| |
Strong
internal controls and well-trained, attentive auditors can
prevent phony-employee
schemes. |
Keep Ghosts
Off the Payroll
BY JOSEPH T. WELLS
urner, a
payroll specialist for a large Florida nonprofit organization, was a sick
man. Most employees who steal do so out of greed, but Turner had a
different motive—he was HIV-positive and needed expensive drugs to control
the disease. Complicating matters, he hid his illness from his employer
and health insurer. Over the course of two years, he embezzled $112,000 to
cover his medical costs. Although Turner needed the extra cash, there were
alternatives to stealing. But he couldn’t bring himself to reveal his
sickness and ask for help.
BEYOND
CONTROLS Turner’s duties included posting
time and attendance information to the computer system and preparing
payroll disbursement summaries. Adding and deleting employee master
records were separate tasks, performed by another staff member. As an
additional safeguard, a supervisor approved all payroll disbursements, and
the company deposited them directly into employees’ personal bank
accounts.
It took a bit of doing to circumvent the
internal control system and steal cash from the nonprofit, but Turner was
up to the task. First, when the co-worker who added and deleted master
records logged onto the system, Turner peeked over her shoulder and noted
her user ID and password.
This enabled him to add fake master records—for
“ghost” employees—to the system. Because tax deductions were programmed to
fall within a given range of employee numbers, each time Turner added the
name of a phony worker to the system, he assigned to it an employee number
higher than the range. Thus, the payroll summary report—which was printed
each week in ascending order by employee number—displayed fake workers at
the end of the printout where they wouldn’t be selected for
deductions.
Next, Turner entered false wage information for
the ghost workers. At the same time, he arranged for their paychecks to be
direct-deposited into his own bank account. Based on past dealings with
his own financial institution, Turner knew the bank did not match the
employee name to the one on the depositor’s account.
Finally, to get over the last internal control
hurdle—approval of the payroll disbursements by a superior—Turner prepared
his own fake payroll summary for the supervisor’s signature. Because
Turner was seen as an exemplary employee, the supervisor didn’t check his
work carefully and failed to notice the fraudulent documentation was
printed in a typeface different from the one used in the real
reports.
| Paying a
Nonexistent Employee Can Be Expensive

Source: Occupational Fraud
and Abuse, by Joseph T. Wells, Obsidian Publishing Co. Inc.,
1997 |
WHITE AS A
GHOST Turner also had to create phony file
copies of the ghosts’ paychecks. He hoped no one would notice that the
office’s hard copies of legitimate employees’ checks—printed in the
accounting department—were yellow, while the ghosts’—printed by
Turner—were white.
But someone did notice: An observant accountant
got lucky and discovered Turner’s ghost-employee scheme. During routine
transaction-testing of the payroll account by the CPA firm Cuthill &
Eddy LLP (www.cuthilleddy.com), an auditor
immediately singled out a white copy of a paycheck. He brought it to
Carson L. Eddy, the partner in charge of the audit.
Eddy, a CPA for more than 30 years, had
encountered payroll frauds before and considered this suspicious. “Let’s
trace this disbursement through the system and see what we come up with,”
he instructed the staffer. The additional testing revealed the employee in
question was not in the payroll register.
After more digging, Eddy and his staff
uncovered three more names that weren’t in the register. Their paychecks
were all being direct-deposited to the same bank account—Turner’s. “Looks
like we’ve got a ghost-employee scheme,” Eddy told his auditors. Realizing
it was important to determine whether Turner was in collusion with another
staff member, Eddy used textbook fraud-examination techniques to document
the defalcation. First, the auditors obtained original copies of payroll
registers, payroll check summaries, direct-deposit records, personnel
files, time sheets and bank documents. In addition, they carefully
interviewed accounting department employees and the executives in charge
of oversight. Noting that Turner was the only employee who profited from
the scheme, Eddy and his team concluded Turner had acted alone. Their
report, which detailed his embezzlements, convinced Turner to plead guilty
when the nonprofit filed charges. Under a plea bargain agreement, he
served no jail time but was sentenced to 15 years’ probation and ordered
to make restitution.
CLUES
EVERYWHERE Afterward, Eddy said: “As
payroll frauds go, this one wasn’t very sophisticated. As it happened, we
conducted our transaction testing first but a number of routine auditing
procedures would have uncovered it later.”
Besides noting with concern that the payroll
system administrator infrequently changed passwords, Eddy and his team
looked into the following clues.
Each
ghost-employee record contained a dead person’s Social Security number,
which Turner had lifted from local death records open to the public. He
arbitrarily made up their names.
Ghosts’
employee identification numbers were much higher than those of legitimate
employees, and a gap in the series separated the two groups.
None of the
fake employees had a personnel file or withholdings for taxes and Social
Security.
The net
payroll expense was lower than the funds actually issued because it didn’t
include amounts paid to ghost employees.
The paycheck
summaries prepared for management approval—which contained the ghost
employees—were not in the same typeface as those the system
printed.
Multiple
direct deposits were made to the same bank account but under different
employee names.
Types of Payroll
Frauds Ghost employees.
This term refers to someone on the payroll who doesn’t
actually work for the victim company. The ghost frequently is a
recently departed employee, a made-up person or a friend or relative
of the fraudster, who can cash the paycheck by forging the
endorsement or by having an accomplice deposit the proceeds into his
or her bank account.
Falsified hours and salary. Dishonest
employees commonly exaggerate the time they work in order to
increase their compensation. Moreover, some crooked payroll clerks
look for internal control deficiencies that will permit them to
adjust their own salaries. For a share of the extra money,
supervisors sometimes approve an employee’s falsified hours.
Commission schemes. Salespeople and
other similar workers can sometimes falsely increase their pay.
These schemes depend on the employee’s finding a way to either
falsify the amount of sales or to increase the commission rate.
Adequate oversight is crucial in preventing these frauds.
False workers’ compensation claims.
Some dishonest employees fake injuries in order to
collect disability payments. In extreme cases employees have held
other full-time jobs while their employers paid them to stay home
and recuperate. Also, some crooked physicians have earned millions
of dollars by issuing false diagnoses of illnesses for workers who
kick back a portion of their benefits to the
doctors. |
WHO SAYS
AUDITORS CAN’T FIND FRAUD? Carson Eddy has
uncovered a number of frauds during his career. “Luckily, most of them
have not been material to the financial statements,” he said, “but the
frauds I’ve seen tend to start small and grow to the point where they can
become material. Even though auditors have no responsibility to detect
immaterial frauds, you’re providing your client a valuable service by
discovering these schemes early.” According to Statements on Auditing
Standards no. 82, Fraud, and no. 99, Consideration of Fraud
in a Financial Statement Audit, the new, revised fraud standard,
auditors are responsible only for frauds that could have a material impact
on the financial statements.
Applying routine auditing techniques can
uncover fraud clues. But most important is what the auditor does with
them, says Eddy, who is also a certified fraud examiner. “It would’ve been
easy for our auditor to think the white copy of the paycheck was simply an
anomaly. But we train our auditors to look proactively for fraud,” he
said.
Seeing
Ghosts Most ghost-employee frauds originate with
payroll personnel. With simple but effective measures, you can
prevent or detect many of these schemes.
Ensure the payroll preparation, disbursement and
distribution functions are segregated.
Look for paychecks without deductions for taxes or Social
Security. Completely fictitious employees frequently don’t have any.
Examine payroll checks that have dual endorsements.
Although most of them are legitimate, two signatures could signal
the forgery of a departed employee’s endorsement, which the thief
also endorses and deposits into his or her own account.
Use direct deposits. This method, although not foolproof,
can cut down on payroll chicanery by eliminating paper paychecks and
the possibility of alteration, forgery and most theft, although it
doesn’t prevent misdirection of deposits into unauthorized
accounts.
Check payroll records for the presence of duplicate names,
addresses and Social Security numbers.
On occasion, hand-deliver paychecks to employees and
require positive identification. If you have leftover paychecks,
make sure they belong to actual employees, not ghosts.
Be wary of budget variations in payroll expense.
Higher-than-budgeted labor costs can indicate ghost employees.
|
Eddy believes it’s essential for auditors to be
skeptical. “Business fraud is more common than most auditors realize,”
Eddy observed. “The things people tell you or the documentation they give
you isn’t necessarily true or authentic. If you accept everything at face
value, you’re not doing your job as an auditor.” He added that it’s
equally important for the auditor to react to the kinds of clues present
in many fraud cases. “If something—such as a document that’s the wrong
color—doesn’t look right, check it out. Perhaps it’s just an error. But it
could be more; it was in the Turner case.” 
JOSEPH T. WELLS, CPA, CFE, is founder and
chairman of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners in Austin, Texas,
and professor of fraud examination at the University of Texas. Mr. Wells
is the author of “So
That’s Why It's Called a Pyramid Scheme”
(JofA, Oct.00, page 91), which won the Lawler Award for the best
JofA article in 2000, and he was inducted into the AICPA Business
and Industry Hall of Fame in 2002. His e-mail address is joe@cfenet.com. |