In last week’s blog, I introduced you to Winfrey who wrote a letter of confession to her boss. She covered a lot of territory in the letter, but there were also plenty of gaps. The information in the letter is similar to the story an owner starts putting together when the red flags of fraud begin to reveal themselves.
Last week I provided three questions to consider. In this blog, we will answer these questions.
These three questions walk through the fraud triangle and provide a way to understand the fraudster’s mindset. In order to unravel the truth, we must identify the important parts of the story and make inferences to figure out the gaps in the story. This process will help us to focus on gathering evidence to determine the possible scheme(s) and the amount Winfrey stole from Jane.
The easiest thing to do is quantify the payments to Winfrey’s daughter, and the auditors have probably already completed this step. The next is to identify the payments to her daughter that were for legitimate work. These will probably look different and were probably the first payments made to her. There may even be a gap between the legitimate ones and the fraudulent ones.
Most people would end the investigation here, but there could be more to this story. If you choose to advance the investigation, you must balance resources with possible outcomes. This is where fraud fighting experience can help because there are numerous decisions that will have to be made and directions that the investigation can take.
If you were Jane, would you forgive your long time employee, Winfrey? Would you press charges? Do you think she will leverage the payments to your children in some way? These are very difficult decisions that will need to be made that will invoke a wide range of emotions.
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