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Managing Client Emotions in Forensic Accounting and Fraud Investigation. Stephen PedneaultЧитать онлайн книгу.

Managing Client Emotions in Forensic Accounting and Fraud Investigation - Stephen  Pedneault


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state and size up whether they want to work with them. The same holds true in meeting an attorney. My firm has walked away from many great cases because we didn't want to work with a client or their attorney based on an impression we picked up on during the meeting.

      In a few rare instances, my firm has lost a referral source for declining our involvement in a potential matter, but experience has shown me that I need to trust my instincts. When my sixth sense tells me something isn't right about an individual or a matter, I know I need to walk away. In some cases, I need to run. That turned out to be the case in the following story, where my instincts alerted me to something “not right” in the client's story.

      I had scheduled a meeting with an attorney I'd worked with on past cases, regarding a matter where employees were stealing funds from an organization. As I regularly do, I brought someone from my office with me so the two of us could listen to the potential matter, assess emotional states, ask questions, and take notes. Often, the person I bring is the person who will work on the matter with me, so they can hear things firsthand right from the inception.

      When we arrived, we met the attorney and several individuals who were sitting at a conference table. As the attorney introduced us to his clients, each expressed how excited they were to meet us and to gain our help in resolving their matter.

      Members of the parent organization had analyzed the activity of the location based on system reports for the past several years and found significant issues. Sales volume was too low and appeared to be manipulated – and although this location was one of their busiest, the sales volume and trends made no sense when compared to their other locations, which used the same systems. The executive director said that he and the others in the meeting were very frustrated with the individuals at that location and wanted to press further based on the initial analyses, but that they thought it would be more prudent to bring in an objective, neutral consultant, such as a fraud examiner, to further analyze the location's activity.

      Listening to his story and looking at the very detailed analyses and spreadsheets they'd prepared, something just didn't feel right to me. I couldn't understand why, with the level of detail collected and analyzed, they didn't just go to law enforcement with their work and ask them to initiate a criminal investigation. I asked the group that very question. They responded that they wanted to be more thorough and prudent by getting an independent assessment. Their responses didn't make sense to me. Something seemed wrong.

      The meeting continued, with the executive director telling us he had given his notice and would only be with the organization for another two weeks. I found that information troubling as well. I wondered what was really happening at the meeting and why this organization wanted to bring in outside fraud examiners when they had done much of the analysis themselves and at the time their executive director was leaving.

      I asked them to describe the individuals who worked at the location in question. The executive director said the family was very close and controlled everything that happened at the location. He said that non‐family members had worked there in the past, but whenever they did not go along with what the family wanted, they were fired. Turnover among non‐family members was high, higher than at any other location. The executive director said he believed that the family was skimming cash from the daily sales and then concealing the thefts in the system, which would account for the sales and trends being so different from the other locations. The executive director said that the family members were not nice people and controlled all hours of operations by having at least one family member on hand at all times to watch over things. The family members had been very hostile toward other workers and had developed a sense of independence from the corporate office. Although the family had received requests for information as well as access to their systems, to date they had provided neither.

      While my instinct was to decline our involvement, I first asked to know more about the family. The executive director said that the father, the patriarch of the operation, was also known as the unofficial “king” of his neighborhood, in one of the poorer areas of the city known for gang‐related activity and violence. I wondered to myself whether, had I not asked this question, the group would have kept that tidbit of information from us – a tidbit that formed a critical element relating to our safety if we were to get involved in the matter. I wondered what else the group had left out – and what their real motive was for our involvement.

      Once the group finished talking, they asked me for my thoughts on how to proceed with their matter. I think they were shocked by my reaction and what I said next. I will never forget how their moods changed in response.

      I told them that, given the background and history of the individuals working at the location, the lack of cooperation and access to information, and especially the patriarch's unofficial title of “king” of a rather violent neighborhood, that they were crazy for not getting law enforcement involved, if for no other reason than to minimize the safety issues for everyone involved. The fact that they possessed a detailed analysis showing some type of theft occurring but were reluctant to get law enforcement involved did not sit right with me. Something seemed wrong with this potential matter and what they were telling us (or more importantly, what they were not telling us).

      I asked them what they thought would happen if they were correct and the family was stealing daily proceeds from the organization. What would happen when that cash flow suddenly stopped? I told them I was not going to get involved unless the group also involved law enforcement. They told me that involving the police was not an option at that time.

      Well, at that point, the meeting took a significant turn. After saying they didn't understand why we wouldn't get involved in the matter, they began to get angry. They started asking pointed questions about why we would not take on this matter. As the mood in the room shifted, I knew I had made the right decision. My sixth sense had been telling me something was wrong, and it was. We ended the meeting and left before the discussion went any further.

      As of this writing, their attorney – who had used our services on several matters prior to this meeting – has never called us again, nor has he been receptive to subsequent communication from us. Worse, when we referred a client to him and the client ended up using his firm, the attorney didn't even bother to thank us for the referral. Apparently, because of my declining involvement in his matter, he chose to no longer have any business dealings with me or my firm. It happens.

      Once we decide a potential matter is one we want to get involved in, we discuss our expectations with the client at the first meeting. I encourage every fraud examiner to establish ground rules with new clients at the inception of a new matter (a process I explore in more detail later


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