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Fraud Library

Protecting Against Credit Card Theft

External Threats Facing your Organization

Is your organization required to be compliant with the Red Flags Rule?

Smartphone Vulnerabilities, Safeguarding Your Phone

Identity Theft: How to Prevent it, How to Respond

Protect Against Procurement Fraud

Is Anything Really What it Seems?

Protecting Your Intellectual Property from Fraud and Abuse

Internal Revenue Service Cracking Down on Tax Fraud

Protecting Your Organization from Becoming a Victim of the Underground Economy

How Healthcare Fraud Affects Us All

Developing and Implementing Distributor Audits to Curb Product Diversion

Increasing The Perception That Fraud Will Be Detected

New Red Flags Rule to Prevent Identity Theft

Fraud Du Jour

Protect Yourself: Don't Be a Victim of a Ponzi Scheme

Economic Hard Times: The Impact on Fraud

Theft By Collusion: Five Times More Loss

Employee Fraud: How Much Should You Spend to Prevent it?

Why Internal Controls and Reviews Are Needed

Payroll Fraud: How It's Done, How to Prevent It

Using CPAs in Fraud & Embezzlement Cases

Anatomy of an Interview, Part II: why a trained interviewer is critical

Anatomy of An Interview, Part I: how to best solicit the truth

Fraud: Safeguards Can Help Mitigate Risks

Is Your Organization Susceptible to Fraud?

Your Best Options for Getting Your Money Back

Finding Assets Postmortem: Where Did All the Money Go?

When There's a Team Effort to Defraud

How to Reduce the Threat of Internal Credit Card Fraud

Who Are You Hiring?

Detecting Fraud: When Good Employees Go Bad

Nonprofits Face Special Challenges in Protecting Against Fraud

The Most Common Types of Fraudulent Disbursements

Investigating an Allegation of Fraud

Developing and Implementing Franchise Audits

The Importance of Background Checks

Expense Reimbursement Fraud: Ten Ways to Protect Your Organization

Browse the entire Fraud Library.

How to Reduce the Threat of Internal Credit Card Fraud

by James Leisner , CPA
Director, Corporate Services
StoneBridge Business Partners

Reprinted with permission from Fraud Matters Newsletter of CPA America.

Credit cards are a fact of life in the business world today.

They can streamline purchases and minimize the need for cash or cash advances. They are widely accepted and recognized in situations where company or personal checks may not be. They can reduce transaction time and reduce the volume of payments, paperwork and transaction costs.

Because credit cards are almost as liquid as cash, they are subject to risk. Theft or abuse by an unauthorized outside party is typically the first concern, but credit card abuse and fraud by those within an organization can also be a source of threat.

Employees already have access to the credit cards, and they know the credit card issuer, number, expiration date, credit limit and, perhaps most importantly, whether their activity is being monitored.

The most common types of credit card fraud are:

Personal charges benefit the individual and could include gasoline for their own vehicle, meals, groceries or other personal expenditures.

Double dipping is using an organization’s credit card to make a purchase and then submitting the documentation for the expenditure for reimbursement. An example is charging a business meal using the company credit card, and then submitting the invoice or receipt for the same transaction for reimbursement on the individual’s expense report.

Safeguards can be put in place to reduce risk and detect mistakes or fraud. 

  • Limit the number of credit cards and authorized credit card users. Use as few providers and cards as possible. One or two issuers might fit all your needs. All authorized users should have their own unique cards that they are responsible for. They should not be loaned or be available to others. Collect and cancel cards when employees leave the organization. 
  • Establish credit limits to limit your exposure. Review your users and their needs. If they don’t need more than a $1,000 line of credit, reduce and limit it to that. Establish low or no ability to obtain cash advances. 
  • Subscribe to credit card company alerts. They can notify the organization of significant or unusual transactions as they occur. Investigate unusual activity immediately. 
  • Be able to quickly report loss, theft or unauthorized use. Maintain in a secure area a list of credit cards by issuers, account numbers, authorized users and issuer phone numbers so that contact can be made quickly if necessary. Prompt notification can reduce or eliminate responsibility for fraudulent charges. 
  • Communicate your organization’s policies. Employees are responsible for the activity on their card and for reviewing the statement for activity each period. Make it clear that the organization’s credit card is for its activities only and that fraud will not be tolerated. Violators should be terminated and prosecuted. 
  • Set the tone at the top. You can lead by example – good or bad. 
  • Receive credit card statements intact and review them. Credit card statements can be altered, revised or edited. 
  • Request a credit card statement cutoff date for all cards that facilitates your organization’s ability to obtain, review and post credit card activity once a month and before month-end to facilitate accounting. 
  • Review credit card activity for the type of expenditure, the vendor and the reasonableness of the amount. Do the types of transactions and the amounts seem reasonable for the organization and the user? 
  • Insist on receipts. As the credit card is used, insist that original receipts be obtained as part of the documentation for the expenditure. Do not let the invoice, the credit card receipt or the credit card statement be the only supporting piece of documentation. The credit card transaction is the means of payment. It is usually not the sole piece of documentation. 
  • Review expense reimbursement claims. Compare the expense report activity to the organization’s credit card statement, scrutinizing for the same vendor and/or amounts. Be alert to altered amounts and claims, as well as expense report claims made months after the original charge was made. Analytically review expenses, compare them to budget and investigate variances.

     

    To effectively reduce the threat of credit card fraud, monitor credit card activity closely – and let your employees know that you are watching.

James K. Leisner, CPA

Jim is a partner at EFP Rotenberg. He works with the management of privately owned businesses and not for profits to provide traditional accounting services and also provides assistance with business acquisitions/dispositions, expansion, financing, and the safeguarding of related assets. Read more about Jim . Article republished with the permission of CPAmerica.

 

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StoneBridge Business Partners | 280 Kenneth Drive, Suite 100 | Rochester, New York 14623
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Phone: 585-295-0550 | Toll-Free: 1-888-247-9764 | Fax: 585-340-5225
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