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Fraud, Money Laundering and the Auditor

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Title: Fraud, Money Laundering and the Auditor


1
Fraud, Money Laundering and the Auditor
  • Definitions-Fraud and Money Laundering
  • Role of the External Auditor
  • Combating Fraud and Money Laundering
  • Some Questions for Discussion

2
Definitions Fraud and Money Laundering
  • There are two types of fraud
  • Financial Statements Fraud (FS). Intentional
    misstatements or omissions of amounts or
    disclosures in financial statements designed to
    deceive financial statement users
  • The reporting entity involved suffers no loss of
    assets. This fraud is not designed to steal
    assets.
  • It occurs through manipulation, falsification, or
    altering of records misrepresentation or
    intentional omissions of events or transactions
    or intentional misapplications of accounting
    principles.

3
Definitions Fraud and Money Laundering
  • Asset Theft Fraud (AT). The theft of an entitys
    assets where the effect of the theft causes the
    financial statements not to be presented, in all
    material respects, in conformity with GAAP.
  • There is a loss of assets, but the balances of
    the financial statements will reflect
    after-the-fact fraud.
  • External users are rarely deceived.
  • It takes place through embezzling receipts,
    stealing assets, paying for goods and services
    not received, or false or misleading records or
    documents.

4
Definition Fraud and Money Laundering
  • Money Laundering. is processing the proceeds of
    criminal activities to disguise their illegal
    origin.
  • It is designed to enable the criminal to enjoy
    the profits of their actions without jeopardizing
    their source.
  • It has three steps placement, layering, and
    integration.
  • Placement is the riskiest as criminals introduce
    the proceeds in the financial system using
    different means layering is initiating a number
    of related transactions to obscure the source of
    funds and integration is to use the funds for
    acquiring legitimate assets or further their
    criminal activities.

5
Role of the External Auditor
  • We have the SAS no. 99 (December 2002) and the
    Sarbenes-Oxley Act (July 2002).
  • SAS 99 states that the auditor has a
    responsibility to plan and perform the audit to
    obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
    financial statements are free of material
    misstatements, whether caused by error or fraud.
  • However, it is entitled considerations of Fraud
    in Financial Statements Audit. All in all, it
    cites the considerations and due diligence and
    care to be taken as to the possibility of
    existence of fraud in the entity being audited.

6
Role of the External Auditor
  • The closest it come to actual auditing for
    possible Asset Theft Fraud is the statement
    requiring auditing large, unusual, or complex
    transactions.
  • However, the focus of the auditor remains largely
    on verifying the balances in the balance sheet,
    and thus focusing on Financial Statement Fraud.
    Their search for Asset Theft Fraud is indirect.
  • Emphasis on Balances in the balance sheet may or
    may not reveal Asset Theft fraud.
  • Independent auditors currently accept
    responsibility for discovering FS fraud, but they
    do not accept respon-sibility for and do not
    attempt to search for AT Fraud.

7
Role of the External Auditor
  • The Sarbenes-Oxley Act (1992) is mainly directing
    towards the officers signing the quarterly and
    annual reports of the entity.
  • They have to sign that they reviewed reports,
    have no knowledge of any material untrue
    statements or omissions, and that they believe
    the statements fairly represent the financial
    situation.
  • They are responsible for establishing and
    maintaining effective controls, and for
    presenting conclusions as to its effectiveness,
    and making needed changes.
  • They are to inform the external auditors of any
    fraud concerning management or employees having
    significant role in internal controls, and all
    significant deficiencies in the design and
    operations of the internal control system.
  • Again, the external auditors bears no
    responsibility as to AT Fraud.

8
Role of External Auditor
  • Money Laundering. Tends to use the business more
    as a conduit than as means of directly
    expropriating assets. It is only an attempt to
    legalize criminal proceeds using the entity.
  • It is very unlikely to affect the representation
    of the financial statements. Indeed, management
    will make every conceivable effort to have a fair
    representation.
  • It involves the manipulation of large quantities
    of illicit proceeds to distance them from their
    sources quickly and without drawing attention.
  • Both the financial system and other types of
    businesses are used in money laundering
    transactions.
  • Again, the external auditor does take
    responsibility or search directly for discovering
    money laundering transaction even though he might
    discover them during the course of his audit.

9
Combating Fraud and Money Laundering
  • Attempting to combat Asset Theft Fraud and Money
    Laundering must start with recognizing the fact
    that they are of different nature than Financial
    Statements Fraud.
  • They might not change the Fair representation
    of the balances in the Financial Statements.
  • Since external auditors stresses the verification
    of the balances and normally test only a small
    sample of actual transactions they are unlikely
    to discover AT fraud or Money Laundering.
  • Financial Statements audit is balance
    verification based while AT and money laundering
    audit are transaction verification,
    investigation, and documentation based.
  • Indeed, auditors for AT fraud or Money laundering
    are unlikely to bother about verifying the
    balances but rather they work on investigating
    and analyzing transactions related to suspected
    fraudulent activities.

10
Some Questions for Discussions
  • Is there an expectation gap between the general
    public and even some professional and the legal
    responsi-bilities of the external auditors?
  • Could we the external auditors responsible for
    Asset Theft Fraud and Money Laundering during his
    audit of the financial statements?
  • What is the role of forensic auditors in checking
    for fraud and money laundering?
  • Do we need to make obligatory for firms to have
    forensic auditing for the growing problems of
    Asset Theft Fraud and Money Laundering?
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