Forensic Accounting and Fraud - Types and Definitions

Forensic Accounting
Forensic Accounting
Research
Research
 
Types of value added services
Risk assessment of fraud and illegal acts
Legal counsel asks you to investigate embezzlement
scheme involving hidden assets
Vendor kickback determination
Fact-finding for alleged frauds involving bribery,
wire fraud, securities fraud, etc.
All of these involve forensic accounting or litigation
support
Fraud defined
Intentional deception, simply lying,
cheating, or stealing
A generic term, embracing all multifarious
means which human ingenuity can devise,
and which are resorted to by one individual
to get advantage over another by false
suggestions or by suppression of truth.  It
includes surprise, trickery, cunning,
dissembling, and any unfair way by which
another is cheated.
Fraud defined (contd.)
Fraud includes the following elements:
A misrepresentation of a material fact
Known to be false
Justifiably relied upon
Resulting in a loss
Types of frauds
Fraudulent financial reporting
(management fraud)
Actions whereby management attempts
to inflate reported earnings or other
assets in order to deceive outsiders
Overstating assets/revenues, price fixing,
contract bidding fraud, understating
expenses/liabilities
Types of frauds (contd.)
Misappropriation of assets (employee
fraud)
Actions of individuals whereby they
misappropriate (steal) money or other
property from their employers
Embezzlement, theft of company
property, kickbacks
Types of fraud (contd.)
Employee embezzlement – fraud in which
employees steal company assets either directly
– stealing cash or inventory –or indirectly –
taking bribes or kickbacks
Management fraud – deception by top
management of an entity primarily through the
manipulation of the financial statements in
order to mislead users of those statements
Investment scams – the sale of fraudulent and
often worthless investments (telemarketing and
Ponzi scheme type frauds)
Types of fraud (contd.)
Vendor fraud – fraud resulting from
overcharging for goods purchased, shipment
of inferior goods, or non-shipment of
inventory even when payment has been
received
Customer fraud – fraud committed by a
customer by not paying for goods received or
deceiving the organization in various ways to
get something for nothing
Miscellaneous fraud – all others – altering birth
records or grade reports, etc.
Examples of fraud activities
Misappropriation of assets
Skimming
Forgery
Kiting
Phony refunds
Larceny
Fraudulent disbursements
Lapping
Fictitious write-offs
Duplicate payments
Nonexistent vendor
Kickbacks
Misdirected shipments
Theft
Unauthorized personal use of
assets
Fictitious burglary
Phantom employees
Falsified time cards
Fraudulent financial reporting
Fictitious revenues
Asset overstatement
Unrecorded liabilities
Improper disclosure
Corruption
Conflict of interest
Bribery
Illegal gratuities
Economic extortion
The Fraud Triangle
Three factors in the triangle (usually all 3 exist
in a fraud)
Motivation (perceived pressure or incentive)
Perceived opportunity
Rationalization
Effective internal controls limit fraud
If an organization can contain any one of the
three elements, fraud will most likely not occur
Overview of financial fraud
examination
Two basic categories of fraud an auditor
investigates when examining material
misstatement risk assessment
Fraudulent financial reporting
Misappropriation of assets
Overview of financial fraud
examination (contd.)
Financial reporting fraud red flags
Incentive/pressures
High degree of competition or market
competition in conjunction with declining profit
margins
Perceived or real adverse effects of reporting
poor financial results
Personal guarantees by management or board
members of entity debt
Overview of financial fraud
(contd.)
Financial reporting fraud (contd.)
Opportunities – flags
Highly complex transactions
Major international operations
Deficiencies in internal controls
Overview of financial fraud
(contd.)
Financial reporting fraud (contd.)
Attitudes/rationalization flags
Ineffective communication or
enforcement of ethical standards
Excessive interest by management in
maintaining or increasing the entity’s
earnings trend
Overview of financial fraud
(contd.)
Misappropriation of asset risk factors
Susceptibility of assets to
misappropriation
Large amounts of cash on hand
Easily convertible assets (bonds,
diamonds)
Controls (lack of)
Overview of financial fraud
(contd.)
Steps of the fraud examination
Indentify issue/plan the investigation
Gather the evidence/the investigation
phase
Evaluate the evidence
Report he findings to
management?/legal counsel
Computer technology in fraud
investigation (contd.)
Data mining software
Software tool that models a database for the
purpose of determining patterns and
relationships among the data
SAS Enterprise Miner-modeling software
Wizrule – used for data cleaning (searching
for clerical errors) or anomaly detection.
Computer technology in fraud
investigation
 (contd.)
Data mining software (contd.)
IDEA (Audimation Services, inc) – allows user to
display, analyze, manipulate, sample or extract data
Monarch – allows investigator to convert
electronic editions of reports into text files
ACL for windows – data inquiry, analysis, and
reporting software
Analyst’s notebook – assists investigators by
uncovering, interpreting, and displaying complex
information in easily understood charts.
Public records – see figure 10-7
Courthouse records – lawsuits, judgments,
property filings, bankruptcy filings
Company records – SEC filings, Dun and
Bradstreet has private company data, D/B/A
filings with state or county, real estate filings
Online databases
The Internet – KnowX, Instant Checkmate,
Zoominfo, etc.
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Forensic accounting plays a crucial role in detecting and investigating various types of fraud such as financial reporting fraud, asset misappropriation, and employee embezzlement. Fraud is defined as intentional deception resulting in a loss and involves misrepresentation of material facts. Types of fraud include fraudulent financial reporting by management, misappropriation of assets by employees, employee embezzlement, management fraud, and investment scams. These fraudulent activities often require risk assessment, hidden asset investigation, and fraud detection techniques.

  • Forensic accounting
  • Fraud detection
  • Financial reporting fraud
  • Employee embezzlement
  • Risk assessment

Uploaded on Sep 19, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Forensic Accounting Research

  2. Types of value added services Risk assessment of fraud and illegal acts Legal counsel asks you to investigate embezzlement scheme involving hidden assets Vendor kickback determination Fact-finding for alleged frauds involving bribery, wire fraud, securities fraud, etc. All of these involve forensic accounting or litigation support

  3. Fraud defined Intentional deception, simply lying, cheating, or stealing A generic term, embracing all multifarious means which human ingenuity can devise, and which are resorted to by one individual to get advantage over another by false suggestions or by suppression of truth. It includes surprise, trickery, cunning, dissembling, and any unfair way by which another is cheated.

  4. Fraud defined (contd.) Fraud includes the following elements: A misrepresentation of a material fact Known to be false Justifiably relied upon Resulting in a loss

  5. Types of frauds Fraudulent financial reporting (management fraud) Actions whereby management attempts to inflate reported earnings or other assets in order to deceive outsiders Overstating assets/revenues, price fixing, contract bidding fraud, understating expenses/liabilities

  6. Types of frauds (contd.) Misappropriation of assets (employee fraud) Actions of individuals whereby they misappropriate (steal) money or other property from their employers Embezzlement, theft of company property, kickbacks

  7. Types of fraud (contd.) Employee embezzlement fraud in which employees steal company assets either directly stealing cash or inventory or indirectly taking bribes or kickbacks Management fraud deception by top management of an entity primarily through the manipulation of the financial statements in order to mislead users of those statements Investment scams the sale of fraudulent and often worthless investments (telemarketing and Ponzi scheme type frauds)

  8. Types of fraud (contd.) Vendor fraud fraud resulting from overcharging for goods purchased, shipment of inferior goods, or non-shipment of inventory even when payment has been received Customer fraud fraud committed by a customer by not paying for goods received or deceiving the organization in various ways to get something for nothing Miscellaneous fraud all others altering birth records or grade reports, etc.

  9. Examples of fraud activities Misappropriation of assets Skimming Forgery Kiting Phony refunds Larceny Fraudulent disbursements Lapping Fictitious write-offs Duplicate payments Nonexistent vendor Kickbacks Misdirected shipments Theft Unauthorized personal use of assets Fictitious burglary Phantom employees Falsified time cards Fraudulent financial reporting Fictitious revenues Asset overstatement Unrecorded liabilities Improper disclosure Corruption Conflict of interest Bribery Illegal gratuities Economic extortion

  10. The Fraud Triangle Three factors in the triangle (usually all 3 exist in a fraud) Motivation (perceived pressure or incentive) Perceived opportunity Rationalization Effective internal controls limit fraud If an organization can contain any one of the three elements, fraud will most likely not occur

  11. Overview of financial fraud examination Two basic categories of fraud an auditor investigates when examining material misstatement risk assessment Fraudulent financial reporting Misappropriation of assets

  12. Overview of financial fraud examination (contd.) Financial reporting fraud red flags Incentive/pressures High degree of competition or market competition in conjunction with declining profit margins Perceived or real adverse effects of reporting poor financial results Personal guarantees by management or board members of entity debt

  13. Overview of financial fraud (contd.) Financial reporting fraud (contd.) Opportunities flags Highly complex transactions Major international operations Deficiencies in internal controls

  14. Overview of financial fraud (contd.) Financial reporting fraud (contd.) Attitudes/rationalization flags Ineffective communication or enforcement of ethical standards Excessive interest by management in maintaining or increasing the entity s earnings trend

  15. Overview of financial fraud (contd.) Misappropriation of asset risk factors Susceptibility of assets to misappropriation Large amounts of cash on hand Easily convertible assets (bonds, diamonds) Controls (lack of)

  16. Overview of financial fraud (contd.) Steps of the fraud examination Indentify issue/plan the investigation Gather the evidence/the investigation phase Evaluate the evidence Report he findings to management?/legal counsel

  17. Computer technology in fraud investigation (contd.) Data mining software Software tool that models a database for the purpose of determining patterns and relationships among the data SAS Enterprise Miner-modeling software Wizrule used for data cleaning (searching for clerical errors) or anomaly detection.

  18. Computer technology in fraud investigation (contd.) Data mining software (contd.) IDEA (Audimation Services, inc) allows user to display, analyze, manipulate, sample or extract data Monarch allows investigator to convert electronic editions of reports into text files ACL for windows data inquiry, analysis, and reporting software Analyst s notebook assists investigators by uncovering, interpreting, and displaying complex information in easily understood charts.

  19. Public records see figure 10-7 Courthouse records lawsuits, judgments, property filings, bankruptcy filings Company records SEC filings, Dun and Bradstreet has private company data, D/B/A filings with state or county, real estate filings Online databases The Internet KnowX, Instant Checkmate, Zoominfo, etc.

More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#