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Fraud Examination Spring 2006 Dr Kevan Jensen Day 2

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Title: Fraud Examination Spring 2006 Dr Kevan Jensen Day 2


1
Fraud ExaminationSpring 2006Dr Kevan
JensenDay 2
2
What is fraudagain?
  • A deception that includes A representation
    about a material point, which is false, and
    intentionally or recklessly so, which is believed
    and acted upon by the victim to the victims
    damage
  • -Albrecht

3
Fraud against organizations
  • 1. Classified by perpetrator
  • A. Employee fraud
  • B. Vendor fraud
  • C. Customer fraud
  • D. Management fraud?

4
Fraud against organizations (cont)
  • 2. Classified by type
  • A. Asset misappropriations
  • i. skimming (prior to recording)
  • ii. larceny (after recording)
  • iii. disbursements schemes (billing,
    payroll, reimbursement, register, check
    tampering)

5
Fraud against organizations (cont)
  • B. Corruption
  • - Conflicts of interest
  • - Bribery
  • - Illegal gratuities
  • - Extortion
  • C. Accounting

6
Fraud on behalf of organizations
  • 1. Financial statement fraud

7
Regardless of why the fraud is perpetrated, there
are ALWAYS victims!
8
Other types of fraud
  • Consumer Fraud
  • Investment Scams
  • Tax Fraud
  • Bankruptcy and Divorce Fraud
  • Identity Theft
  • Cheating/Plagiarism
  • Other

9
Where does fraud occur?
  • Type Median Loss
  • Private company 42 123,000
  • Public company 30 100,000
  • Government 16 38,000
  • Non-profit 12 100,000

10
Where does fraud occur (cont)?
  • No of employees Median Loss
  • 1-99 46 98,000
  • 100-999 21 79,000
  • 1000-9,999 20 88,000
  • 10,000 13 106,000

11
Where does fraud occur (cont)?
  • Industry of cases Median Loss
  • Manufacturing 13 125,000
  • Banking 11 101,000
  • Service 11 139,000
  • Government 11 45,000
  • Other 9 145,000
  • Insurance 9 173,000
  • Retail 8 36,000
  • Health Care 7 105,000

12
Where does fraud occur (cont)?
  • Industry of cases Median Loss
  • Education 6 31,000
  • Construction 3 145,000
  • Transportation 3 225,000
  • Oil Gas 3 102,000
  • Communication 3 150,000
  • Utility 3 30,000
  • Real Estate 2 385,000
  • Agriculture 1 1,080,000

13
Where does fraud occur (cont)?
  • 1. Finland
  • 2. Denmark
  • 3. New Zealand
  • 4. Iceland
  • 5.Singapore
  • 5. Sweden
  • 7. Canada
  • 7. Luxembourg
  • 7. Netherlands
  • 10. United Kingdom
  • 11. Australia
  • 16. United States
  • 18. Germany
  • 20. Japan
  • 31. Italy
  • 59. China
  • 71. Russia
  • 96. Indonesia
  • 101. Nigeria
  • 102. Bangladesh

14
What does fraud look like?
  • Asset Misappropriation 93 93,000
  • Corruption 30 250,000
  • Financial Statement 8 1,000,000

15
What does fraud look like?
  • lt 10,000 14
  • 10,000-100,000 36
  • 100,000-1,000,000 36
  • gt1,000,000 15

16
Whos doing it?
  • Males 53 160,000
  • Females 47 60,000

17
Whos doing it (cont)?
  • lt 30 17 25,000
  • 31-40 34 80,000
  • 41-50 32 173,000
  • 51-60 15 250,000
  • gt 60 2 527,000

18
Whos doing it (cont)?
  • Graduate 9 325,000
  • Bachelor 42 150,000
  • High School 49 50,000

19
Whos doing it (cont)?
  • Married 72 150,000
  • Separated 9 50,000
  • Divorced 8 80,000
  • Single 11 54,000

20
Whos doing it (cont)?
  • Employee 68 62,000
  • Manager 34 140,000
  • Owner/Executive 12 900,000

21
Whos doing it (cont)?
  • Prior convictions 12
  • Charged never convicted 5
  • Never previously charged 83

22
How is fraud usually found out?
  • Tip 40
  • Internal Audit 24
  • Accidental 22
  • External Audit 11
  • Notified by Police 1
  • Other 2

23
What happens to the fraudster?
  • Referred to Law Enforcement 69
  • Must prove intent using evidence
  • Grand jury determines whether sufficient evidence
    for indictment
  • Must prove beyond a reasonable doubt
  • Requires unanimous verdict
  • Penalties include jail and/or fines Outcomes

24
Results
  • Plead Guilty 73
  • No Prosecution 16
  • Conviction 9
  • Acquittal 2

25
What happens (cont)?
  • Civil Suit Filed 19
  • Must prove intent using evidence
  • Plaintiff files a claim/lawsuit
  • Requires preponderance of evidence
  • Verdict may be less than unanimous
  • Penalties include restitution and/or damages

26
Results
  • Settled out of court 54
  • Judgment for victim 46
  • Judgment for perpetrator 0

27
What happens to the assets?
  • 100 recovery 22
  • 75-99 recovery 9
  • 50-75 recovery 6
  • 25-50 recovery 9
  • 1-25 recovery 17
  • No recovery at all 37

28
Why orgs dont take action?
  • Private settlement 27
  • Fear of bad publicity 26
  • Too costly 20
  • Victim just wanted closure 17
  • Internal discipline sufficient 16
  • Dont know 14
  • Perp had no assets 11

29
Why orgs dont take action (cont)?
  • Govt declined to prosecute 9
  • Lack of evidence 9
  • Fear of countersuits 6
  • Perp disappeared 1
  • Other 20

30
Who are the perpetrators?
  • Employees
  • Managers
  • Colleagues
  • Friends
  • Suppliers/Customers
  • Contractors
  • Neighbors
  • Bishops/Ministers

31
Who are the victims?
  • Owners
  • Managers
  • Investors
  • Employees
  • Families
  • Customers
  • Clients
  • There are always victims!!!!!!!!!

32
Career opportunities
  • Government
  • FBI, IRS (CID), GAO, Postal Inspectors, State
    Agencies, Treasury, etc.
  • Forensic Accounting
  • Big 4
  • Smaller firms
  • Boutiques
  • Corporations (internal audit, security, in-house
    legal)

33
Career opportunities (cont)
  • Law firms (prosecuting and defending fraud)
  • Consultants (prevention, detection, etc.)
  • Expert witnessing
  • And dont forget those of you who own your own
    businesses

34
End of Day 2See you Wednesday!
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