You stopped by the accounts payable department and retrieved a series of recently submitted invoices for various trade expenses related to the auditorium construction project. “One of the things you wanted to accomplish was to understand how the accounting codes worked—what was capitalized, what was expensed, how it was recorded, etc.” So, you grabbed a stack of processed invoices with accounting codes and went to the construction site to meet with the vice president for an hour-long interview. As the two of you walked around the grounds, you asked the vice president if he could explain the accounting codes to you: “He stared at the [top] invoice for approximately 30 seconds and said: ‘That is not my signature on the invoice!’ As he looked through the stack, he found what appeared to be about three or four other forgeries. He was completely baffled.” The initial investigation revealed that all the forgeries were in the painting division, budgeted at approximately $800,000 a year. The company employed only one person to oversee the painting operations in its facilities department: James Small. Small, a 35-year-old from New Fairfield, Ontario, earned about $30,000 a year. It was his job to coordinate time-and-materials contracts with the scores of painters, carpenters, electricians, and plumbers who toiled daily on the renovation, repair, and construction of the building complex. As facilities supervisor, Small regularly forwarded invoices to the vice president of administration services for approval. Small launched his scheme by crafting false invoices for the jobs done by the painters. He took a copy of a trade invoice from an existing painting contractor and, using his home computer, created a replica into which he would record slightly different hours for the trade contractors’ work. A probable scenario of how Small executed his scheme. “Let’s say he knew that during the month of February, as an example, there were twenty-seven painters on the grounds during the course of one week.” Small also knew the total number of hours and the volume of materials used in that time. “He would create invoices that were similar in nature but record only eleven painters on the grounds. Small would not reinvoice exactly the same work done during a week, but he would make it look so similar that no one’s suspicions were ever aroused. Effectively, there were no work orders on the “phantom work” he created on these invoices. Small always listed fewer painters on the false invoice than the actual number who had worked that week, and he registered less time for their services than they had actually worked. As part of his job, he regularly brought the trade invoices into the administrative VP’s office for signature approval. After delivering a stack of these invoices, he would return to collect them within the next day or two and deliver the approved invoices to the accounts payable department. It was this opportunity that allowed this individual to go and collect the approved invoices and insert his own replicated fraudulent invoices as approved. This was the first piece of an ‘electronic circuit’ that allowed him to commit the fraud. The second piece of the circuit for the fraud to ignite, was allowing this same employee to transport the invoices to the accounts payable department, and ultimately to collect the cheque. After seeing how easy it was to slip in his own false invoices in the stack of approved ones, Small became bolder in his scheme. He began calling accounts payable, claiming that a carpenter or painter had arrived on the grounds and needed his cheque “immediately.” To keep the project flowing, the employees in the accounts payable department accommodated him. Many employees knew and liked Small, who had worked for the company for nearly 15 years. Eventually, this routine became so familiar to employees in accounts payable that Small did not even need to make up an excuse to pick up cheques. Each time he would collect them, he stashed the cheques for the false invoice in his pocket. When he returned home to New Fairfield, Ontario, he took the cheque to his bank, forged the contractor’s name on the back, then endorsed it with his own name and deposited the cheque. Small’s first transaction totaled $1,200. His second transaction jumped to $6,000—his third, $12,000. His largest single transaction came to over $66,000. Small refined his strategy by pacing, on a parallel basis, a certain amount below the total due the painter. “If the painter submitted an invoice for $20,000 a month,” Small would submit an invoice for, say, $14,000. If the painter submitted a $6,000 invoice, he’d submit one for $3,000.”What type of fraud is this and why?

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
10th Edition
ISBN:9781259964947
Author:Libby
Publisher:Libby
Chapter1: Financial Statements And Business Decisions
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 You stopped by the accounts payable department and retrieved a series of recently submitted invoices for various trade expenses related to the auditorium construction project. “One of the things you wanted to accomplish was to understand how the accounting codes worked—what was capitalized, what was expensed, how it was recorded, etc.” So, you grabbed a stack of processed invoices with accounting codes and went to the construction site to meet with the vice president for an hour-long interview. As the two of you walked around the grounds, you asked the vice president if he could explain the accounting codes to you: “He stared at the [top] invoice for approximately 30 seconds and said: ‘That is not my signature on the invoice!’ As he looked through the stack, he found what appeared to be about three or four other forgeries. He was completely baffled.” The initial investigation revealed that all the forgeries were in the painting division, budgeted at approximately $800,000 a year. The company employed only one person to oversee the painting operations in its facilities department: James Small. Small, a 35-year-old from New Fairfield, Ontario, earned about $30,000 a year. It was his job to coordinate time-and-materials contracts with the scores of painters, carpenters, electricians, and plumbers who toiled daily on the renovation, repair, and construction of the building complex. As facilities supervisor, Small regularly forwarded invoices to the vice president of administration services for approval. Small launched his scheme by crafting false invoices for the jobs done by the painters. He took a copy of a trade invoice from an existing painting contractor and, using his home computer, created a replica into which he would record slightly different hours for the trade contractors’ work. A probable scenario of how Small executed his scheme. “Let’s say he knew that during the month of February, as an example, there were twenty-seven painters on the grounds during the course of one week.” Small also knew the total number of hours and the volume of materials used in that time. “He would create invoices that were similar in nature but record only eleven painters on the grounds. Small would not reinvoice exactly the same work done during a week, but he would make it look so similar that no one’s suspicions were ever aroused. Effectively, there were no work orders on the “phantom work” he created on these invoices. Small always listed fewer painters on the false invoice than the actual number who had worked that week, and he registered less time for their services than they had actually worked. As part of his job, he regularly brought the trade invoices into the administrative VP’s office for signature approval. After delivering a stack of these invoices, he would return to collect them within the next day or two and deliver the approved invoices to the accounts payable department. It was this opportunity that allowed this individual to go and collect the approved invoices and insert his own replicated fraudulent invoices as approved. This was the first piece of an ‘electronic circuit’ that allowed him to commit the fraud. The second piece of the circuit for the fraud to ignite, was allowing this same employee to transport the invoices to the accounts payable department, and ultimately to collect the cheque. After seeing how easy it was to slip in his own false invoices in the stack of approved ones, Small became bolder in his scheme. He began calling accounts payable, claiming that a carpenter or painter had arrived on the grounds and needed his cheque “immediately.” To keep the project flowing, the employees in the accounts payable department accommodated him. Many employees knew and liked Small, who had worked for the company for nearly 15 years. Eventually, this routine became so familiar to employees in accounts payable that Small did not even need to make up an excuse to pick up cheques. Each time he would collect them, he stashed the cheques for the false invoice in his pocket. When he returned home to New Fairfield, Ontario, he took the cheque to his bank, forged the contractor’s name on the back, then endorsed it with his own name and deposited the cheque. Small’s first transaction totaled $1,200. His second transaction jumped to $6,000—his third, $12,000. His largest single transaction came to over $66,000. Small refined his strategy by pacing, on a parallel basis, a certain amount below the total due the painter. “If the painter submitted an invoice for $20,000 a month,” Small would submit an invoice for, say, $14,000. If the painter submitted a $6,000 invoice, he’d submit one for $3,000.”What type of fraud is this and why?

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