School Your
Clients
to Stop Theft
Maybe
its only human nature, but all too often
businesses stung by embezzlement first blame
their outside CPA instead of assessing controls
of their own that might have prevented the theft
in the first place. These suggestions can help
you teach small to midsize businesses and
nonprofit clients how to be more vigilant.
Conduct
background checks on prospective personnel. Many
companies document internal controls with
spreadsheets. This process isnt very secure
and can quickly become cumbersome. Put the
information underlying the documentation into a
database instead to enhance consistency, security
and search efficiency.
Thoroughly
check references and scrutinize all dates and
time gaps in resumes. Have
employees bonded if they have access to cash or
work in financial functions.
Send
bank and credit card statements straight to the
top. The
companys owner, manager or a nonprofit
audit committee member should be the first to
review all bank account entries and canceled
checks. Someone without authority to issue checks
should reconcile bank statements and review them
for forged or altered checks. Before paying
credit card bills, support each charge with an
original receipt.
Review
documentation for all check requests. Compare
original vendor invoices, purchase orders and
receiving reports for agreement on quantities,
brands, product descriptions and services
requested. All should be stamped paid
and marked with the related check number.
Monitor
cash receipts and deposits independently of
employees recording them. Have someone
not involved in making deposits or recording
accounts receivable open the mail, count money
received and report totals to the owner-manager
or other official who compares the reported
amount to the amount deposited.
Reconcile
accounts receivable and accounts payable monthly.
Have the
owner, manager or nonprofit audit committee
member review and clear all exceptions.
Check
out first-time vendors. Someone
independent of buying and payment processing
should review all entries for new suppliers. That
person should call to verify the suppliers
name, address and federal tax identification
number.
Restrict
authorization and access to finances. Ensure that
only appropriate employees can make transactions
or have access to assets, documents and records.
Password-protect computer files and set dollar
limits on check authorization. Other safeguards
include dual custody of cash receipts or cash on
hand and ensuring cash and financial documents
are secure.
Make
employees take vacations. Especially
require personnel in accounting, human resources
and cash-handling functions to take one to two
weeks off each year, preferably at the end of an
accounting cycle. Cross-train employees so that
someone else can do their joband
double-check their workduring the vacation.
Watch
for red flags in employee behavior. They can
include substance abuse, gambling, change in
lifestyle, extramarital affairs, living beyond
ones means, possessiveness of work, high
personal debts, high medical bills, peer
pressures or simply dissatisfaction with work.
Source: Leon
A. LaRosa Jr., CPA, is managing partner and
chairman of litigation support services at Gocial
Gerstein LLC in Jenkintown, Pa. He also is an
adjunct professor and director of The Institute
of Fraud and Forensic Accounting at La Salle
University in Philadelphia. His e-mail address is
llarosa@gocialgerstein.com.
|