This type of invoice/expenses fraud is a structural risk that is often underestimated. The duration of exposure is as decisive as the unit amount embezzled, which in this instance was carried out over eight financial years and cost 1% of the subsidiary’s annual turnover. In this case, the mechanism was simple but invisible to the naked eye: a customer payment deposited in the bank was never recorded in the accounts, while a fictitious expense report, validated internally, reimbursed the same amount to the accountant.
In this case study we’re entering accounting mechanics. The subsidiary had a very small accounting team, and the chief accountant had the ability to process payments himself. The Group also used an external service provider to manage expense reports.
The issue with such providers is that their role is generally limited to checking that receipts exist. They don’t know the company’s internal rules, nor can they challenge the validity or appropriateness of the expenses submitted.
Here’s what happened: several clients were paying their invoices normally, but these payments were not recorded in the accounting system. At the same time, the chief accountant was submitting expense reports, which were approved by the external provider. He then reimbursed himself using the funds received from clients’ payments that had never been booked. The amounts appeared on the bank statements but not in the accounts.
During each monthly close, adjusting entries were posted to artificially record the client payments, then reversed the following month. This allowed the fraud to keep rolling smoothly from one month to the next. And it went on for eight years.
Fraud can rumble on for many months, if not years before it’s detected. Some of the issues in this
case were:
One of the issues with this type of fraud is the length of time it can go on for. The company is being systematically weakened by poor processes; no expense report, restricted access to bank accounts and infrequent reconciliation. This can be caused by siloisation; the concentration of responsibility in one person. The opportunity for fraud is revealed and rationalisation follows because of a lack of oversight.
Two Ways to Prevent Invoice/Expenses Fraud:
Sharing approval processes, and more generally, ensuring a proper segregation of duties whenever there is a cash output, can deter fraud. A sense of impunity is created when processes sit in silos and critical changes depend on a single individual. Strengthening controls and connecting finance, procurement and audit data flows reduces that space, where fraud thrives. With structured workflows, shared visibility and automated monitoring, fraudulent actions become detectable early and therefore far riskier for anyone tempted to act.
It’s time to improve your organisation’s controls and remove isolated decision points, to reduce both the opportunity and the rationalisation that make fraud possible. Don’t let fraud run unnoticed in your organisation for years.
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