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Fraud Forensic Accounting exam questions and answers fully solved

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Fraud Forensic Accounting exam questions and answers fully solved What is Forensic Accounting? - AnswersForensic Accounting is the use of accounting knowledge/skill for courtroom purposes. Therefore it can include not only fraud but also bankruptcy, business valuation and disputes, divorce, and other litigation. What is Fraud Examination? - AnswersInvolves obtaining documentary evidence, interviewing witnesses/potential suspects, writing investigative reports, testifying to findings, and assisting in general detection and prevention of fraud. What are the 4 elements of fraud? - Answers(1) Material false statement (2) Knowledge that the statement is false (3) Reliance on the statement by the victim (4) Damages Who is Edwin H Sutherland? - AnswersThe first person to define "white-collar crime"- Criminal acts of a corporation, individuals in corporate capacity. Also came up with theory of differential association- crime is learned not genetic. Who is Donald R. Cressey? - AnswersStudied embezzlers. Developed the fraud triangle. (Pressure, Perceived opportunity, and Rationalization) Why people become "trust violators" Who is Steve Albrecht? - AnswersHe came up with the 9 motivators of Fraud. (1) Living beyond means (2) Overwhelming desire for personal gain (3) High personal debt (4) Close association with customers (5) Pay not commensurate with job (people believe they are underpaid) (6) Wheeler-Dealer: always looking for other ways to make money. innovative (7) Strong challenge to beat the system (8) Excessive Gambling (9) Family Peer Pressure. Also came up with the Fraud Scale. What is the Report to the Nation on Occupational Fraud and Abuse? - AnswersAlso known as "The Wells Report" Largest fraud study ever. Goal: Classifying Occupational Fraud and Abuse by the methods used to commit them. Also used to gather demographics on perpetrators. What are some factors that contribute to fraud that resulted from the Report to the Nation on Occupational Fraud and Abuse? - Answers(1) Position within the company (Higher up the greater the fraud) (2) Age (Generally the older you are the higher up you are and the better you know the system.) (3) Education (Again the more education you have received typically higher up in the org you are) What is the "Fraud Tree"? - AnswersThere are three main branches: Corruption, Asset Misappropriation, and Fraudulent Statements. Under Corruption there is: (a) Bribery (b) conflicts of interest (c) Illegal gratuities (d) Extortion. Under Asset Misappropriation there is: (a) cash (Larceny and Skimming) (b) Inventory (Misuse and Skimming) (c) Fraudulent Disbursements. Under Fraudulent Statements there is: (a) Financial and (b) Non-Financial What is a Misappropriation? - AnswersThe misuse of a company asset for personal gain. How to conceal Asset Misappropriation? - Answers(1) False Debits: most often to expenses (2) Omitted Credits: Concealing for cash skimming (3) Out-of-Balance Conditions: Assets removed (debited) without corresponding credits. (4) Forced Balances: adds wrong - perps access to the books??????? How is Asset Misappropriation schemes classified? - Answers(1) Cash (Larceny and Skimming) (2) Inventory (Misuse and Skimming) What is Cash Skimming? - AnswersTheft of cash from victim organization before the cash hits the accounting system (Off-book fraud, no direct audit trail, books stay balanced, MOST COMMON form of cash fraud) What is Sales Skimming? (Cash Skimming) - AnswersUnrecorded sales (perp pockets the money from a sale and never records the sale). Results in Understated sales because perp either recorded sale at lower value or lower COGS. What are some Countermeasures for Sales Skimming? - Answers(1) Surveillance of employees at point of sale (2) Maintain secure area for employees to store personal possessions (3) Look for coded messages near register (perp will use to keep track of how much they have skimmed thus far) (4) Investigate gaps in transaction sequence/pre-numbered receipts. What is Lapping (Receivables Skimming? (Cash) - AnswersYou steal customer A's payment and use Customer B's payment to cover customer A' account. Most common form of concealment. Perps typically keep a second set of books to track misapplications. What are Countermeasures fo

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Fraud & Forensic Accounting exam questions and answers fully solved

The purpose of financial statements is to provide meaningful disclosures of where a company
has been, where it is currently, and where it is going. Which of the following short scenarios
best describes how a potential ethical issue could arise in preparing them?

A competitor was found to be committing financial statement fraud, and as such, motivated the
firm to also commit fraud.

Top management has most of their personal wealth and self-image tied up in the value of the
company.

The audit committee for the firm is made up of former Big-"N" audit partners, several of which
worked for the current auditor of the firm.

None of the above situations show any motivation for committing fraud. - AnswersTop
management has most of their personal wealth and self-image tied up in the value of the
company.



A common theme in many of the frauds is an attempt to improve the reported financial
information to support a high stock price, to support a bond or stock offering, or to increase the
company's stock price. In many companies, top management owned considerable amounts of
stock

Financial statements are built from the bottom up (from a transaction level, then aggregated
into accounts seen on the financials). Middle management never has an opportunity of
incentive to overstate earnings; only the top-level management really benefits from having a
falsely inflated stock price. - AnswersFalse



Division managers could inflate the earnings from their sphere of influence to meet some
internal benchmark or other incentive

"The purpose of financial statements is to provide meaningful disclosures of where a company
has been, where it is currently, and where it is going. Which of the following short scenarios
best describes how a potential ethical issue could arise in preparing them?

,A competitor was found to be committing financial statement fraud, and as such, motivated the
firm to also commit fraud.

Top management has most of their personal wealth and self-image tied up in the value of the
company.

The audit committee for the firm is made up of former Big-"N" audit partners, several of which
worked for the current auditor of the firm.

None of the above situations show any motivation for committing fraud." - AnswersTop
management has most of their personal wealth and self-image tied up in the value of the
company.



A common theme in many of the frauds is an attempt to improve the reported financial
information to support a high stock price, to support a bond or stock offering, or to increase the
company's stock price. In many companies, top management owned considerable amounts of
stock.

Financial statements are built from the bottom up (from a transaction level, then aggregated
into accounts seen on the financials). Middle management never has an opportunity of
incentive to overstate earnings; only the top-level management really benefits from having a
falsely inflated stock price. - AnswersFalse



Division managers could inflate the earnings from their sphere of influence to meet some
internal benchmark or other incentive.

"Approximately 20 percent of U.S. public companies backdate stock options for officers and
directors. Which of the following best describes the ethical issue involved with this practice?



It hurts the stock price of the firm and therefore brings down everyone's investment in the firm.

It violates accounting rules, tax laws, and SEC disclosure rules.

It is a form of insider trading, allowing those "with connections" to benefit more from a stock
option than those "without connections."

It isn't necessarily unethical, but is simply frowned upon by investors and analysts." - AnswersIt
violates accounting rules, tax laws, and SEC disclosure rules.

, Backdating stock options is a type of fraud because it violates accounting rules, tax laws, and
SEC disclosure rules. Almost all companies that were investigated ""backdated"" their options so
that they would appear to have been awarded on the low price date despite having actually
been authorized months later. While the amounts involved in many of these cases were not
material to the financial statements (they were in a few cases), backdating was another fraud
motivated by greed.

"When a company commits financial statement fraud, who gets affected by the subsequent
fallout?



Investors

Employees

Auditors that failed to detect the fraud

All of the above" - AnswersAll of the above



The Satyam scandal cost countless jobs, caused individuals to lose retirements and savings (in
less than three days, the stock went from $29.10 per share to $1.80 per share), and created an
overall loss of confidence in the markets. To further highlight the consequences of fraudulent
financial reporting consider the example of Phar-Mor. In that case, the COO, Michael ""Mickey""
Monus, was sentenced to 19 years and seven months in prison; the fraud resulted in more than
$1 billion in lost market value and, at the time, the bankruptcy of the 28th largest private
company in the United States. The company's former auditor, a ""Big 4"" firm, faced claims of
more than $1 billion (which it settled for significantly less).

"Which of the following is a common consequence associated with companies that report
fraudulent financial statements?



a. Chapter 11 bankruptcy

b. Sued by shareholders

c. Dissolution of the auditing firm that failed to detect the fraud

d. Both A and B" - Answersd. Both A and B
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