Your team encounters ethical dilemmas every day.Are they prepared to respond?

Regulatory penalties. Public trust erosion. The impact of a single misstep.

Veritas equips professionals to navigate complex ethical terrain — from subtle conflicts of interest to data privacy concerns — building judgment skills before real stakes are on the line.

Banking & Finance
Health Systems
Public Sector
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Integrity Training — 2026

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Years developing ethical frameworks

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Three situations. Three sectors. Common thread.

Each scenario below reflects actual compliance incidents, anonymized for confidentiality. Consider: would your colleagues recognize the warning signs?

01

The Hospitality Package

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A senior relationship manager at an investment firm receives an invitation from a long-standing technology vendor. The package includes a weekend retreat at a luxury resort for the manager and their spouse, including golf, spa treatments, and a gourmet dinner. The vendor mentions this is simply "gratitude for a great partnership." The manager has attended similar events before without issue. They accept without notifying compliance.

"It felt like appreciation, not influence. That distinction matters more than I realized."
SEC Rule 17a-4 / Firm Policy 4.2

Regulatory Requirements

Two professionals examining documents together in a modern conference room

Under SEC guidance and firm policy, any entertainment exceeding $250 per person requires pre-approval and must serve a legitimate business purpose. The $2,800 weekend package triggered a potential books-and-records violation when discovered during a routine expense audit. The firm self-reported to regulators, paid $180,000 in penalties, and the manager was suspended pending retraining. The vendor relationship was terminated.

Applicable Standards

Anti-Bribery / Vendor Due Diligence

How Veritas Changes Outcomes

Our immersive scenarios present these situations before decisions are made. Participants practice recognizing disclosure obligations and using proper reporting channels. Behavioral change happens in training, not during investigations.

72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025   ◆   72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025 ◆ 72% of ethical lapses — involve employees who believed their actions were justified · Global Integrity Survey 2025
02

The Quick Consultation

Hospital corridor with modern architecture and natural lighting through windows

A medical resident in a hospital emergency department receives a text from a colleague at another facility. The message includes a patient name and partial medical record number, asking for a "quick opinion" on a complex case. The resident recognizes the urgency and responds with their assessment, referencing the patient by name in their reply. They do this routinely to help peers.

"I was just trying to help a patient. I never considered the channel itself was the problem."
HIPAA § 164.530(c) / 45 CFR 164.312

Compliance Obligations

Healthcare professional reviewing medical information on a secure workstation

HIPAA protections extend to any transmission containing protected health information, regardless of sender intent or professional courtesy. Patient identifiers must never appear in unsecured communications. When the colleague's phone was later compromised, the exchange surfaced in a breach investigation. Both institutions faced OCR scrutiny. The resident received formal discipline and mandatory privacy retraining. The incident required patient notification.

Applicable Standards

Data Privacy / Patient Information Security

How Veritas Changes Outcomes

Our immersive scenarios present these situations before decisions are made. Participants practice recognizing disclosure obligations and using proper reporting channels. Behavioral change happens in training, not during investigations.

$11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association   ◆   $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association ◆ $11.2M median cost — of undetected compliance failures in regulated industries · Risk Management Association
03

The Family Connection

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A procurement specialist at a municipal agency discovers their cousin's consulting firm has submitted a proposal for a technology modernization contract. The specialist has no direct decision-making authority on this award but maintains relationships with the evaluation committee. They assume their recusal is sufficient protection and mention the family connection casually to a colleague rather than formally documenting it.

"I thought transparency meant telling someone. I didn't realize it required documentation."
Municipal Code § 2-156 / Ethics Board Directive

Ethical Standards

Professional reviewing formal documents at a government office workstation

Municipal ethics codes require formal disclosure of any familial or financial relationship with vendors, regardless of direct involvement in procurement decisions. The casual mention did not satisfy the written disclosure requirement. When the cousin's firm was selected, a competing bidder challenged the award. Investigation revealed the undisclosed relationship. The specialist faced disciplinary action. The contract was voided and rebid at significant administrative cost.

Applicable Standards

Procurement Ethics / Conflict of Interest

How Veritas Changes Outcomes

Our immersive scenarios present these situations before decisions are made. Participants practice recognizing disclosure obligations and using proper reporting channels. Behavioral change happens in training, not during investigations.

Do these situations sound familiar?

If any scenario resonates, your organization could benefit from proactive ethics training.

Request Program Assessment

Schedule a Program Assessment

A Veritas specialist will evaluate your industry context, workforce size, and risk profile — then propose a tailored integrity program aligned with your regulatory landscape.

30-minute discovery session

We analyze your compliance maturity against sector-specific requirements.

Risk scenario mapping

We pinpoint ethical vulnerabilities most relevant to your operations.

Customized program outline

You receive a detailed proposal with curriculum paths and implementation timeline.

We will confirm a specific time via email within one business day.

No obligation. All information is kept strictly confidential.

Access the 2026 Ethics Scenario Collection

Fifty-two practical case studies spanning banking, healthcare, and public sector contexts — each includes applicable standards, decision frameworks, and discussion prompts. Ideal for facilitating team workshops and strengthening ethical awareness.

52 detailed scenarios
Regulatory references
Decision framework guides
Discussion facilitation tips
Sector-organized index
Digital & printable formats

Scenario 12 — Healthcare

52 Scenarios