FRAUD QUESTIONS
Salih Ahmed ISLAM
Internal Audit Expert CIA | MBA | GRCP | Consultant | Trainer | Author
In order to properly plan the investigation, the fraud investigator needs to be able to ask good questions that extract valuable information about what needs to be done. The specific questions vary with each investigation, but the following are some basic areas that an investigator will definitely want to touch on.
What happened?
a)?How did this situation come to light?
b)?Who was involved with the discovery?
c)?Who is aware that a potential fraud occurred?
Evidence
a)?What evidence has already been found?
b)?How conclusive is it?
c)?Are there multiple pieces of evidence?
d)?Might there be other easily discoverable pieces of evidence?
e)?How much does the evidence tell us about the methods of fraud and the parties involved?
Who is suspected?
a)?Who is the primary suspect?
b)?At what level is this person employed?
c)?Is she or he still employed with the company?
d)?Has the employee been suspended or terminated?
e)?Will the results of our investigation impact the employee’s future with the organization?
f)?Who else do you think might be involved?
g)?Who else could be involved simply based on their access and opportunity to commit fraud?
h)?Do you think any employees were intimidated into participating in or facilitating the fraud?
i)?Is anyone suspected of helping to cover up the fraud?
Are outside parties involved?
a)?Does this fraud involve a vendor, a customer, or other outside party with which the company does business?
b)?What do we know about their involvement?
c)?Is their involvement limited to a single person, or does it extend to multiple parties or the company as a whole?
d)?Will they cooperate with our investigation?
e)?Do they have documentation that we might need?
Key players
a)??Who can explain the processes in the affected department or division?
b)?How are roles assigned in the department or division?
c)??Who is supervising?
d)?Who has critical information for us?
e)?Who can help gather information and documentation?
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f)?Whom will we report to?
g)?Who else needs to be apprised of our progress?
Who knows?
a)?Who is aware that a potential fraud has taken place?
b)?Who needs to be informed (e.g., upper management, insurance carrier, board of directors, investors, bank, other interested parties)?
Secrecy
a)?Should we keep the fact that an investigation is being started quiet?
b)?Should only certain people know?
c)?Should work be performed off-site to minimize our impact on the organization?
d)?Is it necessary to be on-site for access to computers, documents, or key people?
e)?Will we be widely known as fraud investigators, or will we use a less threatening title such as auditors?
Data and documentation
a)?When can we begin to receive documentation?
b)?What is available to us?
c)?What format is it in (digital versus hardcopy)?
d)?What organizations have information that we may need (e.g., banks, investment firms, vendors)?
e)?How will we go about getting the information?
f)?Can an employee help gather documentation?
g)?Will we need to get signed authorizations to get information from outside parties?
h)?Do your employees need help identifying what we will need for the investigation?
What has already happened?
a)?Has management already tried to start its own investigation?
b)?What have they examined?
c)?Is the integrity of any evidence compromised?
Investigation goals
a)?What is our scope of work?
b)?What questions do you want answered?
c)?What level of certainty and precision do you want?
d)?Who will receive our report?
e)?What will our report be used for (e.g., civil litigation, criminal prosecution, insurance recovery)?
f)?Are you interested in remediation after the investigation ends?
g)?Would you like our recommendations for techniques and controls to prevent fraud in the future?
Clients may not necessarily be overflowing with information on these questions. Remember that they have probably never encountered fraud before, and this is new territory for them. Also, they may not volunteer this information and may need to be asked the specific questions.
It is important for the fraud investigator to guide this portion of the initial meeting and keep the conversation on topic. It is easy for the client to get distracted or to start drowning in the minutia of the situation. Details can be discussed later. This information-gathering session should be as broad as possible and allow the fraud investigator to gather answers to these introductory questions relatively easily.
When necessary, tell the client that you’re going to make a note of some specifics that you will discuss with them later. This is a good way of acknowledging the client’s concerns and affirming that you want their information, but it helps you keep the conversation moving in order that you may get through all of these questions.
Legal Counsel | Ethics Leader | Identification and Mitigation of Financial and Reputational Risks | Confidential Investigations | Project Manager
3 年Great article!