Women in Risk Panel – Join Us
Panelists
Elena Sutton
Financial Crime Analytics and Technology Senior Manager, Crowe
Barbara Brick
Executive Vice President, Director of BSA & Compliance, Ocean Bank
AnnaLou Tirol
Partner, O’Melveny & Myers, LLP
Annalisa Camarillo
EVP of Marketing, Quantifind – Moderator
Event Agenda:
Date and Time: November 14th, 9:00 am ET
Location: University of Miami Lakeside Pavillion 1000
9:00 – 9:05 Welcoming
9:05 – 9:10 Opening – What unites us
9:10 – 9:45 Panel Discussion
– Empowering women in financial crime careers
– How skills are evolving in risk roles and how to adapt
– Blockers to career growth in financial crimes risk management
– Technology that supports advancement for you and the organization
– How to form allies inside and outside of your organization
9:45 – 9:55 Audience Q&A
9:55 – 10:30 Open for Networking
Register for the Event
Please register to join us by filling out the form below
Our Mission
The Women in Risk initiative, aptly named WIRE (women in risk: enlightened, empowered, elevated), is a grassroots collective started by leaders at Quantifind in partnership with leaders at Truist, TIAA, and Fifth Third. Our mission is simple: unite women countering risk in finance, government, and technology to accelerate career growth and increase our ability to reduce financial crime risks.
FOUNDERS
EVP, Marketing, Quantifind
Senior Director of Federal Business Development, Quantifind
Senior Director of Product, Quantifind
Deputy Director Financial Crimes, SVP, Truist
Sr. Director – Financial Crimes Systems & Analysis, Everbank
VP, FIU Governance & Reporting Manager, Fifth Third Bank
Become a Member
We invite current and future executive women in risk management positions from global or local financial services, government, technology, venture capital and non-profit organizations.
Historical Sources of Inspiration
Joanne Pierce Misko
Joanne Pierce Misko grew up in Niagara Falls, New York, the daughter and sister of police officers. Out of college, Pierce entered the convent of the Sisters of Mercy in Buffalo, New York, where she taught middle and high school students for 10 years until she left the convent to become one of the first women special agents for the FBI.
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had a firm rule: only men could be special agents in the FBI. But that rule changed shortly after his death in May 1972, paving the way for the first female modern Special Agents. Misko joined the FBI as a researcher at the Training Academy in 1970, but when Acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray opened the special agent position to females in 1972, Misko’s supervisor asked if she had any interest in applying. “Absolutely, I would be interested,” Misko said. The head of the Training Division met with Misko to explain what it would be like and asked her if she was absolutely sure about it.