Fraud comes in many shapes and sizes
and its growing faster than ever.
So Thats Why Its Called
a
PYRAMID SCHEME
BY JOSEPH
T. WELLS
| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
- CPAs
ARE UNDER ATTACK for not doing
enough in the war against fraud, and they
are, at the same time, being asked to
play an increasingly important role in
the detection of fraud. Because CPAs are
becoming more educated about the subject,
success stories about their helping
clients ferret out fraud are becoming
more common.
- FRAUD
AND WHITE-COLLAR CRIMES are
typically committed by older,
better-educated offenders. Estimates of
the total cost of occupational fraud to
the economy are that it equals 6% of the
U.S. gross domestic productover
$400 billion. Small businesses experience
fraud losses at a rate almost 100 times
that of the largest ones.
- THE
FIRST CPAs WERE SCRIBES in
the pharaohs courts who were
charged with fraud prevention and
detection. Their role stayed much the
same until the turn of the 20th century.
Accrual basis accounting became more
common and reporting issues became a top
priority for the profession. Fraud
detection was no longer the primary
focus.
- IN
THE 1980s THE ACCOUNTING PROFESSION began
investing considerable resources in
responding to the fraud problem. The
National Commission on Fraudulent
Financial Reporting (the Treadway
commission) was formed and identified the
expectation gap. The
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations
(COSO) issued a report calling for better
internal control systems.
- THE
PUBLIC OVERSIGHT BOARD in a
special report, In the Public
Interest, concluded that the
public looks to the independent auditor
to detect fraud, and it is the
auditors responsibility to do
so. These activities culminated in
the AICPAs adopting Statement on
Auditing Standards (SAS) no. 82, Consideration
of Fraud in a Financial Statement Audit, which
confirmed the professions
commitment to detecting fraud.
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| JOSEPH
T. WELLS, CPA, CFE, is founder and chairman of
the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners,
Austin, Texas. His e-mail address is: joe@cfenet.com. |
oday CPAs are under attack for not doing enough
in the war against fraud. For confirmation, look at these
news stories: Last year, a Big Five accounting firm
agreed to pay $335 million for failing to detect a
half-billion-dollar revenue overstatement during an
audit and A Denver lending company recently
sued its auditors for allegedly failing to detect a $9
million embezzlement committed by the lenders own
president and chief executive officer.
| IN THE BEGINNING Its
said that accountants predecessors were the
scribes of ancient Egypt, who kept the
pharaohs books. They inventoried grain,
gold and other assets. Unfortunately, some fell
victim to temptation and stole from their leader,
as did other employees of the king. The solution
was to have two scribes independently record each
transaction (the first internal control). As long
as the scribes totals agreed exactly, there
was no problem. But if the totals were materially
different, both scribes would be put to death.
That proved to be a great incentive for them to
carefully check all the numbers and make sure the
help wasnt stealing. In fact, fraud
prevention and detection became the royal
accountants main duty.
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But these
dont tell the whole story. CPAs detected countless
financial statement frauds, embezzlements and tax
offenses before they became serious problems.
Take these examples: In one instance a New Jersey CPA
helped his client avoid a loss of $2.4 million (and a
probable criminal indictment) by advising him not to
invest in an illegal tax shelter and, in another, during
a review and compilation engagement for a small client, a
Nebraska CPA discovered the bookkeeper had embezzled
$420,000.
Because CPAs are becoming
more educated about the subject of fraud, success stories
such as the above are growing more common. Its a
good thing, too, because some experts say changing
demographics have led to more white-collar crime.
Criminologist Gil Geis, a former member of the
Presidents Crime Council, says theres a
correlation between crime and age: Younger
peopleespecially malesare likely to commit
more traditional crimes such as robbery, larceny and
assault. Conversely, fraud and white-collar crimes are
typically committed by older, better-educated
offenders. Our society as a whole is getting older,
and young and old alike are getting more sophisticated.
On top of that, the use of computers and technology to
aid in the commission of crimes has become widespread.
Most CPAs have had little
or no antifraud training, so educating them has become
critical. This article, the first of a new series on
fraud detection, is meant to be a part of that effort. In
future issues, we will look at different aspects of fraud
methodicallywhat it is, who commits it, how they do
it and how CPAs can respond.
Figures and Facts About
Occupational Fraud
- Small
businesses experience fraud losses at a
rate of nearly 100 times that of the
largest ones.
- Occupational
frauds fall into three categories: asset
misappropriation, corruption and
fraudulent financial statements.
- Asset
misappropriations account for more than
80% of cases, but they are the least
expensive of the three fraud categories.
- Fraudulent
financial statements, which account for
less than 4% of fraud litigation, are the
most costly occupational frauds.
- Real
estate financing has the highest fraud
losses; education, the lowest.
- A direct
link exists between the age, sex,
education and position of the perpetrator
and the amount lost. The highest median
losses occur with older male executives
who are senior officials of their
organizations. The smallest losses are
with high-school graduates who have been
with a company for less than a year.
Source:
The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, Report
to the Nation on Occupational Fraud and Abuse, a
1996 survey of 1,523 cases of fraud ranging from
$22 to $1.5 billion.
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HOW TIMES HAVE CHANGED
From the time of the
ancient pharaohs until the turn of the 20th century,
auditors were responsible for fraud prevention and
detection. In the original edition of Robert H.
Montgomerys classic textbook, Auditing Theory
and Practice (1912), the author stated that in
what might be called the formative days of
auditing, students were taught that the primary
purposes of an audit were the detection or
prevention of fraud and the detection or
prevention of errors. However, later textbooks and
accounting theory took a different tack, largely out of
necessity. Huge conglomerates had formed and financial
transactions became so numerous they could not all be
examined. Accrual basis accounting became common and, as
a result, reporting issues became a top priority for the
profession. Vouching each transaction from cradle
to gravewhich catches and prevents many
fraudswas discontinued. Fraud detection or
prevention was relegated to a secondary role.
It didnt take crooks
long to take advantage of this new environment; the 20th
century has been littered with spectacular financial
frauds and embezzlements. Some became famousthe
McKesson & Robbins scandal, the Salad Oil swindle,
the Equity Funding scam, the Savings and Loan frauds. And
one question became a refrain: Where were the
auditors?
THE TIMES, THEY ARE
ACHANGIN
In the 1980s the
accounting profession began investing considerable
resources in responding to the fraud problem. In 1987 the
National Commission on Fraudulent Financial Reporting
(the Treadway commission) was formed to study the issues.
In 1992, the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO)
issued a report calling for better internal control
systems to help management meet its goals. The Public
Oversight Board in a special report, In the Public
Interest, concluded that the public looks to
the independent auditor to detect fraud, and it is the
auditors responsibility to do so. The
profession engaged in several other initiatives that, in
1997, led the AICPA to issue Statement on Auditing
Standards (SAS) no. 82, Consideration of Fraud in a
Financial Statement Audit. This SAS confirmed
the professions commitment to detecting fraud.
BY ANY OTHER NAME
Fraud is trickery that
falls into two basic categories. Internal fraud is
committed by employees and officers of organizations.
External fraud is committed by organizations against
individuals, by individuals against organizations, by
organizations against organizations and by individuals
against individuals. For example, an insurance company
executive filing a false report with a regulatory
authority is committing internal fraud. But a customer of
the same insurance company filing a phony accident claim
is involved in external fraud. An elderly person who
falls victim to a telemarketing scam is caught in an
external fraud.
Although both types of
fraud are of concern, the CPA normally will find internal
fraud more common. Another term to describe it is occupational
fraud and abuse. Because the scope is so broad,
occupational fraud includes such common violations as
asset misappropriations, corruption, fraudulent financial
statements, pilferage and petty theft, false overtime,
using company property for personal benefit and payroll
and sick-time abuses. The term also covers all
employeesfrom the boardroom to the mailroom.
THE STAGGERING COST OF OCCUPATIONAL
FRAUD
Determining the actual
cost of occupational fraud and abuse may be difficult, if
not impossible. Thats because many frauds remain
undiscovered and unreported. That should come as no
surprise: Most companies, given an alternative, will
quietly discharge offenders without reporting the offense
to the authorities. Estimates of the total cost of all
forms of occupational fraud to the economy are equal to
about 6% of the U.S. gross domestic productmore
than $400 billion. There are no federal, state or local
government figures published on the cost of these crimes.
What is the significance
of these numbers to a CPA? It depends on the kind of
practice you have. If you primarily serve small
businesses, your clients statistically are most likely to
be damaged by asset misappropriation. If your clients are
large, the greatest risk is fraudulent financial
statements. And both large and small businesses run the
risk of corruption in which an employee conspires with an
outsider to defraud the company. With the knowledge that
certain types of fraud prevail in companies of particular
size, the CPA is better equipped to look for and find it.
In the following
monthsin actual case studieswe will examine
in detail the three most common methods by which
employees commit occupational frauds. And also try to
answer the thorny question, Why do ordinary
people commit occupational fraud?
Crazy Eddie and the
$120 Million Ripoff
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| Im
Crazy Eddie! a goggle-eyed man screamed
from the television set. My prices are
I-N-S-A-N-E! If you were anywhere near the East Coast
in the 1980s, you undoubtedly saw those TV
commercials. The raucous ads saturated the
airwaves in the tri-state area and helped Crazy
Eddies quickly become the dominant consumer
electronics retailer in New York, New Jersey and
Connecticut.
As it turned
out, Crazy Eddie Antar, who was
behind one of the twentieth centurys most
infamous financial statement frauds, wasnt
crazy at alljust crooked. Indeed, the face
on the tube wasnt even his (it belonged to
an actor). The real Eddie Antar didnt have
time for acting. He and members of his family
were too busy engineering a $120 million rip-off.
Much of the ill-gotten loot was placed in secret
overseas bank accounts. Once discovered, Antar
spent several years on the lam and another
several behind bars. According to a senior SEC
official, This may not be the biggest
[financial statement] fraud of all time, but for
outrageousness, it is going to be very hard to
beat. Even though the fraud is more than a
decade old, it provides vivid examples of how
these crimes can be pulled off and how auditors
can be deceived.
FINANCIAL
STATEMENT FRAUD SCHEMES
There are
numerous ways to classify financial statement
frauds. Our research divided them into five
principal, but related, types. One of the most
outrageous aspects of the Crazy Eddies
fraud is that he used all five methods. This
is how he did it.
Fictitious
revenues. The most common way
companies create fictitious revenues is to dummy
up sales that did not occur. The accounting
transaction created is a credit to sales with an
offsetting debit to accounts receivable, which
boosts both assets and income. In the Crazy
Eddies case, the audit trail was easy to
fake. Antars underlings prepared phony
invoices showing merchandise sales. Three major
suppliers, beholden to Crazy Eddies for
large volumes of business, cooperated. When
auditors attempted to confirm some of these
receivables, the vendors wouldat
Antars behestlie. Obviously, with
such a conspiracy, it would have been
difficultif not impossiblefor the
auditors to easily uncover such a scheme.
Fraudulent
asset valuations. Although any
asset can be fraudulently valued, the most
frequent manipulations occur in inventory. In the
Crazy Eddies fraud, Antar overvalued
inventory by $80 million, and employed some
pretty outrageous tricks to get there. He and his
conspirators borrowed merchandise
from suppliers to boost the ending inventory
count. These were the same suppliers who
confirmed Crazy Eddies phony receivables.
Eddie convinced the suppliers to simply ship
merchandise to the Crazy Eddies stores, and
hold the billing until after the end of the
accounting period. They also shipped stock from
one store to another so it could be
double-counted. And, most outrageous of all, they
got into the auditors desk and altered
inventory count sheets in the workpapers to
increase the numbers.
Timing
differences. Another way companies
overstate assets and income is by taking
advantage of the accounting cutoff period to
either boost sales and/or reduce liabilities and
expenses. Antar routinely told his stores to hold
the books open past the end of an accounting
period to falsely inflate sales revenues.
Conversely, as detailed below, the liabilities
for any given period were normally not recorded
until the next period.
Concealed
liabilities and expenses. Unfortunately
for the CPA, it is all too easy for a client to
conceal liabilities. After all, it is easier to
audit something that is there rather than
something that isnt. In the Crazy
Eddies case, Sam E. Antar, the CFO (and
Eddies nephew), regularly stashed unpaid
bills in his desk. The liabilities would be
either entered after the yearend or held for long
periods without being recorded. As a result,
Crazy Eddies never did know what it really
owed, and neither did the auditors.
Improper
disclosures. Generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP) require adequate
disclosure in the financial statements. Any
material fact not covered in the financials
should be disclosed in accompanying footnotes.
Sam Antara former CPA and
auditormanaged to change accounting methods
simply by altering two words. In one year, the
footnotes stated that certain income was
recognized when received (cash basis).
The following year, Sam removed
received and substituted earned (accrual
basis). The deception went unnoticed by the
auditors, and it had the intended effect of
boosting income. A careful review of the
footnotes from year to year would normally detect
such a simplebut in this case,
effectivescheme.
PAINFUL
LESSONS
Fortunately for
those of us in the accounting profession, the
Crazy Eddies case is an aberration. But it
does serve to illustrate nearly every trick in
the book. It also is a cautionary tale. Auditors
did not detect the fraud. The scheme was
uncovered when one of Eddies disgruntled
relatives informed the SEC. Recognizing that
hindsight is 20/20, there are some fundamental
lessons to be learned.
Know
your client. Eddie Antar started
young. By the time he was 21, Eddie had already
developed a reputation in the retail industry for
saying anything to make a sale; some
considered him an early master of the bait
and switch technique. Had the auditors
invested the time and expense to investigate
Eddie before accepting him as a client, they
perhaps would have decided against conducting the
Crazy Eddies audit. In short, they would
have found that Eddie Antar was very, very risky.
Assign
proper personnel. The field
auditors for Crazy Eddies were, according
to Sam Antar, young and inexperienced. This is
the nature of the audit businessfield work
typically is assigned to less experienced
personnel. Selecting the right auditors for the
job, though, is critical in high-risk
engagements. Less experienced personnel may be
satisfactory in low-risk environments, but
detecting the signs of fraud requires maturity
and judgment. Therefore senior auditors, fraud
examiners and/or antifraud specialists should be
considered.
Be
careful in inventory observations. In
any merchandising concern, inventory is usually
the largest single asset. And experience has
shown it is the asset of choice in financial
fraud cases. In the Crazy Eddies case, the
auditors inadvertently may have contributed to
the fraud by the way the inventory observations
were conducted. Rather than climb over boxes in
the warehouse, the auditors asked employees to
assist them. Crooked employees volunteered. An
employee would stand on top of a stack of
television sets, for example, and call down the
count to the auditors. If there were 10 sets, the
worker would claim there were 25. Repeated many
times, this clever trick helped to greatly
increase the inventory count. The message here is
obvious: If youre supposed to verify the
inventory count, then you must observe it.
Provide
appropriate security to documents and computers. Crazy
Eddies auditors were provided a company
office during their examination. They had a key
to lock the deskwhich they kept in a box of
paperclips on top of the desk in full view. After
the auditors left for the day, Eddies
cohorts would unlock the desk, increase the
inventory counts on the workpapers and photocopy
the altered records. Were the auditors stupid?
No, just too trusting. After all, no one wants to
think the client is a crook. But it happens all
too often. Thats why the profession
requires auditors to be skeptical.
Try
to understand the relationship between the client
and its principal suppliers. Crazy
Eddies bought most of its electronics from
one of three wholesalers. All three were in on
the scheme to inflate Crazy Eddies assets.
Did the suppliers know they were helping Eddie
cook the books? They may have figured it out, but
its doubtful they would have asked
questions. The reason these suppliers cooperated
is simpleEddie engaged in economic
extortion. If they didnt help him with his
schemes, Eddie would change suppliers. This
provided them with a significant incentive to
cooperate. Perhaps if the auditors had known the
extent to which the suppliers were dependent on
Eddie, they would have subjected those
relationships to closer audit scrutiny.
Admittedly, this may be difficult to do. But if
the supplier ultimately is material to the
financial statements, the auditor may even want
to consider visiting the vendors operation
to further assess risk. Auditors should document
any such visits in the workpapers.
Consider
extra risks associated with closely held
businesses. Every major player in
the Crazy Eddies case was related to Eddie
Antarand they made up the board of
directors. This was a case of family conspiracy
and an extreme example of the kind of damage that
can be done to a closely held business when its
board consists entirely of insiders who also are
company officers. The familial relationship
becomes important in assessing risk. There is
certainly nothing wrong with family- owned and
operated enterprises; they are a strong part of
our economic base. But the auditor should
recognize an obvious fact about human behavior in
the risk equation: It is certainly easier to
conspire with a family member than with someone
unrelated.
Be
wary of businesses that buck industry trends. While
other electronic retailers were struggling to
stay even, Crazy Eddies was enjoying
double-digit growth. Eddie Antar had people
believing those I-N-S-A-N-E commercials were
responsible. But now we really know why Eddie was
so successfulhe was a fake. In other
instances of financial statement chicanery,
bucking industry trends has been a big red flag,
too. The auditor should ask herself or himself,
In todays competitive international
business environment, why is this client doing so
much better than everyone else? If you
cant answer that question to your
satisfaction, keep digging. There could be a
problem.
The failure to
detect Crazy Eddies large-scale fraud
spawned seemingly endless lawsuits against those
involvedsome spanning a decade or more. The
auditors were sued for malpractice; the
principals were sued for fraud. Whatever money
was made illegally is long gonethe bones of
the company have been picked clean through
litigation.
Antar and
several of his family members ended up with
criminal records. Only Eddie served
timeeight years. Ironically, he now clerks
in an electronics store. Other family members
fared better. Relatives in on the conspiracy all
received probated sentences. Both Eddie and his
conspirators have millions of dollars in civil
judgments against them. In sum: Other than the
painful lessons learned, nothing positive for
Antar and his cohorts came out of the Crazy
Eddies case.
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