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Occupational Fraud: An Overview. Lydia Pinson. Fraud Facts. Long time issue Fraud Triangle dates back to 1950s Average Company will lose 5% income yearly $3.5 trillion based on the 2011 GWP Significant impact on the bottom line
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Occupational Fraud: An Overview Lydia Pinson
Fraud Facts • Long time issue • Fraud Triangle dates back to 1950s • Average Company will lose 5% income yearly • $3.5 trillion based on the 2011 GWP • Significant impact on the bottom line • More than 20% of fraud cases created a loss of $1million or more • Occupational Fraud is the most common type • Almost half of companies who suffer a loss due to fraud will not make any recovery
A Closer Look • What is fraud? • What are some common occupational fraud schemes? • Who commits occupational fraud? • How can occupational fraud be prevented?
What is Fraud? Definitions and Components
Definition of Fraud • Webster’s Dictionary – an act of deceiving or misrepresenting • Legal Definition – the intentional use of deceit, a trick or some dishonest means to deprive another of his/her/its money, property or a legal right. A party who has lost something due to fraud is entitled to file a lawsuit for damages against the party acting fraudulently, and the damages may include punitive damages as a punishment or public example due to the malicious nature of the fraud. • Occupational Fraud • Occurs within an organization • Perpetrated by employees
Components of Fraud • Fraud Triangle • Developed by Donald Cressey • 3 necessary elements • Opportunity • Motivation • Rationalization
Fraud Components • Fraud Diamond • Introduced in 2004 by David Wolfe and Dana Hermanson • 4 elements • Added capability to the triangle • “Opportunity opens the doorway to fraud, and incentive and rationalization can draw the person toward it. But the person must have the capability to recognize the open doorway as an opportunity and to take advantage of it by walking through, not just once, but time and time again. ”
Six Essential Traits Related to Capability • Positioning • Intelligence and creativity • Ego • Coercion • Deceit • Stress
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners Defines 3 Categories of Occupational Fraud: • Asset Misappropriation – skimming, billing, payroll, cash register disbursements, check tampering • Corruption – bribery, conflicts of interest • Financial Statement Fraud – 5 classifications • Timing differences • Improper disclosures • Fictitious revenues • Improper asset valuation • Concealed liabilities and expenses
Common Characteristics • Position – Level of Authority • Age • Gender • Education Level – high school or less, some college, college degree, post graduate degree
Gender of Perpetrator Frequency Median Loss
Age of Perpetrator Frequency Median Loss
Education Level of Perpetrator Frequency Median Loss
Tips for Fraud Prevention • Know the warning signs • Look for red flags • Living beyond means • Financial difficulties • Unwillingness to share duties • Divorce • Addictions • 81% of fraud cases displayed at least one red flag • Most common – living beyond means – 35%
Tips for Fraud Prevention 2. Have a policy of prevention • Controls in place • Segregation of duties • Mandatory vacations • Stringent hiring procedures 3. Use technology • Easy monitoring • Limit Access • Increase Security
Tips for Fraud Prevention 4. Take swift action • Sets a tone of zero tolerance • More likely to see recoup of assets 5. Trust employees cautiously • Know who works for you • Background checks • Personality tests • Limit access to only what is necessary
Tips for Fraud Prevention • Many resources available online (ACFE, AICPA, IIA) • Education • Diagnostic Tools • Certification