Do you think were the specifics of the fraud triangle

Assignment Help Business Management
Reference no: EM133357511

Assignment:

First Keystone Bank

A Japanese bank introduced the concept of around-the-clock access to cash in the 1960s when it installed the world's first cash-dispensing machine. In 1968, the first networked ATM appeared in Dallas, Texas. Two generations later, there are more than two million "cashpoints," "bancomats," and "holes-in-the-wall" worldwide, including one in Antarctica.

Not surprisingly, ATMs have been a magnet for thieves since their inception. In 2009, an international gang of racketeers used a large stash of counterfeit ATM cards to steal $9 million from hundreds of ATMs scattered around the globe in a well-planned and coordinated 30-minute crime spree. Several hightech thieves have hacked into the computer networks of banks and modified their ATM software. One such miscreant reprogrammed a network of ATMs to change the denomination of bills recognized by the brainless machines-the ATMs treated $20 bills as if they were $5 bills. High-powered video cameras and miniature electronic devices attached to ATMs have been used to steal personal identification numbers (PINs) from a countless number of unsuspecting bank customers.

A variety of low-tech schemes have also been used to rip off banks and their customers via ATMs, including forced withdrawals and post-withdrawal armed robberies. "Ram-raiding" involves using heavy-duty equipment to rip an ATM from its shorings. The ram-raiders then haul the ATM to a remote location and blast it open with explosives. The most common and lowest-tech type of ATM pilfering involves the aptly named tactic of "shoulder-surfing."

Many banks have suffered losses from their ATM operations due to embezzlement schemes perpetrated by employees. One such bank was the Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, branch of First Keystone Bank. Swarthmore, a quiet suburb of Philadelphia, is best known for being home to one of the nation's most prestigious liberal arts colleges. In 2015, Forbes Magazineranked Swarthmore College as the sixth best institution of higher learning in the United States-two slots below Yale, but two slots higher than Harvard.

In January 2010, three tellers of First Keystone's Swarthmore branch were arrested and charged with stealing more than $100,000 from its ATM over the previous two years. The alleged ringleader was Jean Moronese, who had worked at the branch since 2002 and served as its head teller since 2006. According to media reports, Moronese told law enforcement authorities that she initially began taking money from the branch's ATM in 2008 to pay her credit card bills, rent, and day care expenses.

No doubt emboldened by the ease with which she could steal the money, Moronese reportedly began taking cash from the ATM "just to spend" because she "got greedy." Prior to taking a vacation in the fall of 2008, a tearful Moronese approached one of her subordinates and fellow tellers, Kelly Barksdale, and confessed that she had been stealing from the ATM. Moronese "begged" Barksdale to help her conceal her thefts "because she didn't want her children to see her go to jail." Barksdale was apparently persuaded by Moronese's tearful plea and agreed to help her cover up the embezzlement scheme.

In fact, the cover-up was easily accomplished. According to the local police, Moronese and Barksdale simply changed the ledger control sheets that were supposed to report the amount of cash stored in the ATM and in the locked vault within the ATM. First Keystone's internal control procedures mandated that two employees be involved in resupplying the ATM and its locked vault and in maintaining the ATM ledger control sheets. However, either Moronese or Barksdale completed those tasks by themselves.

In early 2009, a third teller, Tyneesha Richardson, overheard Moronese and Barksdale discussing the embezzlement scheme. Richardson then reportedly asked Moronese for money to pay off her car loan. Moronese agreed to give Richardson the money and told her that she shouldn't worry because "the bank had a lot of money and they would never miss it." After telling Barksdale that she had given money to Richardson, Moronese told Barksdale that if she ever needed any money "to let her know." Not long thereafter, Barksdale allegedly asked Moronese for $600 to pay her rent.

An internal audit eventually uncovered the embezzlement scheme at First Keystone's Swarthmore branch. That internal audit revealed that $40,590 was missing from the branch's ATM, while another $60,000 was missing from the locked vault within the ATM's interior.

While being interrogated by law enforcement authorities, Barksdale reportedly confessed that she and her colleagues had also stolen money from the local municipality. City employees periodically dropped off at the First Keystone branch large bags of coins collected from Swarthmore's parking meters. Tellers at the branch were supposed to feed the coins into a coin-counting machine and then deposit the receipts printed by the machine into the city's parking account. According to Barksdale, she and her two fellow conspirators diverted money from Swarthmore's parking funds and split it among themselves. The police estimated that the three tellers stole approximately $24,000 of the parking funds.

In January 2010, when the three tellers were arrested, they did not have far to go since the Swarthmore police station was across the street from the First Keystone branch where they worked. In commenting on the case, the local district attorney observed that Barksdale and Richardson had a choice to make when they learned of Moronese's embezzlement scheme and that each had made the wrong choice. "So, the lesson is you can either be a witness or you can be a defendant. These two chose to be defendants."

The district attorney also commented on the branch's failure to require employees to comply with internal control procedures. "The case is yet another example of the importance of not only implementing internal accounting safeguards, but ensuring that those safeguards are being followed by all employees at all levels of the business."

FRAUD EXAMINATION

  1. What control activity discussed would have helped discover this fraud and why?
  2. What do you think were the specifics of the Fraud Triangle in this case?
  3. What do you think you would have done if you were Barksdale or Richardson? Be honest.

Reference no: EM133357511

Questions Cloud

How did sampling rate affect the measurement of heart rate : How did sampling rate affect the measurement of heart rate? What were the qualitative effects of a low sampling rate on the pulse data that led
How an enterprise system makes such a process possible : Provide a definition of that process and briefly explain how an enterprise system makes such a process possible
How atoms in parental dna are distributed to progeny : The investigators "anticipated that a label which imparts to the DNA molecule an increased density" (Introduction, paragraph 1) might help reveal
How the covid pandemic and its challenges may affect : how the COVID pandemic and its challenges may affect government policy, specific to transportation infrastructure
Do you think were the specifics of the fraud triangle : What control activity discussed would have helped discover this fraud and why? What do you think were the specifics of the Fraud Triangle in this case?
What is the economic orders quantity : What is the Economic Orders Quantity for each raw material, assuming the monthly production rate is stable based on the results of point
What are the mass, lifetime, and principal decay mode : What are the mass, lifetime, and principal decay mode(s) of the muon? (look them up in the PDG Booklet). What is its width? What is the minimum
Describe an enduring trend in operations : In Chapter, "AGILITY" was described as an enduring trend in operations and supply chain management.
What does the company need to ensure : What does the company need to ensure the technician obtains in order to bring the specialized tools for the installation and start up without incurring costs

Reviews

Write a Review

Business Management Questions & Answers

  Caselet on michael porter’s value chain management

The assignment in management is a two part assignment dealing 1.Theory of function of management. 2. Operations and Controlling.

  Mountain man brewing company

Mountain Man Brewing, a family owned business where Chris Prangel, the son of the president joins. Due to increase in the preference for light beer drinkers, Chris Prangel wants to introduce light beer version in Mountain Man. An analysis into the la..

  Mountain man brewing company

Mountain Man Brewing, a family owned business where Chris Prangel, the son of the president joins. An analysis into the launch of Mountain Man Light over the present Mountain Man Lager.

  Analysis of the case using the doing ethics technique

Analysis of the case using the Doing Ethics Technique (DET). Analysis of the ethical issue(s) from the perspective of an ICT professional, using the ACS Code of  Conduct and properly relating clauses from the ACS Code of Conduct to the ethical issue.

  Affiliations and partnerships

Affiliations and partnerships are frequently used to reach a larger local audience? Which options stand to avail for the Hotel manager and what problems do these pose.

  Innovation-friendly regulations

What influence (if any) can organizations exercise to encourage ‘innovation-friendly' regulations?

  Effect of regional and corporate cultural issues

Present your findings as a group powerpoint with an audio file. In addition individually write up your own conclusions as to the effects of regional cultural issues on the corporate organisational culture of this multinational company as it conducts ..

  Structure of business plan

This assignment shows a structure of business plan. The task is to write a business plane about a Diet Shop.

  Identify the purposes of different types of organisations

Identify the purposes of different types of organisations.

  Entrepreneur case study for analysis

Entrepreneur Case Study for Analysis. Analyze Robin Wolaner's suitability to be an entrepreneur

  Forecasting and business analysis

This problem requires you to apply your cross-sectional analysis skills to a real cross-sectional data set with the goal of answering a specific research question.

  Educational instructional leadership

Prepare a major handout on the key principles of instructional leadership

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd