Introduction to Fraud Examination. 2 Discipline of Fraud Examination Resolving allegations of fraud...

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Introduction to Fraud Examination

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Discipline of Fraud Examination

• Resolving allegations of fraud from tips, complaints or accounting clues

• Forensic accounting vs. fraud examination

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Auditing vs. Fraud ExaminationIssue Auditing Fraud Examination

Timing

Presumption

Objective

Scope

Relationship

Methodology

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Fraud Theory Approach

• Predication– Fraud examinations must be based on

predication

• Analyze

• Create

• Test

• Refine and amend

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Tools Used in Fraud Examination

T

Observation

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Defining Occupational Fraud and Abuse

• The use of one’s occupation for personal enrichment through the deliberate misuse or misapplication of the employing organization’s resources or assets

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Elements of Fraud

• material

• Knowledge

• Reliance

• Damages

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Occupational Fraud and Abuse Research

• Edward Sutherland

• Donald Cressey– Cressey’s Hypothesis

• Albrecht

• Hollinger & Clark

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Opportunity

Pressure Rationalization

Fraud Triangle

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So who does this??

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2006 Report to the Nation on Occupational Fraud & Abuse

• Nationwide surveys

• Measuring the costs of occupational fraud– 6 percent lost to fraud– $800 billion annually in the U.S.

• Perpetrators of fraud

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Findings

• Position: – Managers? Employees? Owners?

• Gender:– Are women really more trustworthy?

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Findings

• Age?– Which age is the most likely to commit fraud?

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Findings

• Education??– More ethical or more able?

• Collusion?– Alone or with others?

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Length of employment?

• Are the “old-timers” more trustworthy?

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Criminal history?

• Would a background check have helped?

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Type of company?

• Public? Private? Nonprofit? Government?

• Big? Small?

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Recovery?

• Do the victim companies get their $$ back??

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Method of detection

• Auditors?

• Accident?

• Internal controls?

• Internal auditors?

• Police?

• Tip?

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Fraud Types & Victims

• What types of frauds are there?

• Who are the typical perpetrators?

• Who are the typical victims?

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Criminal versus Civil Responses to Fraud

• Purpose?• Penalty? • Burden of Proof? • Jury?• Organization?• Verdict?• Claims?

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Occupational Fraud and AbuseAsset

MisappropriationsCorruption

FraudulentStatements

Conflicts of Interest

Bribery

IllegalGratuities

Economic Extortion

Inventory & All Other Assets

Cash

Nonfinancial

Financial

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