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Fraud Library

Workers' Compensation - The Common Misconception

Preventing Workers' Compensation Fraud

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.

The Most Common Types of Fraudulent Disbursements

by James Marasco , CPA, CFE, CIA
Director, Corporate Services
StoneBridge Business Partners

Reprinted with permission from the Fraud Matters Newsletter of CPAmerica

It’s been said “cash is king.” This is especially true for perpetrators of fraud.

But businesses beware: You can become a victim of fraud when no cash is involved.

The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners’ 2004 Report to the Nation on Occupational Fraud and Abuse found nearly two-thirds of cases involve some form of fraudulent disbursement. These can be divided into five distinct categories: check tampering, billing schemes, payroll schemes, expense reimbursement schemes and register disbursements.

CHECK TAMPERING

Forged payee or endorsement. One of the simplest and most popular ways to steal from an organization is to simply write checks to yourself and/or forge the endorsement. Inappropriate controls and the lack of segregation of duties allow this to prosper.

Reissuing old outstanding checks. Checks that have existed on the outstanding list for a long time represent an expenditure already recorded and the cash previously appropriated. To clean these up, the checks are either written off and returned to cash or reissued. Loose or poor controls can allow your employees to reissue them but alter the payee to themselves.

Fraudulent wire or account transfers. Business owners may review their cancelled checks, but do they examine all account and wire transfers? Loopholes may exist allowing individuals the opportunity to sweep money into company accounts they control or directly into their own accounts. Or, they might issue electronic funds transfer payments that benefit them, i.e., paying their credit card bills or personal bank loans.


BILLING SCHEMES

False vendor payments. Organizations without a formalized purchase order and approval process could be more vulnerable to paying false vendors. These bogus vendors may be their own employees who set up post office boxes to divert money from the company or represent collusion involving outside parties.

Petty cash disbursements. How strong are the controls that govern this area in your organization? Many companies rationalize this area as being immaterial. We’ve all heard there is no level of immateriality on fraud or theft. Expenditures should be well-documented with the original receipts from the individuals requiring reimbursement. Someone independent of the custodian should be replenishing this fund, reviewing supporting documentation and conducting surprise audits of petty cash.


PAYROLL SCHEMES

Forged payroll checks. Many organizations fail to regularly reconcile their payroll account. They fall into a false sense of security in that it may be an imprested (loan or advance) account or the shear volume is simply overwhelming to timely reconcile. Fraud perpetrators like to either manipulate the amounts on the checks or attempt to reproduce the check’s likeness.

Payroll disbursements. Are employees promptly terminated in your system or can they continue to receive checks or have checks written against their record? Controls should exist that prevent your human resource or payroll personnel from issuing themselves unauthorized pay raises, bonuses, extra vacation, etc. Some organizations could fall prey to having “ghost” employees exist on their payroll. Outsourcing your payroll process doesn’t automatically safeguard your organization.


EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT SCHEMES

Expense report fraud. Employees may submit reports for reimbursement on expenses that were never incurred, inappropriate reimbursable items or duplicated requests for reimbursement. Periodically, communicate your fraud policy to your employees and enforce it. An independent party should review all reports before payments are authorized.


REGISTER DISBURSEMENTS

Credit card processing. Do you restrict access to your credit card terminals? Enterprising finance employees may have the opportunity to issue credits to their own accounts through your organization and reconcile around them on the bank or merchant statements. Insist on adequate documentation and detail for credits issued.

Credits issued to accounts or paid in cash. Someone independent of billing should authorize credits to accounts or authorize refunds from the organization. Since this area could foster collusion among individuals, transactions should be scrutinized for suspicious patterns. 

You can prevent your business from falling victim to these practices by screening those likely to commit frauds before they’re hired.

For example, perform background/reference checks, transcript confirmation and drug testing. Reduce the opportunity to commit fraud by rotating job responsibilities, insisting on mandatory vacations and communicating your fraud policy and its consequences. Tighten your internal controls and segregate duties.

Create an environment in which dishonest acts are not tolerated and are punished.

James I. Marasco, CPA/CFF, CFE, CIA
Jim is a partner at EFP Rotenberg. He brings more than 18 years of public accounting and auditing experience. He is a full-time management consultant and travels extensively throughout the country while leading StoneBridge Business Partners (an EFP Rotenberg affiliate company). Read more about Jim . Article republished with the permission of CPAmerica.

 

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