|
Example from the Stanford Law School Database
From the Stanford Law School
Securities Fraud Database --- http://securities.stanford.edu/1022/TTWO01-01/
Take-Two
Interactive CASE INFORMATION
Summary:
According to a Press Release dated December 21, 2001, the complaint alleges
that during the Class Period defendants materially misrepresented Take-Two's
financial results and performance for each of the quarters of and full year
of fiscal 2000, ended October 31, 2000, and each of the first three quarters
of fiscal 2001, ended January 31, 2001, April 30, 2001 and July 31, 2001,
respectively, by improperly recognizing revenue on sales to distributors. On
August 24, 2001, the truth about the Company's financial condition began to
emerge when the effects of defendants' scheme began to negatively impact the
Company's financial results. It was not until December 14, 2001 and December
17, 2001, however, that
the market began to learn that defendants had caused the Company to
improperly recognize revenue for products shipped to distributors, where the
distributors did not have a binding commitment to pay for the products, in
direct contravention of GAAP.
Significantly, defendants' unlawful accounting practices enabled defendants
to portray Take-Two as a financially strong company that was experiencing
dramatic revenue growth, and which was poised for future success when, in
fact, the Company's purported success was the result of improper accounting
practices. On December 14, 2001, following rumors of a possible restatement
of Take-Two's financial results, Take-Two's common stock fell 31% --$4.72 a
share to $10.33 per share. During the Class Period, Take-Two shares traded
as high as $24.50 per share. Defendants were motivated to misrepresent the
Company's financial results, by among other things, their desire to sell
approximately 900,000 shares of Take-Two common stock during the Class
Period at artificially inflated prices for proceeds of over $15 million.
INDUSTRY
CLASSIFICATION: SIC Code: 7372 Sector: Technology Industry: Software &
Programming
NAME OF COMPANY
SUED: Take-Two Interactive Software Inc.
COMPANY TICKER:
TTWO COMPANY WEBSITE: http://www.take2games.com
FIRST IDENTIFIED
COMPLAINT IN THE DATABASE Fischbein, et al. v. Take-Two Interactive Software
Inc., et al. COURT: S.D. New York DOCKET NUMBER: JUDGE NAME: DATE FILED:
12/18/2001 SOURCE: Business Wires CLASS PERIOD START: 02/24/2000 CLASS
PERIOD END: 12/17/2001 TYPE OF COMPLAINT: Unamended/Unconsolidated PLAINTIFF
FIRMS IN THIS OR SIMILAR CASE: Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach, LLP
(New York, NY) One Pennsylvania Plaza, New York, NY, 10119-1065 (voice)
212.594.5300, (fax) , Rabin & Peckel LLP 275 Madison Avenue, New York,
NY, 10016 (voice) 212.682.1818, (fax) , email@rabinlaw.com Schiffrin &
Barroway, LLP 3 Bala Plaza E, Bala Cynwyd, PA, 19004 (voice) 610.667.7706,
(fax) 610.667.7056, info@sbclasslaw.com
TOTAL NUMBER OF
PLAINTIFF FIRMS: 3
February 28, 2002 message from Allen
Plyler
Bob,
Take-Two
Interactive just restated their last restatement.
Allen Plyler
Keller Graduate School of Management, Chicago, Illinois.
Important Database --- From the Scout Report on
February 1, 2001
LLRX.com: Business Filings Databases http://www.llrx.com/columns/roundup19.htm
This column from Law Library Resource Xchange (LLRX)
(last mentioned in the September 7, 2001 Scout Report) by Kathy Biehl
becomes more interesting with every revelation of misleading corporate
accounting practices. This is a straightforward listing of state
government's efforts to provide easy access to required disclosure filings
of businesses within each state. Each entry is clearly annotated, describing
services offered and any required fees (most services here are free). The
range of information and services varies considerably from very basic (i.e.
"name availability") to complete access to corporate filings. The
noteworthy exception here is tax filings. Most states do not currently
include access to filings with taxing authorities.
I added the above to my evolving monster on accounting and securities
fraud at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
From The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Educators' Review on May 23, 2002
TITLE: SEC Broadens Investigation
Into Revenue-Boosting Tricks; Fearing Bogus Numbers Are Widespread, Agency
Probes Lucent and Others
REPORTER: Susan Pulliam and Rebecca Blumenstein
DATE: May 16, 2002
PAGE: A1
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB1021510491566948760.djm,00.html
TOPICS: Financial Accounting, Financial Statement Analysis
SUMMARY: "Securities and
Exchange Commission officials, concerned about an explosion of transactions
that falsely created the impression of booming business across many
industries, are conducting a sweeping investigation into a host of practices
that pump up revenue."
QUESTIONS:
1.) "Probing revenue promises to be a much broader inquiry than the
earlier investigations of Enron and other companies accused of using
accounting tricks to boost their profits." What is the difference between
inflating profits vs. revenues?
2.) What are the ways in which
accounting information is used (both in general and in ways specifically cited
in this article)? What are the concerns about using accounting information
that has been manipulated to increase revenues? To increase profits?
3.) Describe the specific techniques
that may be used to inflate revenues that are enumerated in this article and
the related one. Why would a practice of inflating revenues be of particular
concern during the ".com boom"?
4.) "[L90 Inc.] L90 lopped $8.3
million, or just over 10%, off revenue previously reported for 2000 and 2001,
while booking the $250,000 [net difference in the amount of wire transfers
that had been used in one of these transactions] as 'other income' rather than
revenue." What is the difference between revenues and other income? Where
might these items be found in a multi-step income statement? In a single-step
income statement?
5.) What are "vendor
allowances"? How might these allowances be used to inflate revenues?
Consider the case of Lucent Technologies described in the article. Might their
techniques also have been used to boost profits?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
--- RELATED ARTICLES ---
TITLE: CMS Energy Admits Questionable Trades Inflated Its Volume
REPORTER: Chip Cummins and Jonathan Friedland
PAGE: A1
ISSUE: May 16, 2002
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB1021494984503313400.djm,00.html
One-time Internet booster Henry Blodget, who recently left Merrill Lynch, is
reportedly one of several stock analysts being probed for alleged conflicts of
interest --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48992,00.html
From The Wall Street Journal's Accounting Educator Reviews on January
24, 2002
TITLE: Ex-Official at Leslie Fay Gets Nine-Year Sentence for Accounting
Fraud
REPORTER: Staff Reporter DATE: Jan 21, 2002
PAGE: B2
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1011571420328020280.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Accounting Fraud, Accounting Law, Fraudulent Financial
Reporting, Legal Liability, Negligent Misrepresentation
SUMMARY: Paul F. Polishan, the former chief financial officer and senior vice
president of Leslie Fay, was convicted of 18 felony counts for his role in
overstating the earnings of Leslie Fay between 1989 and 1993. Mr. Polishan was
sentenced to serve nine years in prison. Questions deal with accountants'
liability and consequences of fraudulent financial reporting.
QUESTIONS:
1.) In what situations is overstating earnings a crime? What other penalties
could result from overstating earnings? Do you think overstating earnings should
result in a prison sentence? Support your answer.
2.) Were Leslie Fay's financial statements audited? What responsibility does
the auditor bear concerning the earnings overstatement?
3.) In what situations would an independent auditor be liable under common
law for overstated earnings? What defenses are available to the auditor?
4.) In what situations would an independent auditor be liable under civil law
for overstated earnings? What defenses are available to the auditor?
5.) In what situations would an independent auditor be liable under criminal
law for overstated earnings? What defenses are available to the auditor?
6.) Who is harmed by overstated earnings? How are each of these groups
harmed?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
In particular,
it has raised awareness of “hollow swaps”, where two telecoms companies
exchange identical amounts of network capacity, then book the purchase cost as
capital expense and the sale as revenue. Although C&W says it does not use
hollow swaps, it has recently admitted to using another controversial accounting
method to book the sale of “indefeasible right of use” (IRU) contracts.
C&W booked the contracts, which give access to its telecoms network, as
upfront revenue even though they were spread over periods of up to 15 years.
Such deals — which were outlawed in 1999 by regulators in America — boosted
C&W’s revenues by £373 million in 2001.
Chris Ayres and Clive Mathieson, London Times Online, March 1, 2002 --- http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/0,,5-222235,00.html
Association of Certified Fraud
Examiners --- http://www.cfenet.com/home.asp
The Association of
Certified Fraud Examiners is an international, 25,000-member professional
organization dedicated to fighting fraud and white-collar crime. With offices
in North America and chapters around the globe, the Association is networked
to respond to the needs of anti-fraud professionals everywhere.
In the April 2002 issue of Journal
of Accountancy, Joseph Wells, chairman of the Association of Certified
Fraud Examiners (CFE), reviews the results of a survey by CFE and discusses
the implications for CPAs. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/77418
In Congressional testimony on February
14, James G. Castellano, the chairman of the American Institute of CPAs said the
Institute plans to release a draft of a new standard by the end of February. The
objective of the new standard is to help auditors detect new types of management
fraud. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/72560
A message from Andrew Priest on February 34. 2002
Yahoo! is carrying this news story in respect of
Tyco International. Apparently the firm spent $US8 billion in its past three
fiscal years on more than 700 acquisitions that were never announced to the
public. The story is at http://au.news.yahoo.com/020205/2/3vlo.html
.
Is this another Andersen client? :-) Seriously does
anyone know who the auditor is on this one?
Thanks
Andrew Priest
The auditor is PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC)
SEC News, Regulations, and Litigation Summaries --- http://www.sec.gov/
On May 20, 2002 the Securities and Exchange Commission announced proceedings
against Big Five firm Ernst & Young. The case reaches back to the years
before E&Y's consulting practice was sold to Cap Gemini. It involves alleged
independence violations due to product sales and consulting fees related to
PeopleSoft software, while PeopleSoft was an E&Y audit client. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/81348
Update on June 1, 2002 --- http://www.as411.com/AcctSoftware.nsf/00/prDBD2F8AEEF51127686256BEC00167F9F
In a ruling Tuesday, Brenda Murray, the chief administrative law judge at the
SEC, granted Ernst & Young's motion for summary judgment and dismissed the
case without prejudice. Ms. Murray agreed with Ernst & Young that more than
one SEC commissioner needed to approve the action for it to be valid.
From Double Entries on July 5, 2002
In the first-ever
auditor independence case against a foreign audit firm, the Securities and
Exchange Commission has brought a settled enforcement action against Moret Ernst
& Young Accountants (Moret), a Dutch accounting firm now known as Ernst
& Young Accountants. The case arises from Moret's joint business
relationships with an audit client. In today's order, the SEC censured Moret for
engaging in "improper professional conduct" within the meaning of Rule
102(e) of the SEC's Rules of Practice, and ordered Moret to comply with certain
remedial undertakings, including the payment of a $400,000 civil penalty. This
is the first time that the SEC has ordered any audit firm to pay a civil penalty
for an auditor independence violation. Moret consented to the order without
admitting or denying the SEC's findings. Full details from the SEC in our full
article. Just
click on through
"SEC List of Accounting-Fraud
Probes Grows, Stretching Agencies Resources," The Wall Street Journal,
July 6, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB994366683510250066.djm
WSJ Interactive
Questions on July 12, 2001
1.) "The most
visible indicator of improper accounting-and source of new investigations-is
the growing number of restated financial reports." Based on your
knowledge of APB Opinion 23, why is this statement true? What other sources of
information does the SEC use to trigger investigations?
2.) Why would the SEC
want to "ferret out" questionable accounting practices before
"word of a company's accounting problems has leaked and battered its
stock price"? How does this goal relate to the SEC's responsibilities?
What steps are they undertaking to accomplish this goal?
3.) What is
fraudulent financial reporting (as opposed to an accounting error)? Why might
the current economic circumstances lead to greater incidences of fraudulent
financial reporting?
4.) Read the summary
of a research study entitled "Fraudulent Financial Reporting: 1987-1997:
An Analysis of U.S. Public Companies" at the AICPA web site http://www.aicpa.org/news/p032699b.htm
How do the factors identified in this study provide a basis for helping the
SEC to detect questionable accounting practices earlier than is now the norm?
5.) How are
executives' compensation packages tied to share prices? What are the benefits
of such compensation arrangements? Why do current market conditions enhance
the risk that executives may be willing to undertake earnings management
practices to enhance their own salaries? What market reactions to earnings
announcements exacerbate these incentives to manage earnings?
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants --- http://www.aicpa.org/index.htm
There are many articles on fraud in the back issues of the Journal of
Accountancy --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/joahome.htm
AICPA Issues Proposed Standard On
Fraud Detection
On February 28, 2002, the American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) released a draft
of a revised audit standard on Consideration of Fraud in a Financial Statement
Audit. If adopted, this updated standard will replace the current standard
with the same name, (Statement on Auditing Standards No. 82). http://www.accountingweb.com/item/73718
From the Journal of Accountancy
in July 2002 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jul2002/index.htm
Risk
Management/Internal Audit
BEYOND
TRADITIONAL AUDIT TECHNIQUES
Paul E. Lindow and Jill D. Race
Instead of just reviewing required controls, internal auditors can
broaden their approach both within and outside the audit process to identify
areas for risk management improvements. Here’s a case study on how the
internal audit group at California Federal Bank redefined its role to add
more value and become key advisers to the company.
Risk
Management/Litigation Services
FIVE
TIPS TO STEER CLEAR OF THE COURTHOUSE
Paul Sweeney
As litigation costs continue to mount, businesses want to develop
efficient strategies to identify and monitor vulnerabilities and avoid
lawsuits. CPAs have the expertise to offer clients solutions to several
corporate risk management problems.
From The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Educators' Review on March 7, 2002
TITLE:
Auditing Standard for Detecting Fraud Is Posed
REPORTER: Dow Jones Newswires
DATE: Mar 01, 200
PAGE: A4
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,BT_CO_20020228_009080.djm,00.html
TOPICS: Auditing
SUMMARY:
The article implies that a new auditing standard on fraud actually has been
issued, but the actual document issued was an exposure draft of a proposed
standard.
QUESTIONS:
1.)
Access the AICPA web site to read the actual document issued by the Auditing
Standards Board at http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/auditstd/consideration_of_fraud.htm
The
article begins with the statement that "the Auditing Standards Board (ASB)
of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants issued expanded fraud
guidance for U.S. auditors..." Is
this statement correct?
2.)
In the second paragraph of the article, the author states, "The guidance
comes at a time when questionable accounting practices have surfaced in the wake
of bankruptcy-law filings by...Enron Corp. and Global Crossing Ltd."
Were these recent scandals the reason behind the new auditing standard
proposal? If not, what were the
ASB's reasons for proposing the new standard?
(Hint: again see the actual
document at the AICPA's web site.)
3.)
The proposed new standard would mandate specific requirements to search for
fictitious entries and perform other tests to search for fraud under certain
circumstances. Compare and contrast
this proposal to current auditing requirements to search for fraud.
SMALL
GROUP ASSIGNMENT: The proposed auditing standard requests feedback from
respondents to assess each of the major areas of the new standard (e.g., classification of risk factors for fraud,
identification of revenue recognition as the major area for risk of fraud,
consideration of the risk of management override of fraud, inquiry of audit
committees about fraud, and the attitude of professional skepticism).
Divide the class into small groups and assign one section to each group
to draft a response to the questions posed in the exposure draft.
Reviewed
By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA) --- http://www.theiia.org/
Can Internal Auditors truly be independent while being employed by the entity
and seen as working for the management to achieve organizational goals? In
theory, External Auditors are more likely to be perceived as independent, but is
it not the case that Internal Auditors appear to have little or no independence?
http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65704
Articles on Internal Auditing and Fraud
Investigation
Web Site of Mark R. Simmons, CIA CFE
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~msimmons/
Internal
auditing is an independent, objective assurance and consulting
activity designed to add value and improve an organization's operations.
It helps an organization accomplish its objectives by bringing a systematic,
disciplined approach to evaluate and improve the effectiveness of risk
management, control, and governance processes. (Institute of Internal
Auditors)
Fraud
Investigation consists of the multitude of steps necessary to resolve
allegations of fraud - interviewing witnesses, assembling evidence, writing
reports, and dealing with prosecutors and the courts. (Association of
Certified Fraud Examiners)
This site focuses on topics that
deal with Internal
Auditing and Fraud
Investigation with certain hyper-links
to other associated and relevant sources. It is dedicated to sharing
information.
Certified Forensic Investigators in
Canada --- FAQs --- http://www.homewoodave.com/frequently%20asked%20question.htm
"Regulators Check the New
Economy's Books," by Karl Schoenberger, The New York Times, August
19, 2001 --- http://college2.nytimes.com/guests/articles/2001/08/19/864842.xml
Responding to
widespread concerns that investors were not always given reliable financial
information in that time of frantic revenue growth, regional offices of the
S.E.C., the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States attorney's
office here are cooperating in a legal crackdown on accounting violations.
A tough
law-enforcement response to accounting irregularities, of course, is not new.
In the past year, federal investigators have pursued cases of irregularities
at companies like Waste Management (news/quote), Cendant (news/quote) and
Sunbeam. But now the government is turning up the heat in Silicon Valley, home
to a preponderance of questionable accounting, particularly among software
companies, during the Internet boom.
Over the last four
years, nearly one in five accounting restatements — red flags for potential
misconduct — have been by companies in California, according to a study by
Arthur Andersen, the accounting firm. (Arthur Andersen was itself the recent
subject of an S.E.C. civil sanction for the way it audited the books of Waste
Management, the trash-disposal company, and agreed to a settlement without
admitting or denying civil fraud allegations.) In the same four- year period,
the total number of restatements for all industries has nearly doubled, Arthur
Andersen's report said.
So far in the
technology sector, federal investigators and prosecutors here have set their
sights on relatively small companies, where a high proportion of problems
center on what accountants call improper "revenue recognition" —
the recording of revenue that does not exist. It could be, for example, from a
pending sale that is misclassified as completed, or a service contract in
which money has not yet changed hands.
The Arthur Andersen
study of accounting restatements from 1997 to 2000 showed that 27 percent of
the restatements nationwide had been filed in the software and computer
industries. About 62 percent of the software companies involved had annual
gross revenue of less than $100 million.
The rise of
accounting fraud investigations, specifically related to overstatement of
revenue, reflects a serious white-collar crime trend in the high-technology
sector in recent years, said Leslie B. Caldwell, chief of the securities fraud
section for the United States attorney's office here.
"The pressure to
do this in the technology industry was intense because the expectation for
growth was so high, and it wasn't sustainable," she said, without
commenting on specific cases.
The inquiry at Indus
International focused on revenue for the third quarter of 1999. According to
the shareholder lawsuits against the company and former executives, the
revenue total included sales derived from "irregular contracts,"
money that was not received during the quarter in question. Last October,
Indus International agreed to settle the suits for $4.3 million without
admitting or denying wrongdoing.
Previously, Ms.
Caldwell said, her office waited for the S.E.C. to refer cases for criminal
investigation. But now, "we're taking the bull in our own hands,"
she said.
"There are a
number of matters under investigation of corporations that cooked their books
to meet Wall Street's expectations — expectations that the companies
themselves created," she added.
Harris Miller,
president of the Information Technology Association of America, a trade group,
said accounting problems in the software industry had arisen because of what
he called vague rules covering sales of licensing agreements, which resulted
in many companies claiming revenue that they expected to receive.
"The rules for
revenue recognition were a bit cloudy, not just for software companies but for
any company that delivers services over time," Mr. Miller said. His
organization, he said, was not making excuses for executives who intentionally
violated regulations. "Yes, there was pressure to drive the top
line," he said. "But you can never justify misconduct."
Ms. Caldwell's unit
of seven lawyers, responsible for expediting complicated and paper-intensive
securities investigations, was created in February 2000 by Robert S. Mueller,
United States attorney for the Northern District of California, whom President
Bush chose to serve as director of the F.B.I.
Matthew J. Jacobs, a
spokesman for the United States attorney's office here, said Mr. Mueller had
made the prosecution of accounting fraud a major objective because of its
prevalence in both economic booms and declines. Mr. Mueller was not available
for comment, the United States attorney's office said on Friday.
In its most prominent
case to date, Ms. Caldwell's team obtained indictments last September against
two former executives at McKesson, the pharmaceutical and medical technology
company based here. The defendants were charged with accounting fraud related
to the 1999 merger of McKesson and HBO & Company, a software company based
in Atlanta. Prosecutors said $9 billion in shareholder losses resulted. The
defendants pleaded not guilty to the charges, and the case is in the pretrial
phase.
The F.B.I. and
federal prosecutors here are investigating about 50 cases of possible criminal
securities fraud in the district, more than a dozen of them focusing on
companies suspected of accounting fraud.
In addition to Indus
International, at least six small and medium-size software companies in
Northern California are under federal criminal and civil investigation,
according to officials. Among them is Critical Path, a San Francisco company
that sells e-mail messaging technology to other businesses and reported $135.7
million in sales last year. In February, after an internal investigation that
led to the departure of its chief executive and two other executives, Critical
Path restated revenue for the third and fourth quarters of 2000, subtracting a
total of $19.4 million from what it had claimed. The company's share price
plummeted and class-action suits were filed, contending deception and fraud.
Critical Path has said it is cooperating with investigators.
In another case, the
S.E.C. filed a civil complaint last September in Federal District Court here
against three former executives of the Cylink Corporation (news/quote), a
Santa Clara company that makes cryptographic software for computer network
security, accusing them of violating accounting rules by recognizing spurious
transactions as sales in quarterly earnings statements. The complaint said
Cylink recognized more than $900,000 in revenue in the second quarter of
fiscal 1998 for sales in which some customers were given a three-month window
to cancel their orders.
"When senior
officers are involved in this kind of conduct we're going to hold them
responsible," Robert L. Mitchell, head of the S.E.C.'s enforcement office
in San Francisco, said when the complaint was issued. "Companies only act
through individuals." The S.E.C. settled a separate administrative
"cease and desist" proceeding with the corporation. In the civil
litigation against three former Cylink executives, each was accused of
securities fraud, circumvention of Cylink's internal controls and
falsification of records.
In July, according to
court records, one of the former Cylink executives, Thomas Butler, who had
been vice president for sales, signed a consent decree, without admitting or
denying the charges, agreeing to pay a $100,000 fine and forfeit a $25,000
bonus he had been awarded by Cylink for his sales performance. Litigation
against the two other defendants is still pending. Robert Fougner, Cylink's
general counsel, said that he and other company executives could not comment
on the case.
In cases in which
criminal charges are brought against company executives, potential penalties
can be harsh. In addition to fines imposed by the S.E.C., a conviction of an
executive on a criminal securities fraud charge can result in a prison
sentence of up to 10 years and a fine as high as $1 million. Conviction on a
lesser charge, like wire fraud or conspiracy, carries a maximum five- year
sentence and $250,000 fine.
Until recently, the
pace of these investigations had been plodding, owing to their complexity and
a shortage of resources. For example, Scorpion Technologies, a software
company that was based in Los Gatos, Calif., and is now defunct, was accused
of fraudulently claiming as much as $3.6 million of its $12.4 million in
reported 1991 revenue. The S.E.C. filed civil charges and federal prosecutors
indicted company executives on securities fraud charges in 1996. The last of
the Scorpion defendants, John T. Dawson, was indicted in 1999. Last November,
he pleaded guilty to charges that he had helped create offshore companies that
masqueraded as buyers of Scorpion software products. Mr. Dawson's sentencing
hearing is set for Oct. 2.
The Justice
Department has a high threshold for criminal prosecution in these cases, with
a distinction being made between misleading accounting practices and criminal
fraud, Ms. Caldwell said. A suspicious accounting trick, by itself, cannot be
the basis for seeking an indictment without other facts establishing
deliberate fraud, she said.
Some major technology
companies, including Lucent Technologies (news/quote), have been subject to
recent class- action suits contending irregularities in the way the companies
accounted for their growing revenue before their businesses weakened. The
S.E.C. started examining Lucent's books last November, after the company had
disclosed an accounting problem, fired an employee and filed a restatement
lowering its revenue for its fiscal year 2000 by $679 million.
Lucent, however,
seems an exception. For now, at least, it appears to be the smaller technology
companies that are receiving the most scrutiny.
Continued at http://college2.nytimes.com/guests/articles/2001/08/19/864842.xml
The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed suit against the founder and
five other former top officers of Waste Management Inc. for massive fraud. The
complaint charges the defendants with inflating profits to meet earnings
targets. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/76329
Note that Waste Management just announced that it was changing
auditors. The auditor up to now was (guess?) Arthur Andersen.
"Channel stuffing" refers to the practice of
building inventories in distribution channels. On July 11, 2002 Bristol-Myers
Squibb, one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, confirmed that
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has launched an "informal
inquiry" into its sales practices. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/85930
Channel stuffing was (is?) common in the tobacco industry
where companies load up sales revenues on deliveries that they know they will
have to take back after the freshness dates on packages expire. More
cartons were (are?) sent to customers than can ever be sold before expiration
dates.
You can read about more revenue reporting tricks at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
Lurking in the shadows behind the public spotlight on Andersen
and Enron has been a criminal case against BDO
Seidman for failing to report that a client had misappropriated
investor funds. Legal steps this week follow a settlement in April with a goal
of removing all criminal charges against the firm. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/84264/ee2eE47/3825
PricewaterhouseCoopers
accused of lax audits of Gazprom
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EUROPEAN BUSINESS
Gazprom: Russia's
Enron?
Angry investors are
accusing PricewaterhouseCoopers of lax audits of Gazprom. Did the accounting
firm ignore the energy giant's insider dealing and shady asset transfers?
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/02_07/b3770079.htm?c=bweuropefeb13&n=link1&t=email
NEWS ANALYSIS
Can UBS Tame
Enron's Wild Traders?
That's the key
question facing the Swiss bank as it prepares to take over the Texas
company's energy-trading business
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/feb2002/nf2002026_4221.htm?c=bweuropefeb13&n=link2&t=email
"Economic slowdown brings rise in
accounting trickery," by Rachel Beck, The Detroit News, August 18,
2001 --- http://detnews.com/2001/business/0108/20/business-272230.htm
There are growing
concerns that the nation's economic downturn is compelling companies to
aggressively seek out ways to make their financial statements look better than
they really are.
Just this year,
dozens of companies have been caught in the act. Among them:
-- Xerox
Corp. restated earnings after admitting that it did not properly follow certain
accounting rules at a Mexican division.
-- ConAgra Foods Inc. reduced earnings by more than $100
million after discovering fictitious sales and earnings at one of its
subsidiaries.
-- Kroger Co., the giant supermarket chain, revised down its
earnings for 1998-2000, saying executives at its Ralphs Grocery subsidiary
conspired to hide cash from auditors and senior management.
Accounting manipulation
has become so prevalent that lawmakers in Washington are considering hearings on
the issue, while the Securities and Exchange Commission has seen a sharp rise in
the number of companies under investigation.
"There is a
big question looming out there: Why is there such a massive deterioration in
accounting practices and can it be stopped?" said Joseph Carcello, an
accounting professor at the University of Tennessee.
Last year there were
156 financial restatements, up from 150 in 1999 and 91 in 1998. The restatements
in the last three years add up to more than the combined total for the previous
eight years, according to the Financial Executives International, a Morristown,
N.J.-based group representing senior corporate financial officers.
About $31.2 billion in
market value was wiped out following restatements, as investors sold stock in
such companies, according to FEI.
Many companies claim
restatements don't mean they have broken any rules, saying that accounting
standards are open to interpretation. Often courts are left to decide whether
laws were violated. Most problems stem from how revenue is counted.
Corporations can falsely boost sales figures by recording revenue before
delivering products or asking customers to receive goods before they need them.
Sometimes they will claim sales before the goods are sold at all.
"There is not a
"one-shoe-fits-all" mentality that works in accounting," said
Mary Ellen Carter, assistant professor of accounting at Columbia University's
Graduate School of Business. "Management is in the best position to know
what accounting choices capture their business ... but they also know what
accounting choices don't."
Companies hire outside
auditors to verify their financial statements, mainly to check if accounting
standards are met. Yet accounting firms are known to overlook irregularities,
sometimes in an attempt to hold on to their audit contracts and more lucrative
consulting services for the same companies.
In June, accounting
titan Arthur Andersen LLP agreed to pay a $7 million civil fine to settle
federal allegations that it issued false and misleading audit reports for Waste
Management Inc. from 1993 to 1996 that inflated the trash hauler's profits by
more than $1 billion. Andersen neither acknowledged nor denied the allegations.
"There is supposed
to be checks in the system that prevent management from being able to do such
things, but it is clear that the checks have eroded," said Michael Lange, a
partner in Berman DeValerio Pease Tabacco Burt & Pucillo, a Boston law firm
that handles investor lawsuits. At Centennial Technologies, top executives
fabricated sales of "Flash 98," a nonexistent product, to friends of
former CEO Emmanuel Pinez. The company also created false sales records by
shipping fruit baskets to Pinez' friends and recording the shipments as $2
million in revenues. The maneuvers made it look like Centennial made
a profit of $12 million in 1996, when in reality the company lost $28 million.
Based on the earnings reports, shares of Centennial increased 450 percent in
1996 to $55.50 a share. Faraone managed to get in at $46 a share, but after the
fraud was uncovered in early 1997, the stock plunged to $3.
Last year, Pinez was
convicted in federal court, and sentenced to five years in prison and a $150
million fine. Other companies -- blue-chips and startups -- have employed
similar schemes. Sunbeam Corp. and its former CEO Albert Dunlap are
accused of creating the illusion of a speedy turnaround after he arrived at the
company in 1996. An SEC lawsuit filed in May alleges that the company shifted
revenues to inflate losses under the old management and added the sales back to
inflate income under Dunlap. The lawsuit also charges that Sunbeam offered
discounts to customers that stocked up on merchandise months ahead of schedule,
but failed to disclose that such revenue would hurt future results. Dunlap has
denied the allegations.
Xerox, the troubled
business machine maker, restated earnings from 1998 to 2000 in May after
acknowledging that its Mexican subsidiary improperly booked sales and hid bad
debts. Questions over its accounting practices helped push its stock down more
than 60 percent in the last year.
ConAgra, whose brands
include Bumble Bee tuna and Butterball turkeys, said in May that falsified sales
at its United Agri Products Cos. subsidiary would force it to lower earnings
from 1998 to 2000 by about $123 million. The company and the SEC are informally
investigating the accounting practices.
Last month, software
maker AremisSoft Corp. announced it was cooperating with a SEC probe into
unaccounted-for revenues. The company claimed $7.1 million in sales to the
Bulgarian government last year, but auditors have confirmed receipt of only $1.7
million.
The SEC has become
increasingly aggressive in its crackdown against alleged offenders. About 260
investigations now under way, a substantial jump from years past.
Lawmakers are also expressing concern about accounting fraud. Rep. Richard
Baker, R-La., chairman of a House subcommittee on capital markets, said last
month that he may call hearings on the issue. There's also been a rise
in the number of shareholder lawsuits. A recent study by the audit and
consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers found that of the 201 class-action
federal and state lawsuits filed against corporations in 2000, some 53 percent
contained accounting allegations. That's up from less than 40 percent in 1995.
"The spectrum of
lawsuits goes across all industries, and all sizes of business" said
Harvey Kelly, partner in the corporate investigations practice at
PricewaterhouseCoopers. "It shows that no one is immune to these kind of
challenges." Faraone joined a class-action lawsuit against
Centennial, never expecting to see any of his losses returned. A settlement of
the case in 1998 got him 666 shares back, then valued at about 50 cents each,
and he sold them immediately. The company, however, was bought this year
by Solectron Corp. for $108 million. Centennial stockholders collected $13.79
for every share they owned. If Faraone had waited, he could have recovered
nearly $9,200. He, however, has no regrets about selling the stock.
"This company did
me wrong in a sneaky way," he said. "I wasn't willing to take any more
chances."
It Just Gets Deeper and Deeper for Ernst & Young
(E&Y)
"Ernst & Young Gets SEC
Penalty For Ties to Client," by Jonathan Weil, The Wall Street Journal,
April 19, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108214408244385161,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us
In one of the longest suspensions ever
of a major accounting firm, Ernst
& Young LLP was barred for six months from accepting any new audit
clients among publicly traded companies as punishment for participating in a
lucrative business venture with a company whose books it audited.
The ruling Friday by the Securities and
Exchange Commission's chief administrative-law judge marks the latest sanction
of an accounting firm for violating the agency's auditor-independence rules,
which are intended to ensure that accounting firms remain impartial in their
evaluations of corporate clients' financial statements. The suspension applies
to American or foreign companies whose stock or debt trades on U.S. markets.
Ernst had fiercely contested the SEC
enforcement division's allegations that it compromised its independence by
engaging in a joint venture with PeopleSoft
Inc. at the same time that it was the software maker's outside auditor, at one
point calling the allegations "outrageous." On Friday, Ernst, the
nation's third-largest accounting firm, said it wouldn't appeal the decision.
The conduct occurred in the 1990s, at a
time when accounting firms' fees weren't disclosed and the prevailing culture
within the major firms was to use audits as a loss leader to generate other,
more-lucrative business with clients.
Three of the four major accounting
firms, including Ernst, since have sold their consulting practices in response
to pressure from regulators. Only Deloitte & Touche LLP continues to
maintain a sizable consulting practice, though it too has come under pressure
to part ways with its consulting business. Nowadays, companies with publicly
traded securities must disclose how much they pay their independent accounting
firms for audit and nonaudit work.
Continued in the article
"Big Auditing Firm Gets 6-Month Ban on New Business," by Floyd
Morris, The New York Times, April 17, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/17/business/17ERNS.html
Ernst & Young, the big accounting firm, was
barred yesterday from accepting any new audit clients in the United States for
six months after a judge found that the firm acted improperly by auditing a
company with which it had a highly profitable business relationship.
The unusual order, which included a $1.7 million
fine, brought to an end a bitter fight in which the Securities and Exchange
Commission had contended that Ernst violated rules on auditor independence by
jointly marketing consulting and tax services with an audit client, PeopleSoft
Inc.
The overwhelming evidence," wrote Brenda P.
Murray, the chief administrative law judge at the S.E.C., is that Ernst's
"day-to-day operations were profit-driven and ignored considerations of
auditor independence." She said the firm "committed repeated
violations of the auditor independence standards by conduct that was reckless,
highly unreasonable and negligent."
The rebuke to Ernst, which said it would not appeal
the decision, is the latest embarrassment for one of the Big Four accounting
firms, which have come under heavy criticism and increased regulation as a
result of accounting scandals in recent years. Those scandals led to the
demise of Arthur Andersen, which had formerly been among the Big Five.
The judge was harshly critical of the Ernst partner
who was in charge of independence issues, saying he kept no written records
and had failed to learn enough facts before saying the relationships between
Ernst and PeopleSoft were proper. That partner, Edmund Coulson, was chief
accountant of the S.E.C. before he joined Ernst in 1991.
Ernst's consulting and tax practices used PeopleSoft
software in their business, and the two companies participated in some joint
promotion activities. Ernst contended that it should be viewed as a customer
of PeopleSoft in the relationship, but the judge said it went far beyond that.
She noted that Ernst had billed itself in marketing
materials as an "implementation partner" of PeopleSoft and had
earned $500 million over five years from installing PeopleSoft programs at
other companies, which use the software to manage payroll, human resources and
accounting operations.
She issued a cease-and-desist order against the firm,
saying it had refused to admit it had done anything wrong and that there was
no reason to believe it would not violate the rules again. She also fined it
$1,686,500, the total amount of audit fees the company received from
PeopleSoft in the years that were involved, plus interest of $729,302, and
ordered that an outside monitor be brought in to assure the firm complied with
the rules in the future.
S.E.C. officials said the decision would send a
message to other firms. "Auditor independence is one of the centerpieces
of ensuring the integrity of the audit process," said Paul Berger, an
associate director of the commission's enforcement division, adding that the
judge's decision "vindicates our view that Ernst & Young engaged in a
business relationship that clearly violated" the rules.
Ernst, based in New York, had previously denounced
the commission for seeking a ban on new business, saying any such punishment
was completely unwarranted. But last night the firm said it would accept the
ruling and would not appeal. It had the right to appeal to the full S.E.C. and
then to federal courts if the commission ruled against it.
"Independence is the cornerstone of our practice
and our obligation to the public," said Charlie Perkins, a spokesman for
Ernst & Young. "We are fully committed to working closely with an
outside consultant in the review of our independence policies and
procedures."
Mr. Perkins said the firm had decided not to appeal
because it wanted to put the matter behind it, and emphasized that it would be
able to continue serving its existing clients.
The six-month suspension appears to match the longest
suspension on signing new business ever imposed on a leading accounting firm.
In 1975, Peat Marwick, a predecessor of KPMG, agreed
to accept a similar six-month suspension as part of a settlement of charges it
had failed to properly audit five companies, including Penn Central, the
railroad that went bankrupt.
Reports coming out of the US tell us that Ernst
& Young has been selling wealthy US citizens four legal techniques for
reducing their income tax bill, one of which experts claim could be illegal.
Accountancy Age, June 21, 2002 --- http://www.financialdirector.co.uk/News/1129611
"SEC Begins Probe Into Ernst's Pacts: Regulator to Weigh If Ties To AMR,
Others Met Rules For Auditor-Independence," by Jonathan Weil, The Wall
Street Journal, December 8, 2003 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107084523554066200,00.html?mod=mkts_main_news_hs_h
The Securities and Exchange Commission's enforcement
division has begun an inquiry into Ernst & Young LLP's business
relationships with three major audit clients, including American Express Co.,
and whether the dealings were appropriate under federal auditor-independence
rules.
Ernst's contracts with American Express, AMR Corp.'s
American Airlines, and Continental Airlines for travel services came to light
this autumn in connection with a lawsuit in an Arkansas state circuit court
where Ernst and other accounting firms are contesting allegations that they
overbilled clients for travel expenses. In a court filing last week, attorneys
for the plaintiff said they received a request from a federal agency for
documents relating to Ernst's relationships with the three companies, which
were the subject of Wall Street Journal articles on Nov. 20.
"We will fully cooperate with the SEC in its
review of this matter," Ernst said in a statement, confirming the
agency's identity. An SEC spokesman declined to comment.
One October 1996 contract called for American
Express, as Ernst's exclusive travel agent, to receive commissions on all
Ernst airfare, hotel rooms and car rentals and return a portion to Ernst. A
section called "profit sharing" said Ernst would receive 53% and
American Express 47% "of the net profit of Total Commission Revenue and
pooled expenses." Ernst also received portions of commissions paid to
American Express on leisure travel booked by Ernst employees.
Continued in article
Risk-Based Auditing Under Attack
Auditors looking into the
fraud at HealthSouth have
found it to be far more
extensive than originally
thought-as much as $4.6
billion in all. Initially,
estimates put the fraud at
$3.5 billion at the
Birmingham, AL-based
operator of rehabilitative
clinics. The auditing
firm implicated in the
HealthSouth scandal is Ernst
& Young --- http://www.AccountingWEB.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=98609
"Behind Wave of Corporate Fraud: A Change in How Auditors Work:
'Risk Based' Model Narrowed Focus of Their Procedures, Leaving Room for
Trouble,' " by Jonathan Weil, The Wall Street Journal, March 25,
2004, Page A1
The recent wave of corporate fraud is raising a harsh
question about the auditors who review and bless companies' financial results:
How could they have missed all the wrongdoing? One little-discussed answer: a
big change in the way audits are performed.
Consider what happened when James Lamphron and his
team of Ernst & Young LLP accountants sat down early last year to plan
their audit of HealthSouth Corp.'s 2002 financial statements. When they asked
executives of the Birmingham, Ala., hospital chain if they were aware of any
significant instances of fraud, the executives replied no. In their planning
papers, the auditors wrote that HealthSouth's system for generating financial
data was reliable, the company's executives were ethical, and that
HealthSouth's management had "designed an environment for success."
As a result, the auditors performed far fewer tests
of the numbers on the company's books than they would have at an audit client
where they perceived the risk of accounting fraud to be higher. That's
standard practice under the "risk-based audit" approach now used
widely throughout the accounting profession. Among the items the Ernst &
Young auditors didn't examine at all: additions of less than $5,000 to
individual assets on the company's ledger.
Those numbers are where HealthSouth executives hid a
big part of a giant fraud. This blind spot in the firm's auditing procedures
is a key reason why former HealthSouth executives, 15 of whom have pleaded
guilty to fraud charges, were able to overstate profits by $3 billion without
anyone from Ernst & Young noticing until March 2003, when federal agents
began making arrests.
A look at the risk-based approach also helps explain
why investors continue to be socked by accounting scandals, from WorldCom Inc.
and Tyco International Ltd. to Parmalat SpA, the Italian dairy company that
admitted faking $4.8 billion in cash. Just because an accounting firm says it
has audited a company's numbers doesn't mean it actually has checked them.
In a September 2003 speech, Daniel
Goelzer, a member of the auditing profession's new regulator, the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board, called the risk-based approach one of the
key factors "that seem to have contributed to the erosion of trust in
auditing." Faced with difficulty in raising audit fees, Mr. Goelzer said,
the major accounting firms during the 1990s began to stress cost controls. And
they began to place greater emphasis on planning the scope of their work based
on auditors' judgments about which clients are risky and which areas of a
company's financial reports are most prone to error or fraud.
Auditors still plow through "high
risk" items, such as derivative financial instruments or "related
party" business dealings between a company and its executives. But
ostensibly "low risk" items -- such as cash on the balance sheet or
accounts that fluctuate little from year to year -- often get no more than a
cursory review, for years at a stretch. Instead, auditors rely more heavily on
what management tells them and the auditors' assessments of a company's
"internal controls."
Old and New
A 2001 brochure by KPMG LLP, which
claims to have pioneered the risk-based audit during the early 1990s,
explained the difference between the old and new ways. Under a traditional
"bottom up" audit, "the auditor gains assurance by examining
all of the component parts of the financial statements, ensuring that the
transactions recorded are complete and accurate." By comparison, under
the "top down" risk-based audit methodology, auditors focus
"less on the details of individual transactions" and use their
knowledge of a company's business and organization "to identify risks
that could affect the financial statements and to target audit effort in those
areas."
So, for instance, if controls over a
company's sales and customer IOUs are perceived to be strong, the auditor
might mail out only a limited number of confirmation requests to companies
that do business with the audit client at the end of the year. Instead, the
auditor would rely more on the numbers spit out by the company's computers.
For inventory, the lower the perceived
risk of errors or fraud, the less frequently junior-level accountants might be
dispatched on surprise visits to a client's warehouses to oversee the
company's procedures for counting unsold goods. If cash and securities on the
balance sheet are deemed low risk, the auditor might mail out only a relative
handful of confirmation requests to a company's banks or brokerage firms.
In theory, the risk-based approach
should work fine, if an auditor is good at identifying the areas where
misstatements are most likely to occur. Proponents advocate the shift as a
cost-efficient improvement. They also say it forces auditors to pay needed
attention to areas that are more subjective or complex.
"The problem is that there's not a
lot of evidence that auditors are very good at assessing risk," says
Charles Cullinan, an accounting professor at Bryant College in Smithfield,
R.I., and co-author of a 2002 study that criticized the re-engineered audit
process as ineffective at detecting fraud. "If you assess risk as low,
and it really isn't low, you really could be missing the critical issues in
the audit."
Auditors can't check all of a company's
numbers, since that would make audits too expensive, particularly in an age of
sprawling multinationals. The tools at auditors' disposal can't ensure the
reliability of a company's numbers with absolute certainty. And in many ways,
they haven't changed much over the modern industry's 160-year history.
Auditors scan the accounting records
for inconsistencies. They ask people questions. That can mean independently
contacting a client's customers to make sure they haven't struck undocumented
side deals -- such as agreeing to buy more products today in exchange for a
salesperson's oral promises of future discounts. They search for unrecorded
liabilities by tracing cash disbursements to make sure the obligations are
recorded properly. They examine invoices and the terms of sales contracts to
check if a company is recording revenue prematurely.
Auditors are supposed to avoid becoming
predictable. Otherwise, a client's management might figure out how to sneak
things by them. It's also important to sample-test tiny accounting entries,
even as low as a couple of hundred dollars. An old accounting trick is to
fudge lots of tiny entries that appear insignificant individually but
materially distort a company's financial statements when taken together.
Facing a crush of shareholder lawsuits
over the accounting scandals of the past four years, the Big Four accounting
firms say they are pouring tens of millions of dollars into improving their
auditing techniques. KPMG's investigative division has doubled to 280 its
force of forensic specialists, some hailing from the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP auditors attend seminars run by
former Central Intelligence Agency operatives on how to spot deceitful
managers by scrutinizing body language and verbal cues. Role-playing exercises
teach how to stand up to a company's management.
But the firms aren't backing away from
the concept of the risk-based audit itself. "It would really be
negligent" not to take a risk-based approach, says Greg Weaver, head of
Deloitte & Touche LLP's U.S. audit practice. Auditors need to
"understand the areas that are likely to be more subject to error,"
he says. "Some might believe that if you cover those high-risk areas, you
could do less work in other areas." But, he adds, "I don't think
that's been a problem at Deloitte."
Mr. Lamphron, the Ernst & Young
partner, and his firm blame HealthSouth's former executives for deceiving
them. Mr. Lamphron declined to comment for this article. Testifying before a
congressional subcommittee in November, he said he had looked through his
audit papers and "tried to find that one string that, had we yanked it,
would have unraveled this fraud. I know we planned and conducted a solid
audit. We asked the right questions. We sought out the right documentation.
Had we asked for additional documentation here or asked another question
there, I think that it would have generated another false document and another
lie."
The pioneers of the auditing industry
had a more can-do spirit. In Britain during the 1840s, William Deloitte, whose
firm continues today as Deloitte & Touche, made a name for himself by
helping to unravel frauds at the Great Eastern Steamship Co. and Great
Northern Railway. A growing breed of professionals such as William Cooper,
whose name lives on in PricewaterhouseCoopers, began advertising their
services as an essential means for rooting out fraud.
"The auditor who is able to detect
fraud is -- other things being equal -- a better man than the auditor who
cannot," wrote influential British accountant Lawrence Dicksee in his
1892 book, "Auditing," one of the earliest on the subject.
But in the U.S., the notion of the
auditor as detective never quite took off. The Securities and Exchange
Commission in the 1930s made audits mandatory for public companies. The
auditing profession faced its first real public test in 1937, when an
accounting scandal broke open at McKesson & Robbins: More than 20% of the
assets reported by the drug company were fictitious inventory and customer
IOUs. The auditors had been fooled by forged documents.
The case triggered some reforms.
Auditing standards began requiring that auditors perform more substantive
tests, such as contacting third parties to confirm customer IOUs and
physically inspecting clients' warehouses to check inventories. However, the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the group that set
auditing standards, repeatedly emphasized the limitations on auditors' ability
to detect fraud, fearing liability exposure for its members.
By the 1970s, a new force emerged to
erode audit quality: price competition. For decades, the AICPA had barred
auditors from publicly advertising their services, making uninvited
solicitations to rival firms' clients or participating in competitive-bidding
contests. The institute was forced to lift those bans, however, when the
federal government deemed them anticompetitive and threatened to bring
antitrust lawsuits.
Bidding wars ensued. The pressures to
hold down hours on a job "inadvertently discouraged auditors to look
for" fraud, says Toby Bishop, president of the Association of Certified
Fraud Examiners, a professional association.
Increasingly, audits became a commodity
product. Flat-fee pricing became common. The big accounting firms spent much
of the 1980s and 1990s building more-lucrative consulting operations. Many
audit clients soon were paying their independent accounting firms far more
money for consulting than auditing. The audit had become a mere foot in the
door for the consultants. Economic pressures also brought a wave of mergers,
winnowing down the number of accounting firms just as the number of publicly
traded companies was exploding and corporate financial statements were
becoming more complex.
Even before the recent rash of
accounting scandals, the shift away from extensive line-by-line number
crunching was drawing criticism. In an October 1999 speech, Lynn Turner, then
the SEC's chief accountant, noted that more than 80% of the agency's
accounting-fraud cases from 1987 to 1997 involved top executives. While the
risk-based approach was focusing on information systems and the employees who
fed them, auditors really needed to expand their scrutiny to include top
executives, who with a few keystrokes could override their companies' systems.
Looking back, the risk-based approach's
flaws are on display at a variety of accounting scandals, from WorldCom to
Tyco to HealthSouth.
When WorldCom was a small, start-up
telecommunications company, its outside auditor, Arthur Andersen LLP, did
things the old-fashioned way. It tested the thousands of details of individual
transactions, and it reviewed and confirmed the items in WorldCom's general
ledger, where the company's accounting entries were first logged.
But as WorldCom grew, Andersen shifted
toward what it called a risk-based "business audit process." By
1998, it was incurring more costs to audit WorldCom than it was billing,
making up the difference with fees for consulting and other work, according to
an investigative report last year by WorldCom's audit committee. In its 2000
audit proposal to WorldCom, Andersen said it considered itself "a
committed member of [WorldCom's] team" and saw the company as a
"flagship client and a crown jewel" of the firm.
Under the revised audit approach,
Andersen used sophisticated software to analyze WorldCom's financial
statements. The auditors gathered for brainstorming sessions, imagining ways
WorldCom might cook its books. After identifying areas of high risk, the
auditors checked the adequacy of internal controls in those areas by reviewing
the company's procedures, discussing them with some employees and performing
sample tests to see if the procedures were followed.
'Maximum Risk'
When questions arose, the auditors
relied on the answers supplied by management, even though their software had
rated WorldCom a "maximum risk" client, according to a January
report by WorldCom's bankruptcy examiner, former U.S. Attorney General Richard
Thornburgh.
One question that Andersen auditors
routinely asked WorldCom management was whether they had made any "top
side" adjustments -- meaning unusual accounting entries in a company's
general ledger that are recorded after the books for a given quarter had
closed. Each year, from 1999 through 2002, WorldCom management told the
auditors they hadn't. According to Mr. Thornburgh's report, the auditors
conducted no testing to corroborate if that was true.
They did check to see if there were any
major swings in the items on the company's consolidated balance sheet. There
weren't any, and from this, the auditors concluded that follow-up procedures
weren't necessary. Indeed, WorldCom executives had manipulated its numbers so
there wouldn't be any unusual variances.
Had the auditors dug into specific
journal entries -- the debits and credits that are the initial entries of
transactions or events into a company's accounting systems -- they would have
seen hundreds of huge entries of suspiciously round numbers that had no
supporting documentation.
The sole documentation for one $239
million journal entry, recorded after the close of the 1999 fourth quarter,
was a sticky note bearing the number "$239,000,000," according to
the WorldCom audit committee's report. Sometimes the "top side"
adjustments boosted earnings by reversing liabilities. Other times they
reclassified ordinary expenses as assets, which delayed recognition of costs.
Other unsupported journal entries included one for precisely $334 million in
July 2000, three weeks after the second quarter's books were closed. Another
was for exactly $560 million in July 2001.
Andersen signed its last audit report
for WorldCom in March 2002, saying the numbers were clean. Three months later,
WorldCom announced that top executives, including its former chief financial
officer, had improperly classified billions of dollars of ordinary expenses as
assets. The final tally of fraudulent profits hit $10.6 billion. WorldCom
filed for Chapter 11 reorganization in June 2002, marking the largest
bankruptcy in U.S. history. Now out of business, Andersen is appealing its
June 2002 felony conviction for obstruction of justice in connection with its
botched audits of Enron Corp.
"No matter what kind of audit you
do, it is virtually impossible for an auditor to detect purposeful fraud by
management," says Patrick Dorton, an Andersen spokesman. "And that's
exactly what happened at WorldCom."
PricewaterhouseCoopers also fell prone
to faulty risk assessments. In July, the SEC forced Tyco, the industrial
conglomerate, to restate its profits, which it inflated by $1.15 billion,
pretax, from 1998 to 2001. The next month, the SEC barred the lead partner on
the firm's Tyco audits from auditing publicly registered companies. His
alleged offense: fraudulently representing to investors that his firm had
conducted a proper audit. The SEC in its complaint said that the auditor,
Richard Scalzo, who settled without admitting or denying the allegations, saw
warning signs about top Tyco executives' integrity but never expanded his
team's audit procedures.
Mr. Scalzo declined to comment. A
PricewaterhouseCoopers spokesman declined to comment on the SEC's findings in
the Tyco matter.
Like Tyco and WorldCom, HealthSouth
grew mainly by buying other companies, using its own shares as currency. So it
needed to keep its stock price up. To do that, the company admitted last year,
it faked its profits.
In their audit-planning papers, Ernst
& Young auditors noted HealthSouth executives' "excessive
interest" in maintaining or increasing its stock price and earnings.
Twice since the 1990s, the Justice Department had filed Medicare-fraud suits
against HealthSouth.
But none of that shook the Ernst &
Young audit team's confidence in management's integrity, members of the team
later testified. And at little more than $1 million annually, Ernst &
Young's audits were fairly low cost. The firm charged slightly less to audit
HealthSouth's financial statements than it did for one of its other services
for HealthSouth: performing janitorial inspections of the company's 1,800
health-care facilities. The inspections, performed by junior-level accountants
armed with 50-point checklists, included checking to see that the toilets and
ceilings were free of stains, the magazine racks were neat and orderly, and
the trash receptacles all had liners.
Most of HealthSouth's fraud occurred in
an account called "contractual adjustments." This is an allowance on
the income statement that estimates the difference between the gross amount
charged to a patient and the amount that various insurers, including Medicare,
will pay for a specific treatment. The company manipulated the account to make
net revenue and bottom-line earnings look higher. But for every dollar of
illicit revenue, HealthSouth executives had to make a corresponding entry on
the balance sheet, where the company listed its assets and liabilities.
An Ernst & Young spokesman, Charlie
Perkins, says the firm "performed appropriate procedures" on the
contractual-adjustment account.
At an April 2003 court hearing, Ernst
& Young auditor William Curtis Miller testified that his team mainly had
performed "analytical type procedures" on the contractual
adjustments. These consisted of mathematical calculations to see if the
account had fluctuated sharply overall, which it hadn't. As for the
balance-sheet entries, prosecutors say HealthSouth executives knew the
auditors didn't look at increases of less than $5,000, a point Ernst &
Young acknowledges. So the executives broke up the entries into tiny pieces,
sprinkling them across lots of assets.
The company's ledger showed thousands
of unusual journal entries that reclassified everyday expenses -- such as
gasoline and auto-service bills -- as assets. Had the auditors seen those
items, one congresswoman noted at a November hearing, they would have spotted
that something was wrong. Mr. Lamphron conceded her point.
March 27, 2004 reply from
MacEwan Wright, Victoria University
[Mac.Wright@VU.EDU.AU]
-----Original Message-----
From:
Sent: Saturday, March 27, 2004 10:29 PM
Subject: Re: Attacks on Risk-Based Auditing
Dear Bob,
I wonder if this is not a case of throwing the baby
out with the bathwater. I mean the idea of risk based auditing is not in
itself a bad idea, The problem is that the idea of what constitutes risk is
not properly understood. As I interpret it - risk means probability of event
multiplied by cost of event. Risk as used in audit planning means probability
of event. It is obvious that the team did not do enough to properly evaluate
the inherent risk or more properly stated - the probability that management
wouold lie and cheat for profit.
It is am American attitude problem. An American
executive posted to an Australian company found the amount of work put into
finding out how honest potential employees were a waste of time - "just
bond them and sack them and claim the bond insurance if they cheat".
Bonding is virtually unheard of in Australia.
I feel that attitude may encourage fraud - the game
is what can each party get away with!
Sorry about the social implications.
Kind regards,
Mac Wright
March 27, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Mac,
You are correct about the fact that risk-based auditing has led to game
playing. Somehow the HealthSouth executives figured out that the risk of
getting caught with fraudulent transactions under $6,000 each was nearly zero
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