worldwide. THE DAYLIGHT APPROACH
Our clients understand that the value of using Daylight
is in our ability to scour the public record as well as our
global network of information sources, targeting potential
red flags and presenting them in the context of our clients
objectives. Accordingly, our approach is not check-list
driven, nor is it reliant on any one resource. It is tailored
to the clients objectives and the industries, geographies
and regulatory environment in which they operate.
Our basic investigative framework considers the
following types of information:
- Corporate records and directorships, including status
of incorporation, related entities, directors and officers,
financial background
- Criminal history queries on the entity and its principals
- Civil litigation history
- Judgments, liens and bankruptcies
- Professional licensing and disciplinary records
- U.S. and foreign government sanctions lists including
the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), the
Government Services Administrations Excluded
Parties List, The Bank of England Financial Sanctions
Unit and the EUs Consolidated list
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