Fraud Author Tracy Coenen

writes about fraud detection, fraud investigation, and fraud prevention.

5 Myths About Fraud

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From my Wisconsin Law Journal article 5 Myths About Fraud:

The following are five of the fraud myths that I regularly run into in my fraud investigation practice. Whether owners and executives actually utter these out loud or not, merely buying into these myths mentally can be a recipe for disaster.

5. Fraud will be detected by our auditors. History has shown us that a company’s independent auditors cannot be relied upon to find fraud. This is true primarily because audits are not designed to detect fraud. They are designed to give “reasonable assurance” that the numbers shown on the financial statements are materially accurate.

Because fraud involves the active concealment of the truth, it makes it difficult for auditors to discover. Further, auditors have a tendency to become complacent with their clients. They see the same things year after year in the audit, and they may stop paying close attention. Employees who are concealing a fraud may also be comfortable with the auditors and know what procedures are coming. If that’s the case, count on the employees to be very careful with the fraud as it relates to those expected procedures.

Auditing rules have attempted to address how auditors approach the potential for fraud within companies. While the current rules are somewhat better than those of several years ago, a traditional independent audit still cannot be relied upon to detect fraud. Executives who believe differently are setting their companies up for disaster.

Written by Tracy Coenen

11 Oct 2008 at 6:08 am

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