A Look at Fraud
Presented by: Karin M. Smith, MBA, SFO, CFE Corey Arvizu, CPA Heinfeld, Meech & Co., P.C.
City of Dixon
Small Midwestern city with 16,000 residents
Childhood home of Ronald Regan
General fund budget of $10 million
Audit and bookkeeping fees of $40,000
Small staff, part-time council, no City Manager
Rita Crundwell
Hometown resident
Began working at the city after high school in 1970
Named comptroller in 1983
Trusted employee and community member
Horse breeding employed a number of residents
The Fraud
• Opened a non-authorized bank account in the name of the City in December 1990
• Prepared fictitious invoices for infrastructure reimbursement to the State
• Wrote checks for payment on fictitious invoices payable to “Treasurer”
• Deposited those checks into unauthorized account
• Went shopping for clothes, jewelry, cars, motorhomes, property, horses, and unusual home furnishings…
The Fraud
• Total fraud exceeded $54.0 million
• Fraud exceeded $5.6 million in 2008
• 179 fictitious invoices prepared
• Most all fictitious invoices in even amounts
• Fraud continued after initial identification until her arrest
Auditor Responsibilities
The auditor obtains reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.
To obtain reasonable assurance, which is a high but not absolute, level of assurance, the auditor identifies and assesses the risks of material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, based on an understanding of the entity and it environment, including the entity’s internal control.
Due to the inherent limitations of an audit, an unavoidable risk exists that some material misstatements of the financial statements may not be detected, even though the audit is properly planned and performed in accordance with GAAS
Responsibility for Prevention and Detection of Fraud
The primary responsibility for the prevention and detection of fraud rests with both those charged with governance of the entity and management. It is important that management, with the oversight of those charged with governance, places a strong emphasis on fraud prevention, which may reduce opportunities for fraud to take place, and fraud deterrence, which could persuade individuals not to commit fraud because of the likelihood of detection and punishment. This involves a commitment to creating a culture of honesty and ethical behavior, which can be reinforced by active oversight by those charged with governance. Oversight by those charged with governance includes considering the potential for override of controls or other inappropriate influence over the financial reporting process, such as efforts by management to manage earnings in order to influence the perceptions of financial statement users regarding the entity's performance and profitability.
Terminology
Data mining
• Sorting through huge data sets using sophisticated software to identify undiscovered patterns and establish hidden relationships
Data analytics
• Examining raw data with the purpose of drawing conclusions about that information
Why Analyze Data?
• You go to the doctor for annual wellness exams
• You take your children to the dentist for periodic checkups
• You take your dog to the vet for preventative care shots
• You take your car to the mechanic for regular maintenance
Your financial data should receive similar treatment…
It is the primary data for making key management decisions!!!
Why Perform Data Analysis?
• Do you sign the year-end representation letter to the external auditors?
• Key representations:
• Responsible for internal control environment
• No known significant deficiencies in the design of or operation of internal controls
• Acknowledge responsibility for the design and
implementation of programs and controls to prevent and detect fraud
• No known material instances of fraud
• Fiduciary responsibility as a member of the executive management team
Data – The Possibilities
Data
Efficiency, Effectiveness
& Compliance
Fraud Indicators
Grant Programs
Purchasing Cards Financial Vendors
Disbursements
Human Resources
Payroll
Transparency
Operational
Attendance
Utility Billings
Public Works
Courts
Food Service
Key Performance
Indicators
Performance Customer Service
Patterns & Trends
Classroom Spending
Time & Effort
Revenue
Delinquent Taxes vs. Vendors
Utility Billings
Property Tax Exemptions
Sales Tax Reports
Fund Raising
Your Imagination
Significant Assets of Organizations
People
Cash & investments
Property, plant &
equipment
Financial & operational
data
Many others
Reputation Many others
One of the most
underutilized assets
Traditional View of Data
Assets, Liabilities and Equity
Revenues versus Expenses
Budget versus Actual
Ratios, etc.
Transactional View of Data Accounts Payable
Accounts Receivable
Bid Rigging Cash
Disbursements
Conflict of Interest
Credit Card Management
Customer Service
Management Deposits
General Ledger Kickbacks Insurances Loans
Materials Management
Inventory Control
Policy and Administration
Purchase Order Management
Salaries and Payroll
Travel Claims Vendor
Management Work In Process
Cross-Functional Views of Data
Operational
Vendors & Disbursements
Human Resources & Payroll
Vendors Compared to Human Resources
Eligibility – Federal and State programs
Delinquent Receivables / Assumed Names / Vendors
Data Analysis – Limited only to
electronic data and your imagination!
Surprise Audits
Effective, yet underutilized
Conducted by less than 30% of victim organizations
Lower fraud losses and detect frauds more quickly
Perception of detection
ACFE, 2012 Report to the Nation on
Occupational Fraud and Abuse
Accounts Payable Analysis
Duplicate payments
Rounded amounts
Just below thresholds
Abnormal volume
Cancelled checks
Accounts Payable Analysis
Above average payments
Payments issued to vendors without POs
Payments exceeding PO amounts
Transactions posted during off-work hours
ROW VND NAM INV NUM INV DATE INV AMT CHECK NUM PAY DATE PROCESS TIME APP PO AMT
1 ROBINSO 94225 12/13/2008
399.50 174709 10/25/2009 1:31 PM GH 400.00
2 SOUTHCO JT5941511 11/14/2009
4,999.99 174915 12/6/2009 2:33 PM GH 4,999.99
3 Q COAT JT6134612 12/20/2009
30.73 175144 2/13/2010 9:10 AM GH 35.00
4 ONETIME 11637 4/30/2010
5,093.38 175779 6/6/2010 1:32 AM SK 5,000.00
5 NEWMAN 4334 11/28/2009
1,086.88 175201 2/7/2010 12:32 PM GH 1,500.00
6 ONETIME 106040 6/11/2010
49.76 175957 7/11/2010 12:34 PM GH 45.00
7 ONETIME 185396 1/26/2010
1,398.25 175229 2/14/2010 4:01 PM GH 1,350.00
8 DESARIO 12126 6/8/2010
23.00 175896 7/4/2010 3:43 PM GH 25.00
9 FILTERS 69688 10/18/2009
175.00 174762 11/8/2009 1:33 PM GH 200.00
10 BOWIE 6573 10/10/2009
1,412.71 174649 10/17/2009 5:05 PM GH 1,500.00
11 ONETIME 37338 11/7/2009
296.10 174929 12/13/2009 5:45 PM GH 275.00
12 Q COAT JT61346-12 12/21/2009
30.73 175239 2/14/2010 2:35 PM GH 35.00
13 ONETIME 01104666I 4/23/2010
42.30 175680 5/16/2010 9:01 AM GH 45.00
14 HOUWATE 78763 11/20/2009
55,000.00 174950 12/25/2009 11:43 AM GH 55,000.00
15 ONETIME 0109-8635 1/10/2010
50.00 175174 1/31/2010 1:01 AM SK 45.00
16 WATKINS 8219 3/8/2010
525.81 175830 6/13/2010 7:43 AM GH 525.00
17 SOUTHCO JT5941622 11/16/2009
4,999.99 174932 12/10/2009 4:23 PM GH 4,999.99
Purchasing & Payables
Rounded Amounts
Use the Rounddown function to separate the cents.
=F2 – ROUNDDOWN(F2,0)
Purchasing & Payables
Duplicate Payments
Use the IF function to look for duplicates.
=IF(F2=F1,”DUP”,””)
Purchasing & Payables
Amounts below thresholds
Sort by the amount and look for costs just under thresholds. ($1000, $5000,
$10000)
Purchasing & Payables
Abnormal volume
Use these options to roll up amounts
Look for a high volume of invoices and dollar amounts
Payroll Analysis
Gross equal net pay
Ghost employees
Off-cycle payments
Payments to terminated employees
False or duplicate employee identification numbers
High overtime
Duplicate employee addresses
Payroll Analysis New position codes added
Analysis of employees and/or total pay by position, position type, location, funding source, number of checks issued
Anomalies in recalculation of total pay, hours, overtime, pay/hours per funding source
Analysis of total supplemental/bonus pay
Variances compared to 941s
Compensated leave anomalies including negative balances, large positive balances
ROW EMP NUM GROSS PAY PAY DATE NET PAY SS HIRE DATE TERM DATE
DD BANK ACCT NUM
1 1123 2,250.00 5/15/2009 1,346.17 579627851 8/20/1973 23896
2 1156 2,060.00 11/15/2009 1,335.91 396152031 9/13/2008 12/24/2009 89000567
3 1178 1,800.01 11/30/2009 1,800.01 123456789 3/4/1980 65324
4 1198 2,370.00 11/15/2009 1,716.47 543945471 3/16/1994 7832112
5 2134 2,370.94 5/15/2009 1,592.08 417337241 11/12/2008 455599021
6 2346 288.75 8/31/2009 126.33 308801411 5/15/2008 78345
7 2389 1,725.00 8/15/2009 1,118.67 294624211 6/30/2008 12/1/2008 9998001326
8 2399 7,754.00 8/15/2009 5,251.79 256024861 6/15/2009 78231
9 1101 4,647.00 2/15/2010 2,668.53 142422251 1/19/2009 90433389
10 1109 2,657.00 11/15/2009 1,563.65 605843191 12/15/2009 51938215
11 2369 1,000.00 8/15/2009 65.01 634999999 4/5/1992 1/14/2010 89000567
12 1178 2,250.00 11/30/2009 1,459.14 341549121 3/4/2008 21903198
13 2478 2,550.00 5/15/2009 1,640.92 303764511 9/14/1991 89100026
14 1103 2,095.76 5/15/2009 1,231.26 626829921 9/8/2008 9875
15 2198 3,093.00 11/15/2009 2,291.15 243454611 8/3/1995 2999843
Vendor Payments with Employee Addresses
Employee Name Vendor Name CALENDAR YTD
MAILING ADDRESS CITY STATE
ZIP CODE
Bouvier, Selma Bouvier, Patty $ 362.00 P.O. BOX 1295 Springfield KY 40069
Simpson, Homer Jay Simpson, Homer J. $ 59.00 PO BOX 1413 Springfield KY 40069
Simpson, Marge Simpson, Homer J. $ 59.00 PO BOX 1413 Springfield KY 40069
Flanders, Ned The Leftorium $ 2,493.13 PO BOX 1424 Springfield KY 40069
Sisters living in the same apartment and
Patty is being reimbursed for an
expense.
This is the same person, but the name was just
spelled slightly different in the vendor listing.
Data analysis can identify both legitimate situations as well as
scenarios that may require further management analysis and inquiry.
The husband and wife are employed at the same entity, so the addresses match.
The vendor name is a company. This could
indicate a ghost vendor or a valid vendor with a
possible conflict of interest.
Karin M. Smith, SFO, MBA, CFE
602-277-9449 ext. 327
Corey Arvizu, CPA
520-742-2611 ext. 101
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