Remi Chauveau Notes

Dylan Tokar



Wall Street Journal
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@dgtokar

Dylan Tokar is a New York–based journalist for The Wall Street Journal, where he covers financial regulation, money laundering, and the expanding world of financial‑crime enforcement. His reporting often follows high‑stakes investigations involving major corporations, federal prosecutors, and the complex machinery of U.S. regulatory agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Treasury Department, and the Federal Reserve.

Before joining the Journal, Tokar built a reputation in the legal‑investigations world through his work at Global Investigations Review and its vertical Just Anti‑Corruption. There, he reported on anti‑corruption enforcement, sanctions, cross‑border probes, and the inner workings of the Department of Justice and the SEC. His coverage spanned courtrooms in Washington, New York, Los Angeles, and Toronto, where he tracked corporate settlements, policy shifts, and the lawyers shaping them.

Tokar has also written on antitrust enforcement for Global Competition Review and spent time as a Journalist in Residence at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, where he studied financial markets, corruption law, and platform competition. Today, his work at the WSJ continues to map the evolving landscape of financial oversight, corporate compliance, and the regulatory pressures reshaping global business.