Account numbers for common carriers,
UPS, FedEx, DHL and others are pure
gold. Little effort is required to
ship a package if access to account
numbers if uncontrolled. The
security of these numbers is as
important as safeguarding the
combination to a safe. There are
some areas where there is a great deal
of vulnerability:
Tip: Ensure there are
frequent spot audits (scheduled and
irregular) of all documentation.
Review for similarities of addresses
that do not seem connected to the
business. In large operations,
only a database would enable complex
queries. Investment is
specialized software that can query
disparate databases that
contain data fields such as employee
addresses, relative's addresses,
emergency contact information,
names, etc (www.infoglide.com/index.htm
) would virtually be the only method
to conduct audits of this type.
Infoglide's software can analyze
relationships of information across
multiple databases to determine how
related all information is to the
target.
-
Shipping Departments. This is
the same as above but usually
involves larger packages and
carriers such as UPS and FedEx.
This area has potential for theft of
company product, especially in
retail and catalog environments, by
shipping to themselves or
accomplices. Additionally the
driver for the carrier can also be
in collusion and simply accept
packages and then drop them
somewhere along their route.
Tip: While cumbersome
and time consuming, occasional
audits should be conducted after the
carrier has been loaded. All
packages should be checked for
proper labeling and screened for
suspicious names and addresses.
6. Expense Monitoring.
Expense accounts are often termed as
"abused" when in reality it is theft.
Expense accounts can be used in a number
of ways for personal gain, most of which
can be caught early on with proper
oversight. A supervisor should
always review submitted expenses or
monthly credit card statements to ensure
the propriety of money spent. A
paper trail needs to exist for all
expenditures and companies should
refrain from adopting policies that do
not require receipts for small dollar
amounts.
To combat possible fraud companies
should do as much direct billing as
possible and set strict limits with
those vendors as to what will be paid
for. A strict policy should be
maintained regarding improper use of
company funds and regular audits should
be conducted for all employees. A
distinction should also be made within
the policy that the supervisor's
approval signature is meant that all
items have been properly reviewed and
that they are legitimate. When
there is accountability, there is less
likelihood that a supervisor is passing
down receipts to a lower level so that
questions won't be raised on their own
reports.
Abuse and fraud through the use of
personal credit cards is also possible.
One of the most frequent abuses I have
seen is the use of a personal credit
card that awards airline mileage to book
travel reservations. The owner of
the card will almost always be
management and the reimbursement process
will need to be prompt in order to pay
the bill. Hundreds of thousands of
miles can be amassed in a fairly short
period of time.
7.
Payroll. Using the
company payroll to commit fraud is
perhaps one of the oldest ploys around.
"Ghosting" payroll means creating
fictitious employees or continuing to
submit payroll requests despite the
employee no longer working. This
also requires forgery of the endorsement
of the check so the funds can be cashed
or deposited in the forger's account.
This type of fraud is usually committed
by managers and can go undetected for
long periods of time.
Even a small company can fall victim to
this type of theft without occasional
audits to reconcile the existence of
employees. In high turn over
industries a manager could simply
postpone submitting termination
paperwork to a payroll department for
until the next person quit. This
could be considered a form of identity
theft but it is more a means to steal
cash.
Tip: Field managers should be
conducting these audits on a very
regular basis.
8. . The
Bookkeeper. The bookkeeper plays a critical role in a
business because of their skills, their
knowledge base, and their total
familiarity with the company and their
practices. These same areas can be
used with a devastating effect if theft
is involved. Even when a company
becomes large enough to move into the
stage that requires an Accounting
Department, fraud can occur.
Consider the following areas:
-
Banking. What process is in
place to ensure that revenue and
deposits are the same? What
process is in place to ensure that
the number and amount of checks and
the amount of cash equal the
receipts for the day? To steal
cash, one would simply have to delay
depositing funds. The
subsequent days the cash that was
taken would have to be replaced by
checks from previous day's business.
-
Vendor accounts. What prevents
the bookkeeper from creating
fictitious vendors and then creating
payments they receive
themselves? What prevents
intentional overpayment of a vendor
to receive a portion of the stolen
funds. What monitoring is
available to ensure that vendors do
not develop personal relationships
with critical employees.
(Note: a review of policy
regarding the receiving of gifts,
trips, ball game tickets, rounds of
golf, etc from vendors should be
conducted).
Horror Stories. A
vendor for a very large company set
out to woo the affection of the
accounts payable clerk that who
handled their account.
Eventually becoming successful the
AP clerk began charging various
locations through journal entries
for fictitious product. By
sheer coincidence one of the
locations' managers saw an unusual
charge which eventually unraveled
the case. Time to detect:
8 months. Loss: $1.2
million. Both were prosecuted
A busy realtor had an excellent
bookkeeper. The bookkeeper was
young, energetic and very
territorial about her work.
Even the realtor could not get into
the password protected files.
The realtor thought she was a gem of
an employee because she even came in
on her vacation to take the daily
deposit to the bank. She was
also efficient and had the realtor
pre sign company checks to pay
bills. The bank manager was
alerted to some odd looking checks
made out to the bookkeeper.
Since the realtor had been a long
time customer, the realtor was
notified. The bookkeeper was
creating checks to herself and
depositing at the same bank.
Time to detect: 12 months.
Loss: $267,000. Side
note: Realtor failed to conduct
criminal background check which
would have shown the bookkeeper's
prior convictions for credit card
fraud.
9. Petty Cash.
Sometimes called a coffee fund or office
supply money, petty cash is simply an
amount of money that is used for various
small purchases. There is no "Best
Practice" as to how much the fund should
be but regardless, it must be tightly
controlled and must be used only for the
intended purpose. Petty cash funds
tend to become the "small loan
department" for lunch or other needs
when someone is short on cash. The
money goes out and an IOU is
substituted. This is not a
recommended practice as company funds
are being used for personal use.
Petty cash should be counted daily and
documented somewhere for reference.
This documentation should be audited and
the cash personally counted (with a
witness) by the person who is in charge
of this fund. The cash plus any
receipts for disbursed money should
equal the total that should be present.
Variances, over or short, should not be
tolerated.
10.
Lockers and searches.
Lockers are considered by many
employees to be "theirs" meaning there
is an expectation of privacy of their
contents and that searching a locker is
an intrusion of their personal rights.
This should not be the perception or the
rule and is simple enough to remedy.
Company policy should clearly state that
all employees and their vehicles are
subject to search. Lockers present
a challenge if employees are allowed to
use their own locks. Check with
your legal counsel as the "ownership"
issue may change if the lock itself
belongs to the occupant.
Searching lockers either randomly or for
cause can be a human resource disaster
if not handled with care, tact, and
diplomacy. Ensure your method of
search is approved by legal counsel.
Is a "search" confined only to what is
visible in the locker or does the search
allow opening of backpacks, purses, and
briefcases? Does the employee need to be
present during any search? There
is a reasonableness factor in this
element. Check with your attorney
to determine if a supervisor can be
there instead. What is the action
taken if someone refuses to allow the
search of the locker? If your
policy is clearly written, the
resolution of that confrontation is
spelled out.
Consider this question: what expectation
of privacy should an employee have while
on company property? There are
many arguments to this and policy should
be chosen and written carefully.