ith a sixth-grade education, legendary gangster
Al Capone thought he was smart enough. By the
time he was 26, Scarface had 1,000
employees and a weekly payroll of $300,000. In
the 1930s, when the average American worker made
about $2,400 annually, Capone was raking in more
than a hundred million dollars a year. The
mobster, thought to be responsible for more than
300 gangland executions, was chauffeured around
the mean streets of Chicago in a seven-ton
limousine with 18 bodyguards. He had everything
money could buy. But
Alphonse Capone wasnt so smart after all.
Hed thought of protecting himself from all
but his worst enemy: the Internal Revenue
Service. Capone never bothered to declare his
income and pay tax on it. So Elliot Ness and the
IRS asked a simple but powerful question: How
could someone live so well on nothing? A federal
jury in the Northern District of Illinois came to
the only obvious conclusionCapone had
evaded his tax obligations. On October 7, 1931,
the legendary gangsters career came to an
abrupt stop when he was sentenced to 11 years in
prison.
| Capone wasnt the first or
the last to try to escape the cold logic
of simple arithmeticif you spend
more than you legitimately bring in, the
difference could come from illegal
sources. Another Elliottthat is
Elliott Leary, CPA, of KPMG in
Washington, D.C.says,
Financial investigators know the
credo by heart: Follow the money.
In this article we will explore the most
effective ways that fraud examiners and
prosecutors prove that funds were derived
from criminal activity. CPAs specializing
in forensic accounting or litigation
support regularly employ the same
methods, because they can help uncover
embezzlements, bribes, drug money and
other illegal income. |
Quote:
The
income tax law is a lot of bunk.
The government cant collect
legal
taxes from illegal money.
Attributed to Al
Capone
Al
Capone was convicted on felony
income tax evasion for the years
19251929 and misdemeanor
failure to file income tax
returns for 19281929. He
was acquitted on conspiracy to
violate probation laws from
19221931. For more on
Capones trial, go to www.chicagohs.org/history/capone.html
|
|
COMPILE A FINANCIAL PROFILE
To begin, the CPA develops a financial profile of
the subject under suspicion. The most
important and difficult part of a net worth
investigation is gathering enough evidence to
prepare a financial profile, Leary said.
The goals are to obtain sufficient data to
document the suspects changes in net worth
or income and to determine his or her typical
spending habits. According to Leary, If
financial records are not readily available, they
often can be developed from alternative sources,
such as interviews with the suspect,
acquaintances and business associates and from
public documents, including real estate and
business filings and court records.
| Once you determine the
comparative financial statements are
complete, you can confirm their validity
by addressing the following questions. Assets
When and from whom were they
acquired?
How much did they cost?
What was the manner of
payment? (Currency, check or
cashiers check, for example.)
Where did the suspect get the
funds to purchase them?
What documentation exists for
the transactions?
|
| Exhibit
1:
Asset Method |
| |
Assets |
| |
Liabilities |
| = |
Net
worth |
| |
Prior-year
net worth |
| = |
Net
worth increase |
| + |
Living
expenses |
| = |
Income
(or expenditures) |
| |
Funds from
known sources |
| = |
Funds
from unknown sources |
|
|
Liabilities
What were the original
amounts of the liabilities?
What are the current
balances?
When were the liabilities
incurred?
What was the purpose of the
loans or debts?
What security or collateral,
if any, was given?
Who was the creditor or
lender?
Were any of the debts written
off?
From what sources were the
liabilities paid?
What documentation exists?
Sources
of funds
What were the total amounts
of funds or income during the questioned
periods?
From what sources were the
funds received?
How, when and where were the
funds deposited?
What documentation exists?
|
Exhibit
2:
Schedule of Increases (Decreases)
in Net Worth |

|
| Note
that in the example the
targets net worth
rose by $54,925 during
year two. To determine
the source of such
increase, the fraud
examiner finds the
suspects known
income during year two
and subtracts known
expenses for year two. |
|
|
Expenditures
or applications of funds
What were the total amounts
spent?
What was the manner of
payment?
From what sources were the
expenditures made?
What were the expenditures
for?
What documentation exists?
Money from any
sourcelawful or notcan be
disbursed in only four ways: It can be
spent, saved, used to acquire assets or
to pay debts. The choice of method
used to prove illegal income is largely
determined by how most of the money was
spent. All are variations of funds
statements that CPAs use regularly in
accounting for the inflows and outflows
of a companys money, says
Leary.
|
| Exhibit
3:
Increases (Decreases) in Net
Worth From Known Sources |

|
|
THE ASSET METHOD
Investigators use
this technique (see exhibit 1,
above) to prove the targets net worth
materially increased during the time of the
suspect illegal activity. CPAs begin by comparing
the beginning and ending net worth, then adjust
for known income and expenditures. The result is
income from unknown sources. They follow these
rules when using this method. Note that items 2
and 3 give the benefit of the doubt to the
subject under scrutiny.
They value assets at
original cost, ignoring appreciation or
depreciation.
They overestimate funds available to
the subject from legitimate sources.
They underestimate expenditures on
legitimate itemsespecially hard-to-document
living costs, such as food and entertainment.
| For an example of a computation
using the asset method, see exhibit
2, above. The difference between the
targets income and expenses equals
the increase (or decrease) in net worth
from year one to year two which can be
attributed to known sources. In exhibit
3, above, it is
$13,985. When you subtract the increase
in net worth from known sources from the
total increase in net worth, you
determine the amount from unknown
sources.
|
| Exhibit
4:
Funds From Unknown
SourcesAsset Method |

|
|
The results reflect that
nearly $41,000 might be attributed to illegal
income (see exhibit 4,
above). In some situations, the suspect will
attempt to explain away this mysterious wealth as
coming from legitimate sources. Later in this
article, we will discuss ways CPAs can rebut
these defenses.
THE
EXPENDITURES METHOD
The
formula (see exhibit 5, at right) for this analysis is
the essence of simplicity. The
expenditures method is easy for jurors to
comprehend, says Leary, who has
testified as an expert accounting witness
in a number of court trials. For a
given period, you simply take the
subjects total expenditures and
deduct the known sources of funds. The
difference is funds from unknown
sources. |
| Exhibit
5:
Expenditures Method |
| |
Expenditures |
| |
Known source
of funds |
| = |
Funds
from unknown sources |
|
|
In one of Learys
cases, the defendants bought items such as $2,200
alligator shoes, $300 bottles of cologne and a
dozen automobiles. They were known for
their shopping sprees on Rodeo Drive in
Hollywood, Leary said. But they could
not identify a legitimate source for their lavish
spending. Because of the strength of the
accounting evidence, the subjects were convicted
on money laundering charges.
| Funds include money received
from all sourcesloans, salary,
inheritance, gifts and cash on hand at
the beginning of the period. See exhibit
6, at right,
for an example of the same computation
using the expenditures method. THE
BANK DEPOSITS METHOD
This
formula (see exhibit 7, below) operates on the
assumption that only two things can be
done with money: It can be deposited or
spent. Leary says, The bank
deposits method should be used when the
CPA can substantiate that the illegal
income has been deposited in financial
institutions. See an example in exhibit
8, below.
| Exhibit
7:
Bank Deposits Method |
| |
Total
deposits to all accounts |
| |
Transfer and
redeposits |
| = |
Net
deposits to all accounts |
| + |
Cash
expenditures |
| = |
Total
receipts from all sources |
| |
Funds from
known sources |
| = |
Funds
from unknown or illegal
sources |
|
|
| Exhibit
6:
Funds From Unknown
SourcesExpenditures Method |

|
|
REBUTTING DEFENSES TO NET
WORTH ANALYSES
It is common for a
subject to attempt explaining away income from
unknown sources. Some of the usual defenses are
the money came from
Cash hordes.
Gifts from friends and
relatives.
Private loans.
Spouses funds.
Gambling winnings.In each of these cases, the CPA
must be prepared to negate the specific
defense. A CPA can rebut the cash hordes
explanation by showing the subject
borrowed money, lived penuriously, made
large installment purchases, was
delinquent on debts, had a poor credit
rating or filed for bankruptcy. Gambling
winnings often can be negated by proving
the subject did not list them on income
tax returns.
CPAs typically can
debunk the excuse of gifts or loans from
friends, relatives and spouses by proving
the alleged providers were financially
incapable of generating such funds. In
one of Learys cases, a defendant
claimed she had received substantial
income from a relative. Leary was able to
prove otherwise. This person hardly
existed in a financial sense. He had no
job, no bank account, no credit cards and
no tax returns, he said. Another
way a CPA can rebut the defense that
money was received from acquaintances is
to show the lack of documentation
reflecting the transaction (for example,
the absence of bank withdrawals by the
alleged provider).
|
| Exhibit
8:
Funds From Unknown
SourcesBank Deposits Method |

|
|
Im frequently asked about the best
method to hide illegal loot and get away
with it. My answer? Secretly bury the
cash in the middle of the desert in the
dark of night. Tell no one. Wait until
the statute of limitations expires before
you dig it up and spend it. Although I
suspect that is what a smart criminal
would do, Ive never encountered
one; Elliott Leary says he hasnt
either. But as long as dumb criminals
like Al Capone and others spend their
ill-gotten booty, they can eventually be
caughtif CPAs follow the greenback
road.  |
| |
|

Resources |
Books
CPAs Handbook
of Fraud and Commercial Crime Prevention
(# 056504)Financial Reporting
Fraud: A Practical Guide to Detection and
Internal Control (# 029879)
CPE
Introduction to Fraud
Examination and Criminal Behavior (#
730275)
Identifying Fraudulent Financial
Transactions (# 730244)
Finding the Truth: Effective
Techniques for Interview and
Communication (# 730164)
To order, go to www.cpa2biz.com.
|
AICPAs
Antifraud Initiatives
Antifraud and Corporate
Responsibility Resource Center, http://antifraud.aicpa.org/.
SAS no. 99 information.
Management
Antifraud Programs and Controls (SAS no.
99 exhibit).
Fraud Specialist
Competency Model.
Free corporate
fraud prevention training and CPE.
Academia outreach
and assistance.
Other antifraud
activities.
|
JOSEPH T. WELLS, CPA, CFE, is
founder and chairman of the Association of
Certified Fraud Examiners and professor of fraud
examination at the University of Texas at Austin.
Mr. Wells won the Lawler Award for the best JofA
article in 2000 and 2002 and has been inducted
into the Journal of Accountancy Hall of
Fame. His e-mail address is joe@cfenet.com.
|