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Mitigating Corporate Financial Fraud

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5 CIA. 2 CPP. 1 CGFM. Work Industries. Audit services, construction, consulting ... Understand and apply the principles of fraud detection and prevention ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mitigating Corporate Financial Fraud


1
Mitigating Corporate Financial Fraud
  • Johnnie R. Bejarano, CGFM, CPA
  • Lead Faculty, University of Phoenix
  • Denver Campus
  • May 15, 2008
  • jrbejarano_at_email.phoenix.edu

2
  • Without rigor, research is worthless, becomes
    fiction, and loses its utility (Morse, Barrett,
    Mayan, Olson, Spires, 2002, p. 2)

3
Overview
  • Problem
  • Purpose of Study
  • Significance of Study
  • Theoretical Framework
  • Research Question
  • Brief History

4
Overview Cont.
  • Research Methodology
  • Population and Sample
  • Demographics
  • Work Industries
  • Results of Findings
  • Conclusions
  • Recommendations

5
Problem Statement
  • Corporate financial fraud in the U.S. continues
    to grow despite current anti-fraud legislation
    (Flint, 2005)
  • Financial fraud has a negative affect on
    corporate earnings and a loss to investor
    confidence (Wells, 2007)
  • Estimated fraud losses increased 65 from 400B
    in 1996 to 660B in 2004 (ACFE, 2004)
  • 1 in 6 U.S. corporations filed fraudulent
    financial statements costing approximately 10M
    per company (ACFE, 2004)

6
Purpose of the Study
  • The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological
    study using a Modified van Kaam Method by
    Moustakas (1994) with semi-structured, recorded,
    transcribed interviews was to explore the
    perceptions of a purposive sample of 20 certified
    public accountants, forensic accountants, and
    criminal fraud investigators in the Denver,
    Colorado area on how to mitigate corporate
    financial fraud.

7
Significance of the Study
  • The results of this research might
  • Add new knowledge for leaders to improve on the
    detection and prevention of financial fraud
  • Expand existing literature relative to criminal
    fraud
  • Expose weaknesses in current anti-fraud
    legislation
  • Aid governments in monitoring contractors
  • Provide new insights for policy-makers,
    regulators, auditors, rules-making bodies, SEC,
    and academia

8
Application of the Research
Society
Industry
Government
Academia
9
Theoretical Framework
  • This study is the first of its kind to apply the
    following two theories in the context of
    explaining corporate financial fraud in the U.S.
  • Agency Theory (Eisenhardt, 1985 Jensen
    Meckling, 1976)
  • Differential Association theory (Sutherland,
    1947)

10
Research Question
  • What factors might mitigate corporate financial
    fraud in the United States?
  • What personal factors existed, if any, that might
    have motivated a person to commit financial
    fraud?
  • What endogenous factors existed, if any, that
    might have influenced the financial engineering
    of financial fraud?
  • What exogenous factors existed, if any, that
    might have influenced the financial engineering
    of financial fraud?

11
Brief History
  • U.S. fraud legislation is based on the Statute of
    Frauds law enacted in England in 1677 (Charles
    II, 1819)
  • Securities Act of 1933
  • Securities Exchange Act of 1934
  • Budget and Accounting Procedures Act of 1950
  • Wire Fraud Act of 1952
  • False Claims Act of 1963
  • Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act
    (1970)

12
Brief History Cont.
  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (1977)
  • Federal Managers Financial Integrity Act (1982)
  • Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (1985)
  • Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act of 1984
  • GASB (1984) established by the FAF
  • CFO Act of 1990
  • Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act of
    1998
  • GASB Statement No. 34 (1999)
  • Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  • OMB Circular A123 Amended (2006)

13
Research Methodology
  • Qualitative Research Method (Creswell, 2003)
  • Phenomenological Approach (Moustakas, 1994)
  • Primary, secondary, government, industry sources
  • Semi-structured interview questions (De Souza,
    Gomes, McCarthy, 2005 Reid, 1987)
  • Recorded F2F interviews

14
Research Methodology Cont.
  • Verbatim transcripts using Sony Digital Voice
    Editor 2
  • HyperRESEARCH QDA coding/analytical software
  • RefViz textual analysis and visualization
    application
  • EndNote X electronic bibliography application
  • Triangulation of field data with scholarly
    peer-reviewed journals, government, and industry
    studies

15
Population and Sample
  • Population consisted of certified public
    accountants, forensic accountants, and criminal
    fraud investigators in the Denver, Colorado area
  • Purposive sample of 20 professionals with a
    minimum of five years work experience

16
Demographics
  • Average experience was 24 years (range 10 42)
  • Highest education levels reached
  • 50 Bachelor
  • 25 Master
  • 15 Juris Doctor
  • 10 Ph.D.
  • Professional certifications held
  • 10 CFE
  • 8 CPA
  • 5 CIA
  • 2 CPP
  • 1 CGFM

17
Work Industries
  • Audit services, construction, consulting
  • Education, financial services, government
  • Government regulator, health care
  • Internal audit, law enforcement, litigation
    support
  • Not-for-Profit, research and development
  • Retail, and telecommunications

18
Results of Findings
  • The main findings that emerged from the study as
    to why people commit corporate financial fraud
    are
  • Personal Factors (a) greed, (b) need, and (c)
    personal gain
  • Endogenous Factors (a) pressure, (b) greed, and
    (c) checks and balances
  • Exogenous Factors (a) internal controls, (b)
    need, and (c) opportunity

19
Results of Findings Cont.
  • The key findings regarding detection and
    prevention of fraud techniques were
  • Detection Techniques (a) hotlines, (b)
    environment, and (c) internal controls
  • Prevention Techniques (a) tone at the top, (b)
    internal controls, (c) hotline, and (d) training
  • Industry Specific Techniques (a) accountability,
    (b) change orders, (c) data mining, (d) duties,
    (e) internal controls, and (f) monitoring

20
Results of Findings Cont.
  • The top findings regarding education and
    training, and U.S. government intervention were
  • Education and Training (a) accounting, (b)
    experience, and (c) auditing
  • U.S. Government Intervention (a) resources, (b)
    enforcement, (c) proactive, (d) funding, and (e)
    reform

21
Conclusions
  • Differential Association Theory and Agency Theory
    may help model the patterns of behavior exhibited
    by perpetrators of corporate financial fraud
  • Understanding key behavioral factors might help
    leadership mitigate corporate financial fraud by
    improving detection and prevention techniques
  • More education and training is needed in college
    and industry regarding fraud detection, fraud
    prevention, and ethics
  • Anti-fraud legislation contains weaknesses,
    inefficiencies, and is costly

22
Recommendations
  • Implications for Action
  • More emphasis needs to be placed on mitigating
    corporate financial fraud
  • More emphasis in education and training in
    accounting curricula and industry on fraud
    awareness, detection, prevention, and ethics
  • Anti-fraud legislation needs to be more proactive
    and reformed to lower the cost of compliance

23
Recommendations Cont.
  • Recommendations for Governments
  • Understand and apply the principles of fraud
    detection and prevention
  • Know key behavioral patterns and act on your
    suspicions
  • Be aware of internal corruption such as sole
    source procurements, unauthorized use of
    government assets
  • Watch out for change orders from contractors
  • Validate allowable reimbursable costs
  • Encourage whistle blowing
  • Have a fraud, waste and abuse hotline

24
  • Questions?

25
References
  • Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (2004).
    2004 Report to the nation on occupational fraud
    and abuse. Retrieved September 12, 2004, from
  • http//www.cfenet.com/resources/RttN.asp
  • Charles II, 1677 An act for prevention of frauds
    and perjuryes. (1819). Statutes of the Realm, 5,
    1628-1680. Retrieved June 3, 2007, from
    http//www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid
    47463
  • Creswell, J. W. (2003). Research design
    Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods
    approaches (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA Sage
    Publications.
  • De Sosa, M. L., Gomes, W. B., McCarthy, S.
    (2005, April). Reversible relationship between
    quantitative and qualitative data in
    self-consciousness research A normative semiotic
    model for the phenomenological dialogue between
    data and capta. Quality Quantity, 39(2),
    199-215.
  • Eisenhardt, K. M. (1989). Agency theory An
    assessment and review. Academy of Management
    Review, 14(1), 57-74.
  • Flint, A. J. (2005, June). Solutions to
    corruption in the auditing profession. Review of
    Human Factor Studies, 11(1), 113-129.

26
References
  • Jensen, M. C., Meckling, W. H. (1976, October).
    Theory of the firm Managerial behavior, agency
    costs and ownership structure. Journal of
    Financial Economics, 3(4), 305-360.
  • Morse, J. M., Barrett, M., Mayan, M., Olson, K.,
    Spiers, J. (2002, Spring). Verification
    strategies for establishing reliability and
    validity in qualitative research. International
    Journal of Qualitative Methods, 1(2), 1-19.
  • Moustakas, C. E. (1994). Phenomenological
    research methods. Thousand Oaks, CA Sage
    Publications.
  • Reid, G. C. (1987). Applying field research
    techniques to business enterprise. International
    Journal of Social Economics, 14(10), 3-25.
  • Sutherland, E. H. (1947). Principles of
    criminology (4th ed.). Philadelphia J. B.
    Lippincott.
  • Wells, J. T. (2007). Corporate fraud handbook
    Prevention and detection (2nd ed.). Hoboken, NJ
    John Wiley Sons.
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