Fraud Author Tracy Coenen

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

5 Myths About Fraud: The Conclusion

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From my Wisconsin Law Journal article 5 Myths About Fraud:

We’ve all heard so much in the news about fraud over the last several years. Not a day goes by that we don’t hear about an executive caught with his hand in the cookie jar, a company that failed to follow proper accounting rules, or a compensation structure that led someone to cheat with the numbers.

In some ways, I think people are becoming immune to fraud. The cases don’t seem as significant as they would have been five years ago. They’re not as shocking as they used to be. It is sad that fraud is becoming more commonplace. And the more we hear about fraud, the more I think companies run the risk of not taking it seriously.

Most importantly, I think people are running around with some big misconceptions about employee fraud. If they mistakenly believe their company is not at risk, they are probably not actively preventing fraud. Companies must know the truth about fraud and its perpetrators in order to actively protect themselves.

The five myths about fraud we’ve looked at this week:

1. Our company does not have an internal fraud problem.

2. Most people are honest and won’t commit fraud.

3. If our company follows government regulations, we will be protected against fraud.

4. Small frauds aren’t important enough for management to worry about.

5. Fraud will be detected by our auditors.

The Solution
Preventing fraud in companies all comes back to active prevention techniques and educating employees about fraud. First, owners and executives must be aware that they are very much at risk of experiencing internal fraud, and that the statistics show that the losses can be expensive. Then they need to take decisive action in formulating a fraud prevention program.

Education of everyone is still a very important part of fraud prevention. No company is immune to the problem, and no employee is completely free from the possibility of committing a fraud one day. After owners and executives appreciate the true magnitude of the problem, it will be through action that fraud will be prevented at their companies.

Written by Tracy Coenen

12 Oct 2008 at 7:46 am

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