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FRAUD EXAMINATION ALBRECHT, ALBRECHT, & ALBRECHT

FRAUD EXAMINATION ALBRECHT, ALBRECHT, & ALBRECHT. Liability, Asset & Inadequate Disclosure Frauds. Chapter 13. Learning Objectives. Identify fraudulent schemes that understate liabilities. Understand the understatement of liabilities fraud. Identify fraudulent schemes that overstate assets.

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FRAUD EXAMINATION ALBRECHT, ALBRECHT, & ALBRECHT

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  1. FRAUD EXAMINATIONALBRECHT,ALBRECHT, & ALBRECHT Liability, Asset & Inadequate Disclosure Frauds Chapter 13

  2. Learning Objectives • Identify fraudulent schemes that understate liabilities. • Understand the understatement of liabilities fraud. • Identify fraudulent schemes that overstate assets. • Understand the overstatement of assets fraud.

  3. Learning Objectives • Identify fraudulent schemes that inadequately disclose financial statement information. • Understand the inadequate disclosure fraud.

  4. Collusion Forgery Complex Audit Trails Lies Normal Looking Transactions Silence Off-Book Frauds Misleading Documents Small Frauds First Time Fraudsters What Makes It Hard for Auditors to Detect Fraud?

  5. Liabilities OVERSTATED UNDERSTATED Revenues How is Liability and Revenue Fraud Committed?

  6. How is Liability Fraud Committed? • Don’t Record Purchase or Record in the Next Accounting Period • Overstate Purchase Returns & Allowances • Make It Appear that Liabilities Are Paid or Forgiven

  7. Discuss Ways Liability Fraud is Committed. • Fraudulent recording of payments • Don’t record accrued liabilities • Don’t record warranty liabilities or service • Record deposits as revenues • Borrow against equities in assets • Write off liabilities as forgiven • Don’t record contingent liabilities that are probable

  8. What are Accrued Liabilities? Liabilities incurred, Used goods or services, but not recorded because paperwork not received, Often estimated

  9. How Are Unearned Revenues Abused? • Instead of recording as a liability the revenue is recognized & recorded EXPLAIN • By not recording as a debt, debts (liabilities) are understated & revenues overstated - results in not disclosing debt • By claiming debt forgiven or paid • By claiming debt as personal, not business, debt

  10. Define a Contingent Liability. Liabilities are not incurred but have some probability of being incurred RECORD if probable & estimable DISCLOSE in footnote if reasonably possible DO NOTHING if remotely probable How are they abused? Underestimate amount or probability

  11. What Are Some Analytical Symptoms of Liability Fraud? • Balances appear to be too small • Purchase Returns & Allowances seem too large • Unearned Revenues, payroll taxes, payroll deductions, accrued liabilities, warranty balances appear to be too small Compare with Prior Period Balances

  12. Large purchases recorded at the beginning of the period Photocopied records instead of originals Strange differences between balances & confirmations Not recorded timely Unsupported or unauthorized balances Last minute adjustments Missing records Denied access to records, facilities, vendors or people What Symptoms Appear in Documents?

  13. What Are Some Other Clues to Liabilities Fraud? ●Unrecorded Liens ●No payments to Govt. ●No Payroll Withholdings ●Capitalization of Wages ●Interest with NO Recorded Debt

  14. Analysis of Period-to-Period Changes Analysis of Period-to-Period Changes Complete The Chart. • Liability Account Balances • Focus on changes in statement numbers • Study Statement of Cash Flow • Use horizontal analysis • With Industry Competitors • Compare statement results with those of similar companies • Compare company’s trends with those of similar companies • Liability Relationships • Examine changes in relevant ratios • Use vertical analysis • With Real-World Numbers • Compare statement amounts with the assets they are supposed to represent

  15. What is a Recommended Process for Examining for Liabilities Fraud? Ask what kind of fraud could be occurring. Identify what symptoms those frauds would generate. Determine whether those symptoms exist. Follow up to determine if the symptom signals fraud, or an abnormality caused by something else.

  16. Under recording Accounts Payable (A/P) Acid-test Current A/P to Purchases A/P to COGS A/P to Total Liabilities A/P to Inventory Under recording Accrued Liabilities Various Accruals to Number of days to accrue compared to same ratio in prior years Various Accruals to Related Expenses Under recording Unearned Revenues Unearned Revenue to Revenue List Ratios that Are Used to Detect These Types of Fraud.

  17. Under recording Service Liabilities Warranty Expense to Sales Under recording Various Liabilities Interest Expense to Notes Payable Long-Term Debt to Stockholders’ Equity Various Types of Debt to Assets Total Liabilities to Total Assets Pension Expenses to Salary Expense Lease Expense to Total Fixed Assets Not Recording Contingent Liabilities Generally no ratios to help you, you must look for documentary evidence. List Ratios that Are Used to Detect These Types of Fraud.

  18. Define Improper Capitalization or Expensing. Recording something as an asset when it should be expensed. This changes the time period when the expense is charged against income. Computer Science Corporation (CSC)

  19. Overstate Receivables and Inventory Overstate Fixed Assets Overstate Cash, Short-term Investments and Marketable Securities Overstate Intangible or Deferred Assets Overstate Assets though Mergers and Acquisitions List Five Common Ways to Overstate Assets.

  20. List Some Ways Fixed Assets Are Overstated. Record at Fair Market Value Under Depreciate Record Fully Depreciated Assets Record Non-Existing Assets

  21. What Does Publicly Traded Mean? Stocks the General Public Can Purchase Stocks Not Traded on Regular Exchanges Are Easily Mistated in Value

  22. List Some Symptoms of Asset Fraud. • Deferred Interest • Size of Deferred Charges • Year-End Reclassification or JEs that reduce expenses & increase deferred charges Detect by Comparing Deferred Charges Ratios

  23. Discuss & Define Inadequate Disclosure Fraud. Creating or Misleading By Providing Incorrect Information or Not Providing Information Statements of Omission Statements of Commission

  24. How Are Footnotes Made Misleading? • Missing • Confusing • Contingent Liabilities • Contractual Obligations • Significant Events

  25. Terms Match Purchase something, one company by another Mortgage Long-term loan secured by real property Acquisition Rent asset, do not own, make periodic payments Merger Stocks, bonds and other non-cash assets Lease Combining two businesses into one business Marketable Securities

  26. Terms Match Deferred Asset Asset that is not tangible, can’t touch Fixed Asset Retirement benefits paid to former employees Intangible Asset Capitalized expenditure to be expensed in future Property, Plant & Equipment Pension Recording expenditure as an asset Capitalization

  27. Terms Match Assets are recorded at higher values than they should be Liability Frauds Disclosure Frauds Agreement to buy back something already sold Issuing financial statements with inadequate disclosure Asset Frauds Repurchase Agreement Liabilities are understated

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