1 / 27

Chapter 3: Skimming

Chapter 3: Skimming. Skimming Schemes. Skimming makes up approximately 29% of cash frauds. 316 cases of skimming were reported, with a median loss of $50,000. . What is Skimming?. Definition: theft of cash from victim organization b efore the cash hits the accounting system Off-book fraud

isabel
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 3: Skimming

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3: Skimming

  2. Skimming Schemes • Skimming makes up approximately 29% of cash frauds. • 316 cases of skimming were reported, with a median loss of $50,000.

  3. What is Skimming? • Definition: theft 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

  4. Deterrence Steps for Skimming • Identify all revenue sources • Determine where they enter the organization • Record accountability immediately • Restrictively endorse all checks “For Deposit Only” immediately • Include revenue sources in organization’s budget • Review budget versus actual revenue • Identify and investigate significant variances

  5. Common Skimming Schemes • Sales skimming • Receivables skimming • Refunds and other skimming schemes

  6. Skimming Schemes – Breakdown of Cases • Of 316 skimming schemes that were studied, 203 involved the theft of sales, as opposed to receivables. • Sales skimming is easier to conceal because payments are not expected.

  7. Skimming Schemes -Median Losses

  8. Sales Skimming • Unrecorded sales • Perp makes a sale • Pockets money • Never records sale • Understated sales • Perp pockets a portion of a sale • Either records sale at lower price or smaller quantity of goods sold

  9. Sales Skimming • Register manipulations • Cash register clerk rings “no sale” • Pockets money • Looks like transaction was recorded • Skimming during off-hours • Perps sell company merchandise on weekends or after hours

  10. Sales Skimming -Countermeasures • Surveillance of employees at point of sale • Maintain secure area for employees to store coats, purses, etc. • Look for coded markers near registers (e.g., employee who has stolen $500 from register keeps nickel by register to remind himself of the amount taken) • Investigate gaps in transaction sequence/pre-numbered receipts

  11. Sales Skimming - Countermeasures • Look for excessive non-sale transactions (voids, refunds) at cash registers • Encourage customers to request receipts (forces employees to ring up sales) • Rotate employee schedules, measure variances in revenue based on employee • Use a secret shopper service

  12. Skimming Off-Site Sales • Remote salespersons largely unsupervised • Common with insurance salespersons: • Sell a policy, policy never filed • Property managers: • Lease a property, list it as vacant • Pocket rents

  13. Skimming Off-Site Sales – Countermeasures • Require external sales staff to maintain activity logs • Spot-check activity log entries by independent personnel • Monitor customer complaints independent of sales staff • Conduct sales trend analysis on external salespersons

  14. Theft in the Mailroom • Mailroom employees steal incoming checks • Checks never logged • Usually occurs when one employee opens mail unsupervised

  15. Theft in the Mailroom - Countermeasures • Open mail in visible area with supervisory presence or video cameras • Use two employees to open mail • No purses or briefcases where mail is opened • Have incoming payments sent to lockbox • Mail marked checks to company, verify that they are logged

  16. Receivables Skimming • More difficult to conceal than sales skimming • Incoming payments “expected” • Can result in delinquent customer accounts • Perp must take steps to conceal the fraud

  17. Concealing Skimming • Destroy or alter transaction records • Lapping • Steal customer statements • False account entries • Inventory padding

  18. Destroying/Altering Transaction Records • Salesperson discards records of stolen sale • Alter records to reflect lower sales price • Missing records can signal fraud

  19. Lapping • Steal customer A’s payment • Apply customer B’s payment to A’s account, etc. • Most common concealment technique • Perp may keep 2nd set of books to track misapplications

  20. Lapping – Countermeasures • Watch for employees who put in a lot of time after-hours and on weekends (lapping schemes take a lot of work) • Enforce mandatory vacations • Spot-check daily deposits to accounts receivable, verify names on checks match postings • Compare a/r postings to dates payments were mailed by customers

  21. Stealing Customer Statements • This is done when skimming causes a customer account to become delinquent • Usually change customer address in billing system • Replace real statements with counterfeits showing account current • Keeps customer from alerting company

  22. Stealing Customer Statements - Countermeasures • Independent confirmations of aging a/r with customers • Separate collections department from sales, accounts receivable • Separate mail function from accounts receivable

  23. False Account Entries • Debit expense account instead of cash • Debit aging receivables or very large accounts • Write off accounts as bad debts • Create fraudulent “discounts” • Force account balances (add wrong)

  24. False Account Entries – Countermeasures • Separate duties of receiving cash, posting payments, and reconciling accounts • Match deposit totals to a/r postings • Investigate shortages in cash account • Require supervisory approval for write-offs • Look for rising trend in write-offs, discounts • Look for large number of aging accounts

  25. Inventory Padding • Unrecorded sales cause inventory shrinkage • Common concealment techniques: • Forced reconciliation of perpetual & physical inventory • False credits to inventory • Write off as lost, stolen, obsolete

  26. Skimming Controls • Segregate all cash receipting functions • Supervise employees at all cash collection points • Supervise employees who open mail • Place restrictive endorsements on all checks received • Enforce mandatory vacations • Conduct surprise audits/cash counts

  27. Skimming Controls • Supervisory authority for all price modifications and write-offs • Independently confirm delinquent customer accts. • Random customer satisfaction surveys • Follow up on customer complaints

More Related