Control fraud

Control fraud

Control fraud occurs when a trusted person in a high position of responsibility in a company, corporation or state uses their powers to subvert the organization and to engage in extensive fraud for personal gain.

The concept of control fraud is based on the observation that the CEO of a company is uniquely placed to remove the checks and balances on fraud within a company, such as through the use of selective hiring. These tactics can position the executive in a way that allows him or her to engage in accountancy fraud and embezzle money, hide shortfalls or otherwise defraud investors, shareholders, or the public at large. An example would be when a company publishes accounts showing massive profits, whereas in reality it is insolvent. This will cause the stock to rise beyond its actual value, and those exercising the control fraud will cash in their stocks before the reality is known by others.[1] Additionally, companies can lobby for changes in the law to weaken regulation, and this can extend the fraud.

Control fraud can also occur in a political situation, for example by the leader of a country who can use their position to embezzle public funds and turn the country into a kleptocracy.

Examples of control fraud include Enron, the Savings and loan crisis, Fannie Mae/ Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers and Alt-A "liar loans" and Ponzi schemes such as that of Bernard Madoff.

Control fraud, a term coined by William K. Black, refers to the fraud or the person perpetrating the fraud.

See also

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Fraud deterrence — has gained public recognition and spotlight since the 2002 inception of the Sarbanes Oxley Act. Of the many reforms enacted through Sarbanes Oxley, one major goal was to regain public confidence in the reliability of financial markets in the wake …   Wikipedia

  • Control Risk — Control Risk, in auditing, is the risk that a company s internal controls are insufficient to mitigate or detect errors or fraud.ee also*Risk Assessment *Inherent risk *Detection Risk …   Wikipedia

  • Fraud — Criminal law Part of …   Wikipedia

  • Detective Control — A type of internal control mechanism intended to find problems within a company s processes. Detective control may be employed in accordance with many different goals, such as quality control, fraud prevention and legal compliance. In small firms …   Investment dictionary

  • Data Analysis Techniques for Fraud Detection — Fraud is a million dollar business and it is increasing every year. The PwC global economic crime survey of 2009 suggests that close to 30% of companies worldwide reported fallen victim to fraud in the past year[1] Fraud involves one or more… …   Wikipedia

  • Internal control — In accounting and organizational theory, Internal control is defined as a process effected by an organization s structure, work and authority flows, people and management information systems, designed to help the organization accomplish specific… …   Wikipedia

  • Insurance fraud — Criminal law Part …   Wikipedia

  • Phone fraud — Whether in the form of the consumer attempting to defraud the telephone company, the telephone company attempting to defraud the consumer, or a third party attempting to defraud either of them, fraud has been a part of the telephone system almost …   Wikipedia

  • Electoral fraud — Articleissues|article=y cleanup=January 2008 wikify=January 2008Electoral fraud is illegal interference with the process of an election. Acts of fraud tend to involve affecting vote counts to bring about a desired election outcome, whether by… …   Wikipedia

  • Birth control sabotage — Birth control sabotage, or reproductive coercion, refers to efforts to manipulate another person s use of birth control or to undermine efforts to prevent an unwanted pregnancy. Examples include replacing birth control pills with fakes,… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”