Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Indifference to Ethical Business Conduct is Death for Organisations, support is needed for whistleblowers

Most employees want to do the right thing, and organisations need to do what they can to help support and encourage employees to report. "Failures in employee reporting today can result in significant operational and reputational hurdles tomorrow," they explain. They encourage you to follow their tips to strengthen your reporting program so no top executive ever has to ask the question, "What went wrong?"

See:
https://acfeinsights.squarespace.com/acfe-insights/?category=Whistleblowing


One of the 'Big 4' faces 3 major trials that threaten its business


PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, the U.S. member of the global professional-services giant, is currently facing not one, not two, but three significant trials for allegedly negligent audits. 

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/pwc-faces-three-major-trials-that-could-put-firm-out-of-business-2016-08-12?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTXpka1pUWmxaRGhrWlRJMCIsInQiOiJ4Vlp4Y01ZQldsanM1dnFQRFwvRDdhRG0zTG1BWDBcLzFIQTdTXC9TcldyRTlhRFRFYytcL0ZPcWhCZlJHMVRVODJjZlAyTGxUTUhhT25Xb1ZPTjhKNlA3SmhoQ3hTa1wvcmxqNzdwODgyMGJqRjFKOXhDWE5VeUxmUll5R3F5b25ZZzViIn0%3D

Thursday, 16 June 2016

Key lessons from the Unaoil scandal for forensic email reviews - analysis using words!

Using code words in communication

Many of the leaked Unaoil emails and excerpts contain several code words referring to individuals, organizations, events and the contexts of the communication. Individuals are referred to as "Doctor," "Ivan," or "Lighthouse." Keywords can help disguise intent in communication. For example, bribers or bribe receivers (public officials) might not be red-flagged in email if they identify themselves by code name or keyword.

Sunday, 13 March 2016

Workers warned to watch out for bogus requests from bosses to transfer money as one firm loses £18.5m

The scam, which sees criminals impersonate e-mail accounts of chief executives to trick staff into wiring payments to an overseas bank account, has cost firms around the globe $2billion – or £1.43billion – in the last two years, according to the US Federal Bureau of Investigation.

http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/saving/article-3471248/Beware-CEO-fraud-costing-British-businesses-millions.html?mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRoks6rMZKXonjHpfsX%2F7eokWLHr08Yy0EZ5VunJEUWy3IEISNQ%2FcOedCQkZHblFnVgJSq29RawNr6IE

Thursday, 18 February 2016

THE MOST LIKELY VICTIM OF FRAUD IS …

Margaret is a retired schoolteacher and widow with two children and four grandchildren. Richard, a practicing physician, is a faculty member at a university medical center. Adam is a fourth-grader who excels at math but has a strong dislike for cleaning his room. John, an attorney, has been practicing tax law for more than 20 years, and his friends are among the upper echelon.
Of these four people, who is the most likely victim of fraud? Considering the countless scams and schemes that fraudsters use their devious, yet often very intellectual, minds to concoct and perpetrate, the answer might — or might not — come as a surprise.
Let’s find out which of our four “contestants” turns out to be the unlucky “winner.”


http://www.acfe.com/fraud-examiner.aspx?id=4294991840&mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRoks6zBZKXonjHpfsX%2F7eokWLHr08Yy0EZ5VunJEUWy3IEATdQ%2FcOedCQkZHblFnVgJSq29RawNr6IE