CH8 - Accounting
Please complete this within 36 hrs.
For instruction and information, check the attachment below.
Instruction:
1. Read the Chapter 8 reading.
2. Write a write-up outlining ( small article) the major points, 3-5 point for this chapter.
3. This paper should be more than 1 page.
4. Times New Roman, 12 pont, Double space.
Due on Wednesday, October 6th, 2021, befroe 11 pm, US central time (Chicago).
There are almost 36 hrs to complete this.
I continued along the same line of questions and answers
regarding the paying of bills and other financial duties. Each line
of questioning followed the same course. First, there was the lack of
understanding, and then in response to my asking each question a
different way, his answers were vague and uninformative. We played
the back-and-forth game for a half-hour or so, and then I decided to
turn the heat up a bit on the interview.
I asked him if he remembered his response when I asked him
about any new bank accounts. He said he couldn’t recall. I said he
told me that there were no new bank accounts. He said he must have
misunderstood what I was asking at the time, because there was an
account that was opened just before that day but that there was next
to no activity in the account because it was so new. He said he didn’t
think about that account because it had just been opened and there
was little or no activity in it. I asked him what he thought I meant
when I originally asked him if the division had opened any new
accounts recently. He said he didn’t think I meant accounts that
didn’t have activity in them.
I thought to myself, ‘‘The mole obviously knew and told him that
we had found the bank information about the new account that he
had opened, and therefore he had ample time to prepare an
explanation.’’ I knew he wasn’t smart enough to have remembered
what was in his trash pail when we showed up the first day.
I asked him why the account was opened in the first place. He
said the controller told him to open a new account so he did. I asked
him why the controller wanted a new account opened. He said I
of meetings can be very stressful to the target. Some people get nervous and
quiet, while others can get hostile toward the interviewer. Expect the
unexpected, and never let your guard down. In this case the individual
clearly chose to play dumb, in a poor attempt to show me how smart he was by
not providing any responses or information. As with delays and cancellations,
it is important not to get frustrated or let people’s behavior and responses (or
lack thereof) personally affect you during these interviews. By not reacting to
their comments and behavior, and by maintaining your composure through
out the meeting, you are more likely to accomplish your objectives and
identify information they provide even when they think they are providing
you no information.
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 107
should ask the controller that question. I asked him what he knew
about the purpose or use for the new bank account. He said he had
just told me to ask the controller why he wanted the new account.
I asked him why an existing bank account had been closed
recently. He said the controller told him to close out the account,
and so he did. I asked him what the account had been previously
used for. He said the controller mainly used the account, and that I
should ask the controller about the closed account. I asked him if he
maintained any records about the closed account. He said the
account was maintained by the controller, and that I should ask
him those questions. I asked him where the records were for that
account. He said he just told me to ask the controller about the
account. I asked him if he ever had any access to the account, or
reconciled the account, or recorded the activity of the account. He
said no.
I knew from the mailing address on the statements found and the
fact that all the bank-related information was found in his desk that
he likely received the bank statement each month for this account as
well, reviewed and reconciled it somewhere off the division’s books,
and that he knew exactly what the account activity and history
entailed.
I asked him how money went into the bank account. He said
there were deposits made into the account by the controller. I asked
him the nature or source of the deposits. He said that I should ask the
controller that question, as he didn’t have any involvement with the
account. I asked him if he ever made any transactions with the bank
account. He said no, that the controller handled that account. I
asked him into what bank account the payments received by the
woman were deposited. He said those funds were deposited into the
operating checking account. I asked him about payments that were
received in the mail. He said the mail went to the same woman, and
that she would include payments received in the mail with the other
payments she received in person. I asked him if all the payments
received were provided a written receipt. He said that that was the
way it was supposed to work. I asked him if that was the actual way it
worked. He said he believed it was, but that I should ask the woman
that question. I asked him who handled the payments when the
woman was out of the office, on vacation, or at lunch. He said
he would handle the payments. I asked him if he followed the
procedures and wrote out a receipt. He said he did. I asked him
108 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
where the receipt books were maintained. He said everything should
have been right in his desk drawers for the current year, and in the
boxes for the prior years.
I remembered that I saw maybe one manual receipt book within
the contents of all the boxes we had collected and stored. The
question that remained was where were all the receipt books if a
written receipt was written for every payment received?
I asked him to describe how it worked if a payment was received
by credit card. He said they processed the charge. I asked him if they
came in person, or if they mailed in their card information. He said
both. I asked him who physically entered the charge into the credit
card terminal and processed the charge to the member’s card. He
said the woman processed the cards. I asked him who handled the
credit card payments when she was away or unavailable. He said he
processed the cards. I asked him if anyone else had access to process
credit card transactions. He said anyone who walked up to the credit
card terminal could process a transaction. I asked him what he did
when he processed a charge. He said he swiped the card, entered the
amount, printed the slips, had the member sign the slip, and left the
slip for the woman on her desk. I asked him if he wrote out a receipt
for credit card payments. He said no, because the credit card slip was
the member’s receipt. I asked him if he wrote out a receipt when a
member paid by check. He said no because their canceled check was
their receipt. I said then, ‘‘The only time you wrote out a receipt was
when cash was received.’’ He said, ‘‘Basically.’’ I asked ‘‘What do you
mean, ‘Basically’?’’ I asked him at what other time did a receipt get
written for a payment. He said never. I said, ‘‘Then the only time a
receipt was provided was when cash was received?’’ He had no
further response.
! ! !
I was starting to get an idea of how the account was likely funded, and
how the credit card was likely being paid (through the ‘‘controller’s’’
bank account). I wanted to see just how much he was willing to
provide me regarding the likely scheme, or at least this likely scheme.
There could also be other schemes yet to be identified—the inter-
view was far from over.
I asked him if the credit card terminal was closed and recon-
ciled on a regular basis to the bank deposits and bookkeeping
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 109
system (QuickBooks), such as on a daily basis at the end of each
day. He said it wasn’t used that way. I asked him to describe how it
was used. He said he just finished describing how it was used. I
asked him to explain how the credit card activity was reconciled to
the bank statement and accounting transactions. He said he re-
corded the credit card activity by general journal entry after each
deposit made into the account. He said the credit card activity was
just part of the entry made. I asked him if anyone else made entries
into QuickBooks or any other bookkeeping records. He said no. I
asked him who handled those responsibilities when he was away or
out. He said he has never been away or out, and no one handled the
QuickBooks.
I thought to myself, ‘‘That was a good response in light of the
United Alliance payment entered into QuickBooks under a different
description.’’ In his own words, he had just told me that no one else
entered activity into their QuickBooks.
LEARNING POINT
During the interview, asking the right questions will yield the most infor
mation. Done properly, you can get people to provide information that you
may be able to use against them. Often they will provide information you
didn’t know or expect, expanding the case. In my experience I have found
that if I can get individuals to describe how something was supposed to
work, and also how it actually worked, I can use their descriptions to expand
the interview. By ‘‘playing dumb’’ and asking a lot of questions, you allow
the interviewee to provide as many rich details as possible, even though you
likely have a good, detailed understanding of how it worked through
procedures performed prior to the interview. You can use this nonthreat
ening discussion to calibrate the individual and his body language, and
watch for changes as you move into discussions about his actions and
involvement.
In this case I got the office manager to describe the bookkeeping and
accounting in his own words, as well as who had access and ability to record
transactions within QuickBooks. He stated no one else had access. Then he
stated he made all the entries within QuickBooks. When I asked him about
questionable transactions and discrepancies within QuickBooks, he stated he
didn’t know. I reminded him that he just told me he had the only access to
QuickBooks, and that only he entered information into QuickBooks, and
(Continued )
110 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
Having spent a good half-hour talking only about the payments
received into the division, I turned my attention to expenses and
bills of the division. I asked the office manager to describe the
typical expenses incurred by the division. He said utilities, oil,
security, payroll, supplies, and those kinds of things. I asked him to
describe the process of paying bills at the division. He said he
didn’t understand the question. I asked him to walk me through
how a bill is received and ultimately processed for payment and
filed. He said the bills came in, he wrote the checks, and the
controller signed the checks. I asked him if any signature stamps
existed. He said there was one stamp. I asked him whose signature
was on the stamp. He said it was the controller’s signature. I asked
him who handled the signature stamp. He said that he maintained
the signature stamp so that no one else could get unauthorized
access to the stamp. I asked him where the division’s blank checks
were maintained. He said they were kept in the drawer below the
printer. I asked him if the drawer was locked. He said the drawer
was never locked.
I realized I had just identified another potential way funds could
have been diverted from the division. Checks could have been
written and stamped with the signature stamp by the controller.
The statements likely came in and went directly to the office manager
for reconciling, and it was likely to be found that the controller never
looked at the bank statements or reconciliations. I noted it was
something to look further into after the interview. I asked him more
questions about how expenses were incurred, approved, selected for
payment, and ultimately paid to the vendors.
I next asked him to describe the payroll process. He said the
employees’ hours were called in, and the next day a package arrived
therefore he should know the answer to my question. Then I asked him who
else could have entered the activity, and proceeded down that line of
questioning.
The key in this interview was to get the interviewee to provide founda
tional information and continue to build upon that foundation, setting the
stage to show that he and only he was responsible for the activity (in
QuickBooks in this case).
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 111
with their paychecks and reports. I asked him who called in their
hours. He said he called in the hours. I asked him who received
and opened the payroll information when it was received the next
day. He said he received and opened the payroll, and used the
reports to record the payroll within QuickBooks. I asked him
who else reviewed the payroll reports and information. He said
no one. I asked him if he had ever seen anything unusual or
unexpected within a payroll batch received. He said he didn’t
understand my question. I asked him if he recognized anyone
getting paid when they weren’t supposed to, or anything like that.
He said he never saw anything unusual. I asked him more questions
about how employees were paid and how much each person made
at the division.
I already knew the human resource director had requested
copies of the employees’ W-2s and the year-to-date payroll report
directly from the payroll provider, and having already received them,
was able to tell me she didn’t see anything suspicious in the amounts
and transactions within the reports.
! ! !
I looked at the clock. We had been meeting for nearly two hours.
He looked at the clock as well, and then he rolled up his right sleeve
and looked down at his watch. He asked me how much longer I
thought we would need to meet, and that he had someplace to be. I
asked him what time he needed to be somewhere. He said it didn’t
matter.
Knowing that he was getting impatient, and not knowing how
long he would tolerate my questions, I decided to head right for the
most important information. I asked him if he remembered his
response regarding credit cards used by the division. He said he
told me there were no cards presently in use by the division. I asked
him if he remembered a United Alliance account. He said the division
had an account at one time, but that the United Alliance account was
closed at the time I asked him the question, and therefore the division
had no credit cards. I asked him if there were any other credit card
accounts other than the closed United Alliance account. He said not
to his knowledge. I asked him, if there were any other cards, wouldn’t
he be aware of them, as he paid all the bills and received all the
statements? He said not that he was aware of. I asked him if he ever
112 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
used the United Alliance card. He said he had used it twice. The first
time was in making a purchase for the office under the direction of
the controller, and the second time was in paying the bill for a
meeting held with the controller. He said he didn’t want to use the
card that day, but the controller told him to put the invoice on the
card. I asked him if he had ever used the card for personal purposes.
He said no. I asked him if anyone else ever used the card for personal
purchases. He said the program manager (the woman with the card)
used it with the approval of the controller, and that I should ask them
about her use of the card. I asked him if she ever reimbursed the
division for her use of the card. He said not that he was aware of, and
that I should ask them about that. I asked him, if he was the person
responsible for making the deposits and recording the bookkeeping,
wouldn’t he be aware of any repayments by the individual? He told me
to ask the controller about that.
I asked him who received the statement in the mail each month.
He said it went to the controller. I asked him if he ever reviewed or
reconciled the statements. He said no. I asked him how the United
Alliance account was paid each month. He told me to ask the
controller about that. I said that I thought he was responsible for
paying all the invoices and bills for the division, and as such he
should have been aware of how the United Alliance account was
being paid. He said the controller handled all aspects of the United
Alliance account and how it was paid, and that I needed to talk with
the controller about it.
I asked him if he thought anyone at the division was stealing funds
from the organization. He said he didn’t understand the question. I
said to him that he was the person primarily responsible for the
receipts, deposits, purchases, disbursements, and payroll, and that if
anyone would be aware of funds being diverted or used for personal
purposes, it would be him. He said he wasn’t aware of anyone stealing
from the division, but that others were also involved in making the
deposits and paying the bills, and that maybe someone else may know
of something. I asked him why the United Alliance payment identi-
fied on the operating bank statement was entered into QuickBooks
with different information. He said he never entered any United
Alliance activity into QuickBooks, and that he never had the state-
ments to enter the activity. I asked him if there were any other trans-
actions posted within QuickBooks that were different from the
underlying transactions. He said he didn’t understand my question.
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 113
He began to look at the clock and his watch again. He was
slouched down a bit in his chair, and I could tell he was anxious to
end the meeting. In an attempt to lighten things up for him, I asked
him what he did in the off time when he wasn’t working at the
division (I already knew he belonged to several clubs and acted as
the treasurer of at least one of them). That question pressed a nerve.
He sat right up and turned bright red. He said what he did on his
personal time was none of my business, and had nothing to do with
his responsibilities at the division. He seemed pretty agitated. I said I
was simply trying to learn more about the person I was talking with, to
be more social than ‘‘Just the facts, ma’am.’’ He repeated that what
he did was none of my business.
I asked him if there was anything he wanted to add to the
information he provided. He said there was nothing else, and
that we had talked about everything. I asked him, if he had any of
the division’s records or items at his house or in his car. He said he
had nothing that belonged to the division. I asked him, if we needed
to meet again, would he be willing to come back to discuss things
further? He said that would be fine, and stood up to leave the room. I
stood up, and walked to the door to open it, allowing him to leave
and allowing me to observe him at all times.
He walked out of the office, picked up his long leather coat, and
headed straight toward the front door. I walked behind him, and as
we walked down the hall, I thanked him for coming in and
spending the time with me. He didn’t respond, opened the front
door, and walked out straight down the front walk. I shut the door
behind him, ensuring it was locked so that he couldn’t simply
return, and stood next to the human resource director as we
watched him cross the street and get back into the shiny black
car. He drove away, and we continued to watch for a few minutes to
ensure he didn’t circle and come back.
! ! !
I needed a break. I asked the human resource director if she heard
our conversation. She said she heard more than 90 percent of what
was discussed. She also said she took notes based on what she heard,
and that she didn’t think she missed anything of importance. I asked
her what she thought of the meeting and his responses. She said he
obviously knew about the bank account and the United Alliance
114 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
account, and was likely aware of other things happening at the
division. I asked her what her thoughts were on continuing his
employment on paid administrative leave status. She said the fact
that he lied to us on the first day, and failed to respond completely
and appropriately today to my questions was likely sufficient grounds
to terminate his employment. She asked me if I thought I was going to
get any further information or cooperation from him to resolve this
matter. I told her that he was not likely to provide anything further,
and that his sole motive for today’s meeting was likely to learn what we
knew to date to share with the controller. She said that even if he
wasn’t terminated right away, he was going to be changed to unpaid
administrative leave once she spoke with outside counsel and docu-
mented his file.
To me it seemed pretty straightforward. The office manager was
primarily responsible for the accounting and bookkeeping of the
division, and as such, he had firsthand knowledge of things that
were happening. He admitted to opening the bank account, only to
lie about it on the first day. He said he was the person who entered
the activity into QuickBooks, and that no one else entered activity
into QuickBooks. He admitted he knew about the United Alliance
account, and that at least one unauthorized individual was using
the card for personal purposes. Yet he didn’t do anything or tell
anyone at the main office about these things.
The human resource director walked back to the desk where
she was working to call outside counsel and discuss what to do with
the office manager. I returned to the room where I had met with the
office manager, retrieved my notebook, and began documenting as
much of the interview as possible, filling in details around the notes I
had taken.
LEARNING POINT
While it is important to memorialize a meeting or interview, consideration
must be made as to how that will be accomplished. Most fraud examiners
outside of law enforcement lack interview rooms equipped with two way
windows, video, and other recording technology. Video or electronic record
ing of a meeting or interview often creates a potential barrier to free flowing
(Continued )
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 115
I knew Tim was anxiously waiting to hear how the meeting went,
so I went down to the private office I used to interview other
employees and called him. I knew other employees could be
coming into the division at some time during the day, and I wanted
(Continued )
information from the target, causing him to respond cautiously or in a
reserved manner. I know personally I would be more careful what I would say
if I knew I was being recorded, and so I would expect anyone else would
behave similarly.
Taking notes is important during an interview, but if you spend your
time writing down every last word people said, two things will likely occur.
First, by taking copious notes, you likely spent much of the time looking down
at your notes versus watching the individual and his reactions to questions.
Body language is often more important than their verbal responses. Second,
note taking also creates a barrier, as the interviewee will be talking and
watching you write things down that he said.
Consider having a second person at the meeting or interview who can
take notes and make observations, allowing you to focus on talking with the
target while observing all his body language without any distraction.
FRAUD FACTS
Body language is the nonverbal or unspoken mode of communication and interaction. It
involves gestures, mannerisms, and other bodily signs. Body language is like a mirror that
informs you of the thoughts and feelings of the other person in response to words and
actions.
How important is learning how to read and use body language?
! 8\% of the information we receive is from what people actually say.
! 37\% of information we receive is from their tone, inflection, and speed of their voice.
! A staggering 55\% of the information we receive is from their body language.
Different signals contribute to different meanings depending on the individual and
scenario. A guide is to look for three or four signals that share the same meaning.1
116 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
to be sure no one, including our mole, heard any of the conversa-
tion. I thought it was likely the office manager had already called
the controller to fill him in on the morning meeting, likely from his
cell phone while driving away from the division. I was also sure the
office manager would be talking with the others as he had in the
past, if he hadn’t done so already.
I called Tim and provided him a five-minute rundown of the
interview, especially the long leather coat. That’s when I remem-
bered the heat was still cranked up in the area where we met. I
scratched a note to remind myself to walk down and turn off the
heat. Tim seemed pleased with the findings. He asked if I thought
we had enough from the meeting to contemplate having the
office manager charged as a conspirator should criminal charges
be pursued. I told Tim I thought the office manager should be
terminated for now, and as the case was further investigated and
additional evidence was found, a determination could be made
regarding the extent the office manager may have been involved
in any schemes. I said I thought, based on how the office manager
acted and responded, that he likely had some scheme of his
own being perpetrated beyond the bank account and United
Alliance account, both areas he clearly attempted to distance
himself from.
I asked Tim where he stood with receiving the bank statements
for the identified bank account. He said he had spoken with the
bank earlier, and that the statements would be available for him to
pick up by the end of the week. I thought that was pretty fast service
from the bank based on my personal experience, but I also knew
the organization’s relationship with the bank was very important to
the bank, so I wasn’t all that surprised with their prompt attention
to his request.
As I was finishing my call with Tim, there was a knock on the
door. I asked Tim to hold for a moment while I saw who was
knocking, and I set the phone down. I opened the door and an
individual I had yet to meet was standing at the door. She intro-
duced herself by providing her name, and then stated she was the
informant providing information to Tim. I asked her to come in,
and I shut the door behind her. I went back to the phone and told
Tim that an individual who identified herself as the informant just
came into the office. Tim said he knew that she would be coming to
see me, as he had spoken to her earlier in the day while I was
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 117
meeting with the office manager. Tim said the informant stated she
wanted to provide information directly to me while I was out at the
division. Tim said he had spoken with outside counsel, and that
outside counsel approved of my speaking with the informant based
on her request to meet with me. I told Tim I would talk with him
later, and ended our call.
118 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
8C H A P T E R
FURTHER INVESTIGATIVE MEASURES
(OBTAINING MORE EVIDENCE)
Ididn’t sleep all that well that night. I thought about the upcoming
interview, the things that I hoped went well, and potential problems
or issues I could face. I tried to remember everything about the office
manager from the first day. He was a young guy, still living at home
with his parents from what I was told, and could be a potentially
angry person having been abruptly removed from his job and placed
on leave (albeit paid leave, so a vacation in essence). I still didn’t
know much regarding the level of potential fraud I could be facing at
the division. I didn’t know if he would do anything rash or behave
irrationally in a desperate attempt to derail the investigation. And I
didn’t know if he could become hostile. I knew the mole was keeping
him informed until we stopped talking around her, and that there
had to be some kind of need for information he was experiencing
that no longer was being fulfilled. One thing I did know was that the
information he had provided me with on the first day was not
accurate and was likely grounds for termination of employment,
in and of itself, for lying when questioned about employment-related
matters.
The potential for a bad situation was ever present, and I
thought about my safety, as well as the safety of the human resource
director. I had checked the day before and I knew the women of the
division would not be in tomorrow morning, leaving the place to
ourselves for the interview. I thought about the need to determine
what the office manager knew, especially if he provided anything
that could lead us to the information faster than the measures we
101
already had in place. I decided the meeting would occur as
planned, but if anger, hostility, or other risks became obvious, I
would immediately end the meeting and set a time to continue the
conversation, allowing time to cool off, as well as raise the safety
measures to a more appropriate level.
There was also the strong chance that he wouldn’t show up for
the meeting at all, or would call at the last minute to cancel due
to ‘‘an unexpected change or urgent need or something.’’ Based
on what I knew thus far, the office manager was told we were at the
division to conduct a financial review and as part of that review I
would need to speak with the employees. Aside from being paid to
stay home, there was no reason for the office manager to cause us
harm. If he wanted to end the meeting and leave, I would let him,
and then he would likely be placed on unpaid leave for in-
subordination for his lack of cooperation with the financial review.
LEARNING POINT
It is common to set up these meetings and interviews, only to have them
canceled, delayed, or have a no show. Sudden illnesses and last minute
cancelations are frequent, especially when the target of an investigation
knows he may finally have to discuss details of his scheme that he has been
concealing for some time. Having to admit to wrongdoing creates much
stress, and it is human nature to delay that confrontation as long as possible.
Fight or flight? In my experience the target will choose flight. Rather than get
annoyed or take it personally, you need to accept the fact that delays and
cancellations are just part of the process. Rescheduling even at the last
minute to accommodate a scheduling issue with the target is one thing, but in
each case a decision will need to be made as to how long you will wait, and how
many times you will reschedule the meeting, simply to accommodate the
interviewee. At some point you may need to pull the plug on conducting the
interview, simply document the meeting attempts, delays, and cancellations,
and complete the investigation without the interview. The fact that you tried
on several occasions to meet with the individual to get the facts from his
perspective and to discuss your findings will only show that you attempted to
be thorough with your procedures. In the end, if additional facts later
become known through the individual that could change your conclusion,
you will be able to show that you attempted to get that information from the
individual prior to completing your work and drafting your report.
102 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
I headed out to the division, running through the interview in
my mind. It seemed like the shortest ride yet. I arrived to find the
human resource director waiting for me in the lobby. Having just
arrived herself, she was still turning on the lights and things. The
weather was noticeably pleasant, and it was only going to get
warmer as the day progressed. I was wearing my khaki pants and
a polo shirt—short sleeves, because it was going to be warm in the
afternoon. I asked her if she thought the office manager would
show up today, and she said she thought he would not show for
the meeting. I bet her a dollar that he would show. I went into the
office to make sure everything was as I had left it and put my notes
on the table.
! ! !
As it got closer to 9:00, we stood in the lobby and looked out the front
windows to see if he would show up. If he parked around the corner
and walked up, we wouldn’t see him until he crossed the front
walkway and headed toward the front door. We both thought he
would park right out in front, and that we would see him as he pulled
up. Just before 9:00, a shiny, new, luxury four-door sedan pulled up
across the street and stopped. As the door opened, we both recog-
nized the driver as the office manager. The funny thing was we knew
he drove an older Ford Bronco and only made $28,000 a year
working at the division, so the car was obviously not his, nor was
it consistent with his lifestyle still living at home with his parents. The
car was likely his parents’ car, but we were unsure what his message
was in coming in their expensive car. When he stood up outside the
car, we instantly noticed the full-length leather coat he was wearing.
One of the warmest days so far this season and forecasted to only get
warmer, and the office manager drives over in an expensive new car
wearing a full-length leather coat.
I looked at the human resource director and said I had one
very important question to get answered before we proceeded.
What was under that long leather coat? My mind raced as I tried to
find a way to determine if there could be a weapon hidden below
the long coat. Then the idea popped into my head. It would work,
but only if the office manager wasn’t too bright—something I was
banking on. I ran back into the office where we were to meet and
cranked the thermostat as high as possible. Then, I opened a
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 103
window in the room, and returned back to the lobby. I didn’t want
to leave the human resource manager alone when he came through
the door.
He opened the exterior door and knocked. I looked at the
human resource director and said ‘‘Here we go.’’ I opened the
door. I immediately stuck out my right hand to shake his hand,
and thanked him for coming in to meet with me. He didn’t seem
fazed and shook my hand. Then the human resource director re-
introduced herself to him and thanked him for coming in. I
watched him as he scanned the lobby and areas. Then I asked
him to come in. As we walked down the hallway toward his desk, I
told him that we would be meeting in the office just beyond his
desk. I then asked him if that would be a good place to meet. His
response was ‘‘whatever.’’ Then I told him there was one other
thing. I told him that the thermostats in the back had been
malfunctioning during the week, and that the offices got extremely
hot throughout the day, causing us to open windows at times. I
asked him if that had ever happened while he was there. He said
not that he was aware (and wouldn’t he be aware of it, since he
worked just outside the office we were about to meet in, every day
for how long?). I said to him that I thought it would be a lot more
comfortable given the heat situation if he left his coat outside on
the chair right near the door, because it was only going to get hotter
when we closed the door. Unfazed, he agreed and took that long,
potentially weapon-concealing leather coat off in front of the
human resource director, and laid it on the chair. What he didn’t
realize was that I was scanning him the entire time to ensure there
were no weapons hidden under his coat. Now with his coat off,
I could see around his waist—no bulges. That’s not to say he
couldn’t have something hidden elsewhere on his body, but at
least I wasn’t going to be distracted wondering and worrying
constantly about what might be looming under his coat.
I was so thankful he wasn’t brighter than he turned out to be. I
was wearing short sleeves, the window was already opened, and we
could have simply left the door open during the meeting, reducing
the risk of the office getting too warm, which would have allowed him
to keep the coat on. Needless to say I was relieved.
I directed him to his seat, and went over to where I planned on
sitting. He sat down, and then I followed. I started by apologizing
for the abrupt way we had met just a few days earlier. I told him it
104 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
wasn’t my call to complete the financial review in that fashion, but
just as he took direction from others, I did from my client. I asked
him what he remembered from our first encounter. He said he
remembered us bursting into the division, and bringing him and
the others into the office while members of our team started going
through everything. The next thing he remembered was being
escorted out of the office like some criminal, and walking out the
front door. He seemed a bit angry, but not hostile.
I asked him if he remembered speaking with me and any of the
questions I asked him that day. He said he remembered talking to
me, but couldn’t recall what we talked about. He said it all happened
so fast, he wasn’t sure if he even provided accurate answers to the
questions asked. I thought this was a nice defense he had created in
the event that I showed him the information he provided was less
than accurate.
I thought I would start with some basic foundational questions,
relatively harmless and totally nonthreatening, and asked him to
describe what he did at the division. His reply was that he did
everything. I said to him that we needed to get a little more specific.
I then asked him to describe his original duties and responsibilities
when he first started at the division, and if they evolved or changed
over time, and to describe how and when they changed. He asked me
what I meant. I asked him to identify the main things he did on a day-
to-day basis. He said he made deposits, paid bills, and managed the
finances for the division. There it was—short and sweet, and to the
point. I asked him what making the deposits entailed. He said he took
the money that came in, recorded it into the system, and brought it to
the bank. He said that’s what you do when you make deposits. I
thought to myself, ‘‘Either this guy is an idiot, or he thinks I am an
idiot.’’ Either way, I knew I should delve a bit further to see why his
responses to these innocuous questions were so bizarre.
! ! !
I asked him to describe how money came into the division. He said
funds came in, and they got recorded. I asked him how funds came
in, and he said he didn’t understand my question. I asked him to
describe the different ways funds were received into the division. He
said either they were brought in or they were mailed in. I asked him
what form the funds were in when they were received. Again, he said
Further Investigative Measures (Obtaining More Evidence) 105
he didn’t understand my question. I asked him if they paid by cash,
check, credit card, and/or other means of payment. He said they
paid in all of those forms. I asked him who handled the payments
when they were mailed into the division. He said the woman sitting
near his desk (a.k.a. the crier) handled all the payments and wrote
out receipts for the payments she received. I asked him what
happened to the funds after the woman received them. He said
she put the funds into the safe at the end of each day. I asked him
who had access to the safe. He said he didn’t understand my
question. I asked him who had the combination or key to get into
the safe where the funds were placed by the woman. He said the
controller had access to the safe. I asked him if anyone else had
access to the safe. He said the woman had access, but it was kept open
during the day so that she could put the money into the safe at the
end of each day. I asked him if anyone else had access, meaning the
ability to open the locked safe. He said he could open the safe, if
needed. I asked him if the woman could open the safe if it was closed.
He said she couldn’t open the safe, but that it was always open for her
to use. I asked him how often he opened the safe. He said he just told
me that it was always open during the day for anyone including
himself to use, if needed. I said I heard what he said, but my question
was how often did you have to unlock the safe and open it for the day?
He said he didn’t understand what I was asking.
I thought to myself, ‘‘No one is that ignorant.’’ The office
manager was clearly playing games with his responses, and likely
thought his cute responses and selective memory would prevent him
from divulging any information potentially implicating him in any
wrongdoing. This seemed to be consistent with what he told the
informant—that he would be cleared of any wrongdoing and shown
to have done nothing wrong.
LEARNING POINT
While not holding myself out as an expert in interviewing techniques, I have
had great experience in getting individuals to meet, talk, and admit to their
actions, even when they didn’t want to provide any information. In my
experience, people react in strange ways to stress, and having these types
(Continued )
106 Anatomy of a Fraud Investigation
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No matter which type of health care organization
With a direct sale
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We can mention at least one example of how the violation of ethical standards can be prevented. Many organizations promote ethical self-regulation by creating moral codes to help direct their business activities
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For example
The inbound logistics for William Instrument refer to purchase components from various electronic firms. During the purchase process William need to consider the quality and price of the components. In this case
4. A U.S. Supreme Court case known as Furman v. Georgia (1972) is a landmark case that involved Eighth Amendment’s ban of unusual and cruel punishment in death penalty cases (Furman v. Georgia (1972)
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In my opinion
with
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4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open
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After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
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Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
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Compose a 1
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I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
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