Fraud Examination - AC313 (Unit 2)
Multilevel (or Network) Marketing (MLM) Company
A business where company representatives are independent distributors of a product or service. Representatives recruit other distributors to join them in selling the product or service and make money both on what they sell personally and on the sales of those they recruited.
Ground Floor Opportunity
A classic marketing scheme that makes people believe that they will make money simply because they are one of the earliest investors in a new venture.
Bankruptcy Code
A federal statute that governs the bankruptcy process.
Product Testing
A fraud that typically begins when consumers receive brochures featuring different products, asking the consumers to review the products presented and send their commentaries to the supplier for review.
Restructuring
A means of misstating liabilities.
Phishers
A person who sends e-mail or pop-up messages claiming to be from legitimate businesses or organizations that consumers deal with.
Earnings Per Share
A ratio that assesses a company's profitability.
Mail Stuffing
A scam where consumers respond to an advertisement that promises income simply for stuffing envelopes.
Bust-Out
A scheme that involves intentionally obtaining loans or purchasing inventory on a credit basis and concealing, or absconding with, the proceeds from the loan or sale of the inventory or with the inventory itself before creditors are paid.
Foreign Advance-Fee Scams
A type of financial fraud.
Pension
A type of retirement plan.
Disbursement of Money from Wills
A type of scam where perpetrators con charities, universities, nonprofit organizations, and religious groups.
Bad Debt Expense
Accounts receivable amounts that cannot be collected.
Repurchase Agreements
An agreement to buy back a security.
Mortgages
An agreement to finance the purchase of property.
Leases
An agreement to rent.
Fixed Assets
An asset whose value does not change.
Economic Extortion
An employee demands a payment from a vendor in order to make a decision in that vendor's favor.
Investment Fraud
Any fraud that is related to stocks, bonds, commodities, limited partnerships, real estate, or other types of investments.
Consumer Fraud
Any fraud that targets individuals as victims.
Corruption
Any scheme in which a person uses his or her influence in a business transaction to obtain an unauthorized benefit contrary to that person's duty to his or her employer.
Skimming
Any scheme in which cash is stolen from an organization before it is recorded on the organization's books and records.
Asset Misappropriation
Any scheme that involves the theft or misuse of an organization's assets.
Accounts Receivable Turnover
Assesses a company's operational efficiency.
Number of Days in Receivables Ratio
Calculated by dividing 365 by the accounts receivable turnover.
Gross Profit (Margin) Ratio
Calculated by dividing gross profit (also referred to as gross margin) by net sales.
Operating Performance Margin Ratio
Calculated by dividing net income by total sales.
Working Capital Turnover Ratio
Calculated by dividing sales by average working capital (current assets minus current liabilities) for a period.
Sales Discount Percentage Ratio
Calculated by dividing sales discounts by gross sales.
Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts as a Percentage of Receivables
Calculated by dividing the allowance for uncollectible accounts by total accounts receivable.
Asset Turnover Ratio
Calculated by dividing total sales by average total assets.
Larceny
Cash is stolen by employees or others after the cash is recorded in the company's accounting system.
Unearned Revenues
Cash that is received before a transaction has been carried out.
Deferred Charges
Charges that will be written off against future earnings.
Inventory Turnover
Computed by dividing cost of goods sold by the average inventory and is useful for determining whether inventory is overstated or cost of goods sold is understated.
Number of Days' Sales in Inventory
Computed by dividing the number of days in a period by the inventory turnover ratio.
Capitalization
Converting income or assets into capital.
Lapping
Delayed recognition of payment.
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
Direct costs related to production.
Phishing
E-mail or pop-up messages sent to users asking for personal information in creative ways.
Evidential Matter
Evidential Matter
Fraudulent Statements
Fabrication of an organization's financial statements to make the company appear more or less profitable.
Mortgage Fraud
Falsifying or omitting information when obtaining a mortgage loan for the purpose of obtaining a higher loan than would be provided if the truth was disclosed.
Headhunter Fees
Fees paid for signing additional recruiters on to a business.
Dummy Companies
Fictitious entities created for the sole purpose of committing fraud.
Shell Companies
Fictitious entities created for the sole purpose of committing fraud.
Nigerian Money Offers
Form of foreign advance-fee scams where individuals from Nigeria or another (usually underdeveloped) country contact victims through e-mail, fax, or telephone and offer the victim millions of dollars.
Telemarketing Fraud
Fraud that occurs via the telephone.
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
Trustees
Individuals or firms who identify and collect a debtor's assets and then allocate those assets to creditors in an orderly manner.
Sales Returns
Item that a customer returns to the producer.
Shoulder Surfing
Looking over a person's shoulder while they enter personal information into a computer.
Marketable Securities
Marketable Securities
Sales Return Percentage Ratio
Measure of the percentage of sales that are returned by customers.
Opportunity Meetings
Meetings where many fraudulent organizations will pressure individuals to pay money to become a part of the group.
Understatement of Liability Frauds
Misstating liabilities on a balance sheet.
Overstatement of Asset Fraud
Misstating the value of assets on a balance sheet.
Occupational Fraud
Occupational Fraud
Creditor
One who holds a valid claim against a debtor.
Expense
Perpetrators of these frauds produce false documentation that causes the victim company to unknowingly make a fraudulent disbursement.
Payroll Schemes
Perpetrators of these frauds produce false documentation that causes the victim company to unknowingly make a fraudulent disbursement.
Bogus Mystery Shopping Scam
Perpetrators promise victims a job (for a fee) that involves strolling through stores, enjoying the displays, shopping for merchandise, and then filing reports on the experiences they have had.
Snake Oil Plans
Plans that promise enormous earnings or claim to sell miracle products.
Intent
Purpose.
Clawbacks
Recoveries from net winners in a Ponzi scheme.
Contingent Liability
Reflect likelihood of loss.
Net Asset Value (NAV)
Reflects the closing prices of the securities that comprise a particular fund's portfolio plus the value of any uninvested cash that the fund manager maintains for the fund.
Register Disbursement Schemes
Relatively low-cost disbursement schemes that include false refunds and false voids.
Accrued Liabilities
Salaries payable, payroll taxes payable, rent payable, utilities payable, interest payable, etc.
Craft Assembly
Scam where perpetrators promise high pay for working on different projects.
Ponzi Scheme
Similar to an MLM but instead of selling real, legitimate products, these companies have only illusionary products and profits.
Pyramid
Similar to an MLM but instead of selling real, legitimate products, these companies have only illusionary products and profits.
Chain Letter Scams
Similar to an MLM but without any product or service. The chain letter encourages individuals to send a small amount of money to people who were previously involved and to recruit other people as new participants.
Illegal Gratuities
Similar to bribery schemes, except that there is not necessarily an intent to influence a particular business decision but rather to reward someone for making a favorable decision.
Commercial Bribery
Similar to the traditional definition of bribery, except that something of value is offered to influence a business decision rather than an official act of government.
Skimming
Skimming
Intangible Assets
Start-up costs, advertising costs, research and development, marketing costs, salaries, and other initial costs.
Footnotes
Supplemental information to a balance sheet.
Tax Fraud
Tax Fraud
Divorce
The dissolution of a marriage relationship.
Warranty Liabilities
The estimated amount a company will need to spend on repairing or replacing an item during its warranty period.
Inadequate Disclosure Fraud
The issuance of fraudulent or misleading statements in the disclosures.
Bankruptcy
The legal process that allows a debtor to work out an orderly plan to either settle debts or liquidate assets and distribute them to creditors.
Bribery
The offering, giving, receiving, or soliciting of anything of value to influence an official act.
Billing Schemes
The perpetrator submits or alters an invoice that causes his or her employer to willingly issue a check or make other types of payments.
Debtor
The person or entity who is the subject of a Chapter 11 filing.
Bankruptcy Court
The specific judicial body that hears bankruptcy cases.
Clearinghouse Scam
The victim receives a letter that falsely claims the writer represents a foreign bank.
Purchase of Real Estate Scam
This fraud takes the form of someone trying to sell a piece of real estate or other property to the victim.
Identity Theft
Those circumstances when someone uses another person's name, address, Social Security number, bank or credit card account number, or other identifying information to commit fraud or other crimes.
Dumpster Diving
To rummage through trash in order to find useful information.
Sale of Crude Oil at Below Market Price
Type of fraud where the victim receives an offer to purchase crude oil at a price well below market price.
Check Tampering
Type of fraudulent disbursement scheme in which an employee either (1) prepares a fraudulent check for his or her own benefit or (2) intercepts a check intended for another person or entity and converts the check to his or her own benefit.
Kickbacks
Undisclosed payments made by vendors to employees of purchasing companies.
Topside Journal Entries
Used to create revenues and receivables without underlying documentation.
Bid-Rigging Schemes
When an employee fraudulently assists a vendor in winning a contract through the competitive bidding process.
Conflict of Interest
When an employee, a manager, or an executive has an undisclosed economic or personal interest in a transaction that adversely affects the company.
Acquisitions
When one company obtains ownership of another company.
Mergers
When two companies come together to form a single company.
Front Loading
Where representatives of legitimate MLMs are required to buy large, expensive amounts of inventory.