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ARXIS - Litigation Consulting
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February 2019

 
Recent Case:

Embezzlement Scheme: Lessons Learned

"I Can't Believe It Happened to Me — I Should Have Known"

The shock of realization when a victim recognizes that a trusted employee — and even a friend — has stolen from them ranges from sad to tragic. It is a very personal feeling of betrayal and violation. It strikes fear in some, grief in others, and anger in most. In my experience, it is almost always accompanied by a sense that "I should have known this was going on." The evidence of theft sheds a very bright light on the rearview mirror. Patterns and circumstances take on a clarity that contemporaneous experience either hid or obscured. Sometimes the clarity was there but for a variety of reasons it was ignored.

The following is just such a case — the victim immediately recognized the theft and simultaneously felt incredibly stupid for "allowing it to happen." The lesson cost him several hundred thousands of dollars in uninsured losses. The recognition happened when his bookkeeper unexpectedly missed a few days of work and he ventured into the mail and opened a bank statement. The simple act of thumbing through cancelled checks from one month's bank statement prompted a phone call to his attorney who directed him to a forensic accountant.

What developed was evidence of a simple and devastatingly effective embezzlement scheme. The bookkeeper had set up vendors that were very similar to existing real vendors. For example, if the real vendor was ABC Service Company then a fake vendor was established called ABC Service Co. The bookkeeper went to the bank and set up bank accounts for the fake vendors. That was the hard part. The rest was easy. The business owner signed hundreds of checks to the fake vendors thinking the checks went to legitimate business activity.

Since that worked so well, the bookkeeper began forging checks made payable to pay the vendors, personal expenses, and provide cash gifts to family and friends. And, since all that worked without any notice by the business owner, the bookkeeper got an unauthorized increase in salary. It was bold. It was also easily discovered and should have been easily prevented.

The bookkeeper was pretty quickly arrested and has spent some serious time in jail. The following are Fraud Prevention 101 steps that were ignored and could have prevented the fraud.

  • Know your employee. In this particular case the business owner recounted that he knew the prior employer of the bookkeeper really well. He was aware that the bookkeeper had left the prior employer on less than positive terms but figured it was none of his business and hired the bookkeeper because of knowledge of the industry. A phone call to the prior employer/friend after the embezzlement was discovered revealed that the bookkeeper was probably stealing from the current employer to pay off a judgment obtained by the prior employer to recover embezzled funds.
  • Embezzlers tend to be repeat offenders. This is an obvious follow-up to the prior point. A simple background check is not expensive, easy to do, and in this case would have prevented a really bad hiring decision. It would have confirmed the ill-at-ease feeling of the employer at the time of hiring.
  • Open your own mail. Let the bookkeeper do the bookkeeping. You cannot abdicate other important (and seemingly unimportant) functions because the clerk is always around and does their job well. Vendor communications, bank statements, and bills from vendors and suppliers are important sources of information.
  • Separate functions and duties. Many small business owners are so busy that they tend to overlook common sense when assigning work. In this case a bookkeeper was eventually given the responsibility for answering the phones, opening all the mail, writing checks, making deposits, preparing invoices, reconciling the bank statements, and preparing the financial reporting provided to the business owner and his outside tax preparer. As noted above, simply opening the mail would have prevented some of the problems - or would have caught it a lot earlier.
  • Don't accept bad answers to good questions. When the forensic accountant arrived on-scene, the business owner requested a report showing payments to all vendors. The request was preceded with a long list of qualifications recognizing that it was difficult to put such a report together, would take a long time, and would not be precisely correct. The accountant produced the report in about 90 seconds. The business owner was shocked — and the point was made. His bookkeeper, for a long time, had prevented him from seeing the very report that exposed the whole scheme. He had been given every reason in the book why the report couldn't be produced.
  • Force vacations. Nobody else had access to the bookkeepers work for over two years. Any other eyes on the accounting records would have exposed everything.
  • Acknowledge your instinct. If the lifestyle of the employee exceeds what you know about their legitimate compensation there is good reason to look harder. If the bookkeeper can't produce simple reports from "the books" they are keeping there is a problem. If you feel like you are working for the bookkeeper rather than them working for you, something is wrong. If it feels like the business is doing better than ever but there isn't any cash there is good reason to find a reasonable explanation. All of the bullets were separate points of recognition by the business owner in this case — "I knew something wasn't right. I should have known this was happening." That is never good after-the-fact.

 
Service Profile:

Litigation Consulting Services for
Insurance Claims/Bad Faith

As part of Arxis Financial's "Litigation Consulting" practice, we regularly work with attorneys on insurance claims/bad faith matters. Although insurance companies owe a duty of good faith in dealing with the persons they insure, violation of that obligation occurs in commercial policies that can involve huge sums of money. Examples of bad faith include undue delay in handling claims, inadequate investigation, refusal to defend a lawsuit, threats against an insured, refusing to make a reasonable settlement offer, or making unreasonable interpretations of an insurance policy.

Arxis Financial provides objective and independent evaluation of the economic and financial issues involved in insurance claims/bad faith litigation. We work with litigators through the evaluation of opposing party's claims, assistance in preparation of deposition and cross-examination questions, document request lists, other discovery assistance, analysis and calculation of damages, preparation of trial exhibits, and expert witness testimony. Clients are pleased with Arxis Financial's abilities to clearly, persuasively, and accurately present economic and financial arguments.

If you have any questions about Litigation Consulting Services for Insurance Claims/Bad Faith, please feel free to contact us.

 
 
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Chris Hamilton, CPA, CFE, CVA
 
 
Chris Hamilton, CPA, CFE, CVA
chamilton@arxisfinancial.com
(805) 342-0749
www.arxisfinancial.com
 
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