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Fraud

Fraud. The Environment of Fraud Preventing Internal Fraud External Fraud. Acknowledgments. Material is from: Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, John Wiley & Sons, 2008 The Art of the Steal, Frank Abignale, Broadway Books, 2001 CISA Review Manual, 2009

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Fraud

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  1. Fraud The Environment of Fraud Preventing Internal Fraud External Fraud

  2. Acknowledgments Material is from: • Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, John Wiley & Sons, 2008 • The Art of the Steal, Frank Abignale, Broadway Books, 2001 • CISA Review Manual, 2009 • Check Fraud: A Guide to Avoiding Losses • The Art of Deception, Mitnick & Simon, Wiley & Sons, 2002 Author: Susan J Lincke, PhD Univ. of Wisconsin-Parkside Reviewers: Funded by National Science Foundation (NSF) Course, Curriculum and Laboratory Improvement (CCLI) grant 0837574: Information Security: Audit, Case Study, and Service Learning. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and/or source(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

  3. The Problem • Organizations lose 5% of revenue annually due to internal fraud • Average scheme lasts 18 months, costs $140,000 • 20% costs exceed $1M • Smaller companies suffer greater average $ losses due to inadequate controls 2012 Global Fraud Study Assoc. of Fraud Examiners

  4. Internal or Occupational Fraud Definition • Violates the employee’s fiduciary responsibility to employer • Is done secretly and is concealed • Is done to achieve a direct or indirect benefit • Costs the organization assets, revenue, or opportunity Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  5. Fraud Categories

  6. Legal Considerations of Fraud • Intentionally false representation • Not an error • Lying or concealing actions • Pattern of unethical behavior • Personal material benefit • Organizational or victim loss Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  7. Moti- vation 3 Key Elements Oppor- tunity Rational- ization Key Elements of Fraud Motivation: Need or perceived need Opportunity: Access to assets, information, computers, people Rationalization: Justification for action Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  8. How Fraud is Discovered Tips come from Employee 51%, Customer 22%, Anonymous 12.4%, Vendor 9%, Other 11.6%; Tips highest for all continents. 2012 Global Fraud Study Assoc. of Fraud Examiners

  9. Collusion Collusion: Two or more employees or employee & vendor defraud together 2012 Global Fraud Study Assoc. of Fraud Examiners

  10. Who Does Fraud? • Most $$$ internal frauds committed by longer-tenured, older, and more educated staff • Executives commit most expensive fraud: $573K • Median manager fraud: $180K • Median line employee fraud: $60K • Most hit: Banks/financial industries: 16.7% • Government/public administration: 10.3 • Manufacturing: 10.1% • 87% have no criminal convictions related to fraud • To steal a lot of money, you must have a position of power and access: • highly degreed > HS grad • older > younger people 2012 Global Fraud Study Assoc. of Fraud Examiners

  11. Discussion Points • What types of fraud could computer programmers or system administrators commit? • For each type of fraud, what methods may help to prevent such fraud?

  12. Example 1:Financial Statement Fraud Dunlap of Sunbeam had high expectations that employees needed to meet the standards. To meet these standards, it was necessary to play the game, and financial statement fraud was accepted. Methods of such fraud may include: manual adjustments to accounts or improper accounting procedures Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  13. Example 2: Corruption The Director of a subsidiary always purchases goods from 2 large organizations, who provide rebates for large purchase quantities. The director negotiated contracts and pocketed the rebates to an off-shore bank account. Local vendors are upset that their bids are ignored. Managing Fraud Risk: A Practical Guide for Directors and Managers, Steve Giles

  14. Example 3: Asset Misappropriation A manager took money from one account, and when payment was due, paid via another account. When that was due, she paid via a third account, etc. This lapping went on for years and was finally caught when a sickness resulted in her being absent from work for an extended period. Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  15. Asset MisappropriationVocabulary Skimming: Taking funds before they are recorded into company records Cash Larceny: Taking funds (e.g., check) that company recorded as going to someone else Embezzlement: Abusing a business privilege for personal gain Lapping: Theft is covered with another person’s check (and so on) Check Tampering: Forged or altered check for gain Shell Company: Payments made to fake company Payroll Manipulation: Ghost employees, falsified hours, understated leave/vacation time False Shipping Orders or Missing/Defective Receiving Record: Inventory theft Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  16. Detecting & Preventing Fraud How to Recognize Fraud How to Prevent Fraud Info. Systems Applications Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  17. Fraud & Audit • Audits are not designed to detect fraud • Goal: Determine whether the financial statement is free from material misstatements. • Auditors test only a small fraction of transactions • Auditors must: • Be aware of the potential of fraud • Discuss how fraud could occur • Delve into suspicious observations and report them Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  18. Red Flags • Significant change in lifestyle: New wealth • Addiction: • Gambling, drug addiction, infidelity • Criminal background • Chronic legal problems • Dishonest behavior in general • Beat the system: Break rules commonly • Dissatisfaction with job Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons Statistics: ACFE

  19. Work Habits of Fraudsters One or more: • Justifying poor work habits • Desperately trying to meet performance goals • Over-protective of certain documents (poor sharing or avoids documentation) • Refusal to swap job duties • Consistently at work in off-time (early or late) or never absent Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  20. Potential Transaction Red Flags Unusual transactions: • Unusual timing, too frequent or infrequent • Unusual amount: too much or too little • Unusual participant: involves unknown or closely-related party • Voided checks or receipts, with no explanation • Insufficient supervision • Pattern of adjustments to accounts • Different addresses for same vendor, or vendors with similar names Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  21. Fraud Control Types Time of Fraud After Fraud Before Fraud: ***BEST*** Detective Controls: Finding fraud when it occurs includes: Anonymous hotline*-> Surprise audits*-> Monitoring activities-> Complaint or fraud investigation Mandatory vacations Corrective Controls: Punishment-> Amend controls Fidelity Insurance Employee Bonding Preventive Controls**: Preventing fraud includes: Segregation of Duties Ethical Culture Internal controls: Physical & data security Authorization (Passwords, etc) Signed Documents Fraud education Employee Support Programs Background checks

  22. Motivation Key Elements Oppor- tunity Rational- ization Techniques to Discourage Fraud Realistic job expectations Adequate pay Training in job duties Trained in policies and procedures Policy enforcement Sr. Mgmt models ethical behavior to customers, vendors, employees, share holders Segregation of duties Checks and balances Job rotation Physical security of assets Background checks Mandatory vacations Examination of required documentation Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  23. Segregation of Duties Authorization Distribution Approves Acts on Double-checks Origination Verification CISA Review Manual 2009

  24. Compensating Controls When Segregation of Duties not possible, use: • Audit Trails • Transaction Logs: Record of all transactions in a batch • Reconciliation: Ensure transaction batches are not modified during processing • Exception reporting: Track rejected and/or exceptional (non-standard) transactions • Supervisory or Independent Reviews Separation of duties: authorization, distribution, verification CISA Review Manual 2009

  25. Software to Detect Fraud • Provide reports for customer credits, adjustment accounts, inventory spoilage or loss, fixed-asset write-offs. • Detect unusual anomalies such as unusual amounts or patterns • Compare vendor addresses and phone numbers with employee data • Use Range or Limit Validation to detect fraudulent transactions • Logged computer activity, login or password attempts, data access attempts, and geographical location data access. Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  26. Red flags software can detect • Out-of-sequence checks • Large number of voids or refunds made by employee or customer • Manually prepared checks from large company • Payments sent to nonstandard (unofficial) address • Unexplained changes in vendor activity • Vendors with similar names or addresses • Unapproved vendor or new vendor with high activity Essentials of Corporate Fraud, T L Coenen, 2008, John Wiley & Sons

  27. Encourage Security in IT Departments • Physical security • Segregation of duties • Employee monitoring • Surprise audits • Job rotation • Examination of Documentation Quality Assurance Programmer Analyst Business Analyst

  28. Business Application Checks • Checks locked up; access restricted • Physical inventory of checks at least every quarter • New accounts payable vendors’ existence and address double-checked by management • Returned checks sent to PO Box and evaluated by someone independent of Accts Payable The Art of the Steal, Frank Abignale, Broadway Books 2001

  29. Question What is the MOST effective means of preventing fraud? • Effective internal controls • Fraud training program • Fraud hotline • Punishment when fraud is discovered

  30. Question A woman in the accounting department set up a vendor file with her own initials, and was able to steal more than $4 M after 3 years. The auditor should have found that: • The vendor was a phony company • Purchases from the vendor did not result in inventory received • The initials for the vendor matched an employee in the accounting dept. • Management did not authorize new vendors with a separate phone call

  31. Question What is: Origination, Authorization, Distribution, Verification? • Four stages of software release • Recommended authority allocations for access control • Stages for development of a Biometric Identity Management System (BIMS) • Categories for Segregation of Duties

  32. External Fraud Social Engineering Check Fraud Other Scams From: The Art of the Steal, Frank Abignale, Broadway Books 2001 & Check Fraud: A Guide to Avoiding Losses

  33. Red Flags Rule Red Flags Rule

  34. Social Engineering I Email: • The first 500 people to register at our Web site will win free tickets to … • Please provide company email address and choose a password • You received a message from Facebook. Follow this link … log in. • Social engineering: Getting people to do something they would not ordinarily do for a stranger • Social engineering is nearly 100% effective The Art of Deception, Mitnick & Simon, Wiley, 2002

  35. Social Engineering II Telephone call from ‘IT’: • Some company computers have been infected with a virus that the anti-virus software cannot fix. Let me walk you through the fix… • We need to test a new utility to change your password…

  36. Social Engineering III Phone call 1: • “I had a great experience at your store. Can you tell me manager’s name, address?” Phone call 2: • “This is John from X. I got a call from Alice at your site wanting me to fax a sig-card. She left a fax number but I can’t read it can you tell me? What is the code? • “You should be telling me the code…” • “That’s ok, it can wait. I am leaving but Alice won’t get her information…” • “The code is … “ Phone call or fax 3: • “I need … Code is …”

  37. Social Engineering Techniques • Learns insider vocabulary and/or personnel names • Pretends legit insider: “I am <VP, IT, other branch, other dept>. Can you …?” • Pretends real transaction: • Helping: I am in trouble <or> you need help due to … • <My,Your> computer is <virused, broke, busy, don’t have one>. Can you <do, tell me> …? • Deception: Hides real question among others. • Establishes relationship: Uses friendliness to gain trust for future tasks The Art of Decption, Mitnick & Simon, Wiley 2002

  38. Verification Procedure Verify requester is who they claim to be Verify the requester is currently employed in the position claimed. Verify role is authorized for request Record transaction Organization security Data classification defines treatment Policies define guidelines for employee behavior Employees trained in roles, need-to-know, and policies Combating Social Engineering

  39. Fraud Statistics • Businesses lose $400 Billion a year in fraud = 2 x US military budget • 1/3 of $400B is embezzlement = employees stealing from employer • Next highest sources (KPMG 2000) • Check forgery • Credit cards • Fake invoices • Theft • $350 Billion for counterfeit goods The Art of the Steal, Frank W Abagnale, Broadway Books 2001

  40. Check Fraud Examples Altered Checks: Chemicals are used to erase the payee or amount, then re-printed OR check is appended to. • An Argentinian modified a ticket-overpayment refund check from Miami, changing a $2 check to $1.45 Million Counterfeit Checks or Identity Assumption • Someone in your checkout line views your check, or does yard work for you • Fishes in a business’s in-mailbox or home’s out-mail for a check • Checks can be purchased on-line or mail order Telemarketing Fraud: • “You’ve won a prize” or “Would you like to open a VISA?” “Now give me your account information.” Hot Check: “Insufficient Funds” • 90% of ‘insufficient funds’ checks are numbered between 101 and 200 • account opening year is printed on check The Art of the Steal, Frank W Abagnale, Broadway Books 2001

  41. Be Careful Printing Checks! • Paychecks & Accounts Payable should not be printed on blank check paper • Laser printer is non-impact (ink does not go into paper but sits on top) • Easy to remove printing • ‘Laser Lock’ or ‘Toner Lock’ seals laser printing • Matrix printer puts ink into the paper • Chemical ‘washing’ removes the print • Good Practices • Use larger printing: 12 font • Reverse toner in software: white on black • Control check stock and guard checks • Check your bank statements – you have 30 days The Art of the Steal, Frank W Abagnale, Broadway Books 2001

  42. Check Security Features Watermark: Subtle design viewable at 45-degree angle toward light. Cannot be photo-copied Void Pantograph: Background pattern of checks. When photo-copied, the background patter disappears or prints ‘VOID’ Chemical Voids: When check is treated with eradicator chemical, the word VOID appears Microprinting: When magnified, the signature or check border appears to be written words. The resolution is too fine for a photo-copier 3-Dim. Reflective Holostripe: Metallic stripe contains at least one hologram, similar to credit card. Security ink: React to eradication chemicals, distorting check Thermochromic Ink: Ink reacts to heat and moisture by fading and reappearing Check Fraud: A Guide to Avoiding Losses

  43. Processing Money Orders • Money order information provides info on a ready checking account • Non-negotiable incoming wire account prevents out-going checks I would like to send you a money order. What is your account number? THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! The Art of the Steal, Frank W Abagnale, Broadway Books, 2001

  44. Fraud Scams • Get a receipt from the trash, ‘return’ a product • Copy gift certificate and cash in at multiple locations • Markdown sale prices reimbursed with receipt – copied and collected at multiple locations • Fake UPC numbers to pay low prices then return at higher price. If receipt total is sufficient, scam may work. The Art of the Steal, Frank W Abagnale, Broadway Books 2001

  45. Preventing Scams • Receipts must have security marks on them (e.g., two-colored ink on special paper, or better: thermochromatic ink) • Line-item detail on receipts and sales records in company database • Garbage bins which may receive receipts should be protected from access (e.g., bank garbage bins) • Register gift certificates – unique numbers • Shredders should be used for any sensitive information • Protect against shoulder surfing or device attachment for card readers The Art of the Steal, Frank W Abagnale, Broadway Books 2001

  46. Study Questions • What are the key elements of fraud, and what techniques can be used to counteract these key elements? • What are the three categories of fraud? • What are the legal considerations of fraud? • Who commits fraud, and who commits the most expensive fraud? • What are the red flags of potential fraud? • How does social engineering occur, and how can it be prevented? • Apply the concept of segregation of duties.

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