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Glossary
of Fraud Schemes and Terms - Per www.raa.gov. bt
Abuse: In some cultures, a minor Fraud or infraction.
Accomplice: In fraud, a partner to the fraud scheme.
See also Perpetrator and Shill.
Advance Fee Scheme: The Fraudster collects fees in
advance without ever intending to fulfill the
agreement to provide services or products.
Affidavit: A sworn statement.
Affiliate Bidding: A condition in purchasing when
multiple bids are tendered for a contract from a
single company under various names to give the
appearance of competition.
Agent: A person with an agency relationship (employee
or independent contractor).
"At will": An employment situation where the employee
is not protected from arbitrary firing -- the
employee works only at the pleasure of management and
may be terminated at any time for no reason. Contrast
"For cause."
Backdate: To post a date on a document earlier than
the actual creation date for purposes of deception.
Back Door: In computer fraud, unauthorized entry
point or weakness discovered by a Hacker. Similar to
Trapdoor, except that back doors are usually
pre-existing weaknesses.
Bait and Switch: In consumer fraud, advertising a low
cost item and then steering the customer to a higher
priced item when they come to buy, claiming the low
priced item was "sold out."
Bank Examiner Scheme: The Fraudster poses as a Bank
Examiner who is trying to catch a dishonest teller.
The Bank Examiner needs the victim to withdraw a
substantial sum from their account to test the
teller. The Bank Examiner then asks the victim to
hand over the cash for a receipt while they use the
cash as evidence. The fraudulent Bank Examiner then
disappears with the cash ,and the receipt turns out
to be worthless.
Bankruptcy Fraud: The Perpetrator files a notice of
bankruptcy. He then approaches each of his creditors
(who have received a cop of the notice of bankruptcy)
and tells each one in turn that they are the special
one that he wants to see get paid at least something.
The creditor often settles for 10% of the amount
owed. Once a settlement with one creditor is reached,
the Perpetrator approaches the next creditor, and so
on until all creditors have been settled with at a
small fraction of the outstanding amounts owed. The
Perpetrator then withdraws his petition for
bankruptcy, have extinguished most of his debt for a
small fraction of the original amount.
Bid Rigging: In purchasing, any scheme that gives the
appearance of competitive bids but is actually not
competitive because the participants establish the
winner before submitting bids for the contract. See
Affiliate Bidding and Bid Rotation.
Bid Rotation: In purchasing when bidders for
contracts Collude to distribute work among themselves
by establishing which among them will win particular
bids.
Boiler Room Operation: A fraud scheme that attempts
to sell worthless securities (or similar assets) over
the telephone through high pressure sales tactics. If
the money is sent in or the credit card number given
out, there is nothing of value received.
Bribery: To offer money in exchange for favourite
treatment or to compel or influence some action.
Official (government employee or elected official)
bribery involves a promise for acting or withholding
some official act. Official bribery (Corruption) is
unlawful in most cultures. Commercial Bribery is
known as "facilitating payments" in some cultures and
is not a crime in most cultures, although it often is
against the organization's policies and procedures.
Bucket Shop: A securities fraud scheme that pretends
to buy and sell securities for customers, but
actually never invests the money it receives. The
scheme depends upon stock price manipulation or a
continuously rising market to encourage more buyers
than sellers. Also associated sometimes with the
Pump-and-Dump scheme.
Case Method: In fraud Investigation, a six-step
process of gathering evidence in order to identify a
Suspect.
Chain of Custody: In evidentiary matters, the record
of possession from original discovery until produced
at trial. If the chain of custody is broken or
unclear, the Evidence may be challenged as not the
original or not in its original condition.
Chain Letter Schemes: Letters with names listed and
claims that the recipient of the letter, by putting
their name on the list, removing the top name and
sending them some nominal amount, then mailing the
new list to some number of friends and acquaintances,
will receive a lot of riches in the mail. There is
usually also a "curse" or bad luck associated with
individuals who "break the chain."
Check Kiting: See Kiting.
Code of Conduct: See Code of Ethics.
Code of Ethics: A document adopted by an organization
that describes the expectations of the organization
of employee and management behaviour to all
employees, suppliers, customers, the government, and
the community.
Coerce: To influence action against someone's will,
usually by threat.
Collateral Frauds: Fraudulent representing collateral
for loans that (1) does not exist, (2) is not owned
by the loan applicant, or (3) is grossly over-valued,
or some or all of these.
Collude: In the context of Fraud, to act together for
a fraudulent purpose.
Commercial Bribery: Giving and accepting payments to
favour or not favour a commercial transaction or
relationship. See also Bribery and Corruption.
Computer Virus: See Virus.
Con: Short form of Confidence Game.
Conceal Concealment: The second step in committing a
Fraud. To hide from view.
Confidence Game: A fraud scheme where the Perpetrator
gains the confidence of the Mark to defraud the Mark
in some way. Perfect Confidence Games are so
effective that Marks do not report them to the
authorities for fear of looking foolish or because
the game involved something unlawful (such as illegal
gambling).
Conflict of Interest: An employee owes a duty to the
employer to act in the interest of the employer (and
no other) when carrying out the duties of an
employer. A Conflict of Interest exists when the
employee has some personal kinship, friendship or
financial interest in the transaction that may divide
the employee's interests and put his duty to his
employer in jeopardy.
Conspiracy: Two or more persons come together for the
purpose of committing a Fraud.
Conversion: The third step in a Fraud. To exchange
for personal gain.
"Cooking the Books": Altering the official accounts
to deceive. See also Journal Entry Fraud.
Corruption: Bribery of a government official. See
also Commercial Bribery.
Cost of Goods Sold changes: Unusual changes in cost
of goods sold as a percentage of sales may be an
indicator of the theft of revenue or theft of
finished goods inventory. See Fictitious Refunds
Fraud.
Covert: Hidden or secret, as in Covert Operations.
Covert Operation: A plan or activity to obtain
evidence through Operatives or Agents whose true role
is undisclosed to the target. Examples of covert
operations include Undercover work and Pretense. See
also Ruse.
Cyber-crime: Referring to frauds perpetrated on the
Internet or through the use of computers.
Cycle Counts: In inventory control, counting various
portions of the inventory frequently until it is all
counted (vs. counting the whole inventory once a
quarter or once a year).
Defalcation: A fancy word for Fraud, theft or other
dishonest act relating to a position of trust in an
organization.
Defamation: The act of knowingly uttering Slander or
printing Libel that is untrue but harms another
person's character and reputation.
Denial of Access attack: A computer Virus or computer
program run to generate many thousands of requests to
the central computer, thereby tying up the processor
and denying legitimate requests of access.
Deposition: A pre-trial legal proceeding in which a
person is questioned under oath by an attorney,
usually witnessed and recorded by audio, video,
and/or written verbatim notes. The purpose of the
deposition is to discover Evidence that may be used
later at trial or to induce the person to make
statements of knowledge or fact that can be used at
trial.
Directory Advertising Schemes: Fraudulent invoices
claiming that the company is listed in a business
directory and requesting payment. There may or may
not be such a directory, and the directory may or may
not ever be distributed or distributed as widely as
claimed. For certain, no one ever ordered or
authorized the directory advertisement. See also
Shipping Short.
Direct Inward System Access: A feature on PBX
(Private Branch Exchange) telephone equipment that is
vulnerable to fraud. It is used to allow people
outside of the office to call anywhere in the world
through the DISA port using a toll-free number and a
PIN (Personal Identification Number). Hackers attack
the PBX through the toll-free number and try to break
in by guessing the PIN. If successful, the hackers
can use the telephone network of the victim to place
calls billed back to the victim.
DISA: See Direct Inward System Access.
Documentary Evidence: Written or photographic
representations of fact.
Dual Custody: A method of protecting cash by
requiring all cash assets handled by two people (two
signatures, two keys, two people counting, etc.).
Dummy: Fictitious.
"Dumpster Diving": Rummaging through someone's trash
to obtain information.
Eavesdropping: See Electronic Surveillance.
Electronic Surveillance: Listening and/or recording
activities using electronic means (audio and video)
without being detected. In some jurisdictions,
electronic surveillance is unlawful without
permission from all parties.
Embezzlement: Theft of money from an employer by an
employee using false entries in accounting records to
cover up the crime. See also Journal Entry Fraud.
Employee Account Fraud: When employees are also
customers, employees may make unauthorized
adjustments to their accounts (including write-off).
Entrapment: Unlawfully lured into a crime by a police
officer. A common defense in a criminal activity
where the criminal claims they were innocent and
would not have been involved in the crime otherwise.
Expense Report Fraud: Charging unauthorized or
fictitious amounts on an expense report. See Padding
Expense Accounts.
Exposure: The potential for loss.
Extortion: The offer to keep from harm in exchange
for money or other consideration. The demand for
Restitution in exchange for not prosecuting a crime
is a form of extortion.
Factors of Fraud: Opportunity (an opening or control
weakness to be able to commit the fraud), Pressure (a
problem that cannot be shared or resolved), and
Attitude (a propensity to steal or the ability to
rationalize fraudulent behavior). All frauds have
these three factors as a cause.
False Claims: Claims for reimbursement by an employee
or contractor for nonexistent or inflated expenses.
False claims can be for business expenses or personal
expenses (such as medical). See Padding Expense
Accounts.
False Credentials: Misrepresenting education or
experience or professional certification to
fraudulently obtain and hold employment.
False Imprisonment: During an Interrogation, blocking
the subject's avenue of escape, essentially holding
the person against their will. Unless the person has
been arrested, they may not be detained against their
will at any time.
False Pretense: See Pretense, Ruse or Subterfuge.
Fictitious Refunds Scheme: Preparing false documents
of refunds to cover thefts of cash. A retail
cashiering fraud. See Cost of Goods Sold changes.
Fictitious Sales: A scheme to record sales to
fictitious customers or fictitious sales to existing
customers at the end of one period and reversing the
transactions at the beginning of the next period. The
purpose of the scheme is to inflate sales to create
false profit statements or earn unwarranted bonuses.
Excessive credit memos or sales cancellations at the
beginning of an accounting period can be an indicator
of this fraud.
Fiduciary Duty: The acts necessary (usually of an
authorized employee or agent) to carry out a
responsibility to care for assets prudently. See
Embezzlement.
Firewall: A software program that protects direct
access to a local area network by establishing a
"public" network in front of the "trusted" network.
The purpose of the program is to secure data and
systems from Hackers.
"For cause": An employment arrangement where
employees may only be terminated for a proven cause.
For contrast, see "At will."
Forensic: Suitable for use in a court proceeding.
Forensic Auditing: Examination of a business process
for evidence of Fraud.
Forgery: Creation of false documents or altering
existing documents, especially financial instruments
or other authorizations.
Fraud: A theft, concealment and conversion to
personal gain of another's money, physical assets,
information, or time.
Fraud Scenarios: A method of developing mental models
of possible Frauds. "Thinking like a crook."
Fraudster: One who commits the Fraud.
"Ghost" employees: Fictitious employees on the
payroll, for whom the supervisor or manager receives
the extra paychecks.
Hacker: (Old) One who enjoys unraveling the mysteries
of the computer. (Modern) A person who attacks
another's computer and seeks to gain unauthorized
access by hacking (breaking down) the computer's
logical security.
Hearsay: A weak form of evidence that is an opinion
of the witness or that is not personally and directly
known to them.
Hidden Bank Accounts: A possible indication of
Embezzlement, Bribery or Kickback frauds.
Hot Line: A telephone number to report suspected
Fraud. Often hot lines are handled as anonymous tips.
Impeach: In Testimony, to catch the person in a lie
or contradiction of fact.
Improprieties: A polite word for Frauds and
wrongdoings.
Inflated Inventory: An indication of Embezzlement or
possible theft of inventory. See Inventory Shrinkage.
Influence Pedaling: The offer by a government
official to use their office to influence actions for
a private party in return for something of value.
Informant: A person, such as a co-worker or friend of
the accused, used in the investigation of a fraud who
may know something about the crime but is otherwise
not involved.
Insider Trading: Using business information not
released to the public to reap profits trading in the
financial markets.
Interrogation: An interview of a suspect conducted
for the main purpose of obtaining an admission of
guilt, to identify and neutralize defenses the target
may raise, and to obtain information used to impeach
the Suspect.
Interview: A structured (planned) question and answer
session with a person designed to elicit information.
Inventory Shrinkage: Theft of physical inventory.
Investigation: A structured gathering of Documentary
Evidence and Testimony to solve a reported Fraud.
Irregularity: A polite word for Fraud.
Journal Entry Fraud: Using accounting journal entries
to fraudulently adjust financial statements. See also
Embezzlement.
Kickback: A payment by a vendor to an employee at the
request of the employee in order for the vendor to
receive favorable treatment.
Kiting: Using several bank accounts in different
banks, making deposits and writing checks against the
accounts before the deposit checks clear the banking
system, creating a "float" of money out of nothing
more than the lag in time while checks clear and post
to their respective accounts.
Lapping: Stealing a customer payment and then using a
subsequent customer payment to cover the previous
customer's account. This overlapping payments creates
a "float" of money that can be used as long as all
payments are eventually posted. What usually occurs
is that the lapping process builds up like a giant
pyramid until it falls apart when not enough payments
are available to cover the amounts owed.
Libel: Knowingly publishing false statements about
another person that creates harm.
Lie Detector: See Polygraph.
Lifestyle changes: A possible indicator of theft is
the sudden change in lifestyle such as exhibiting
more than usual wealth.
"Lowballing": Placing an unusually low bid to win the
business. Often with the intent to inflate the price
later with extras or change orders. Also can indicate
a defective Request for Proposal.
Maintenance Port: An access point in the PBX (Private
Branch Exchange) telephone equipment that is
vulnerable to fraud. The port exists to allow the
manufacturer's repair technicians to call into the
PBX from a remote location and diagnose problems or
administer maintenance software patches. Also known
as the Remote Access Unit, or RAU.
Malicious Prosecution: Targeting someone for
prosecution without reasonable grounds for suspicion.
Mark: The intended victim of a Swindle or Confidence
Game.
Misappropriation: A polite word for theft.
MLM: See Multi-Level Marketing.
Moving Surveillance: Following the target of
surveillance from one position to another, as in
Shadowing or Tailing a suspect.
Multi-Level Marketing: A form of Pyramid Scheme, not
necessarily fraudulent, where sales are made to
retail customers and commissions earned through many
levels of the chain within the pyramid. The chain is
built and expanded by each layer constantly
recruiting more people to sell the product or
service.
Negative Invoicing: Using an invoice for a negative
amount to cover a theft of a customer payment. The
negative invoice is less noticeable than a credit
memorandum and usually under less stringent control.
A negative invoice is a symptom of possible theft.
Nigerian Letter: A fraud scheme that now includes fax
and email versions of a letter from a supposed
official in Nigeria. The official has a large sum of
money (often stated as $20 to $30 million) to
transfer out of the country. Due to exchange
controls, the official asks for the victim's help
with the transfer. All that is required to earn a
hefty reward/commission is to furnish the Nigerian
official with your bank account number, and they will
handle the rest. What actually happens is that the
Perpetrator depletes the victim's account.
Obstruction of Justice: Impeding a lawful
Investigation by such acts as providing false
documents, false testimony, destruction of evidence,
and intimidating witnesses.
Ombudsman: A person who acts as an advocate for
employee grievances against the organization. Also, a
neutral party to whom employees can turn to report
Fraud.
Operative: A person acting on your behalf or under
your care, custody or control in a specific manner. A
source or Informant working Undercover in Covert
Operations is an operative. There is no agency
relationship with an operative as with an Agent.
Overbilling schemes: Padding invoices with extraneous
or fictitious items. Intentional duplicate billing,
such as billing two parties for the same work is also
an overbilling scheme.
Overt: Open, not hidden. See Covert for contrast.
Out-of-Route: Outside sales or service workers who
deviate from their normal route or time schedule,
such as conducting personal errands or taking
excessively long coffee or lunch breaks.
Outstanding Items: In checking operations, checks
that have been written but not cleared through the
bank. An equivalent banking term for interbank
transactions.
Padding Expense Accounts: Adding extra expense items
or inflating the value of legitimate expense items to
obtain unwarranted reimbursements.
Padding Overtime: Adding extra hours to falsely
inflate the payroll and earn unwarranted pay.
Palming: To conceal in the hand.
Perjury: Lying under oath, including sworn court
appearances, Depositions, Affidavits, and other sworn
statements and documents.
Perpetrator: The person who commits the Fraud.
Personal Identification Number: A code used to access
personal data or accounts.
Pilfering: Theft, usually referring to theft of
physical goods. In retail business, customer theft is
known as Shoplifting and employee theft is called
pilfering. Occasionally used also with theft of cash,
especially petty cash or for small thefts.
PIN: See Personal Identification Number.
Pigeon Drop: A fraud scheme that involves a
wallet/purse/envelope with a large sum of money in it
but no identification. The Perpetrator and
Accomplice, together with the victim "finds" the
wallet, and the victim is persuaded to withdraw a sum
of money as "good faith" to share in the cache. The
victim is distracted and the Perpetrators steal the
money and disappear with it.
"Pingponging": In medical insurance or Workers
Compensation Fraud, referring patients to other
doctors in the same clinic in order to claim
reimbursement for "consultations" rather than for
actual treatment. See also False Claims.
Polygraph: A machine for recording a number of life
signs (breathing rate, pulse, etc.) to aid in
determining if a Suspect is lying. Also known as a
Lie Detector.
Ponzi Scheme: A fraud in which a high rate of return
is promised on investments. The first few investors
receive the high rate of return from part of the
investments of later victims. At no time is any
actual investment made.
Pretense: Also False Pretense. To represent something
to be what it is not. See Ruse and Subterfuge.
"Pump-and-Dump": Manipulating stock prices by
artificially creating demand through rumor, high
pressure sales tactics, or multiple large orders. The
price is "pumped" upwards and then when other
investors join the trend, the original investors
"dump" the stock in a rapid sell-off. See also Bucket
Shop.
Pyramid Scheme: A commercial version of the Chain
Letter scheme where the Fraudster sells bogus
distributorships, franchises or business opportunity
plans to people who are in turn induced to do the
same. See also Multi-Level Marketing.
"Razoring": Removing the last check, invoice,
purchase order or other sequentially numbered item
from a pad of items by carefully cutting with a razor
around the staple holding the pad together. In this
manner, fictitious transactions can be documented on
official forms.
RAU: Remote Access Unit. Also known as the
Maintenance Port.
Reconciliation: A process of comparing details with
control totals, such as checks paid during the month
and deposits made that month with the change in bank
balance at end of the month.
Red Flags: Symptoms and indicators (of Fraud).
Remote Access Unit: See Maintenance Port.
Request for Proposal: A request to potential vendors
for tender offers or bids to perform a service or
provide a product (or both) to solve a particular
business problem. See also Request for Quote.
Request for Quote: A request to potential vendors for
price quotes and delivery terms -- usually for much
simpler procurement requirements than Request for
Proposals.
Restitution: Restoring money or property to the
victim of a Fraud.
Resume Inflation: See False Credentials.
RFP: See Request for Proposal.
RFQ: See Request for Quote.
Rube: A slang term for a Mark or victim, especially
someone who appears naﶥ.
Ruse: A scheme that tries to make something appear as
something else. Hiding the true meaning or acting out
a lie. A Subterfuge or Pretense.
Sabotage: Destroying or delaying some part of the
business process.
"Salami": In banking, a fraud that involves taking
all of the "round-down" fractional cents from
periodic interest payments and crediting them to a
single account. Thus each transaction has only a thin
slice removed.
"Salting" cash: Testing accounts receivable employee
honesty by placing some cash in the customer
receivables process to see if it is reported as cash
or stolen.
Secure Socket Layer: A protocol used in electronic
commerce to afford more security to transactions on
the Internet.
Self-approval: The act of authorizing a transaction
for one's own benefits or gains, or an act of
approval for an activity in which the approval
authority participated.
Sewer Service: Many consumer frauds rely on
litigation to win judgments to collect the proceeds
of the fraud. These organizations limit the ability
of the victim to defend against this litigation by
not informing them of the suit (literally dropping
the Subpoena "down the sewer") and filing false
Affidavits in court that the litigation papers had
been properly served.
Shadowing: Following the suspect or target of
Surveillance from place to place to observe
activities without being detected.
Shell Game: A game where a pebble or dried pea is
hidden under one of three shells or cans. The
Perpetrator moves the shells around quickly, often
Palming the pebble, and then asks the Mark to choose
the shell where the pea is located. A common street
Confidence Game. See also Sleight-of-hand.
Shill: An person in a Confidence Game that acts as a
participant to draw in the Mark. An Accomplice -- one
who is paid to play as part of a Swindle. Derived
from casino gambling, where the shill is a paid
employee used to attract other gamblers.
Shoplifting: Customer theft from retail inventory.
See also Pilfering.
"Short-and-Over": An account used in cashiering
operations to track the imbalance of cash to sales
recorded. A perfectly balanced cash operation
day-after-day, with no shorts or overs, is a symptom
of possible theft. It is unusual to never make
mistakes handling money.
Shorting: In medical frauds, delivering less
prescription medicine than actually charged to the
insurance company or government.
Short Shipping: Shipping less than the quantity shown
on the invoice (or shipping nothing at all; see
Directory Advertising Scheme).
"Shoulder Surfing": Observing someone using a PIN
(Personal Identification Number) by covertly looking
over their shoulder, sometimes with the aid of
binoculars or video camera with zoom lens.
Shrinkage: See Inventory Shrinkage.
Slander: Knowingly uttering false statements about
another person that causes harm.
Sleight-of-hand: A magician's trick. The ability to
conceal a physical action by distracting the
participant. See also Palming.
Spying: See Surveillance.
SSL: See Secure Socket Layer.
Stakeout: See Stationary Surveillance.
Stationary Surveillance: Observation of activities of
a suspect from one vantage point. Also known as a
Stakeout.
Statutory Employee: An employee by action and tax
law, but not actually on the payroll. There are
potential violations of USA tax and employment
benefits laws if independent contractors and
consultants are found to be statutory employees
instead.
Suborn: The act of Bribery.
Subterfuge: Masking the true nature or reason for an
action.
Surveillance: Gathering evidence through observation
from outside of the operation (contrasted with
Undercover). Surveillance can be Moving Surveillance,
Stationary Surveillance or Electronic Surveillance.
Also known as Spying or Eavesdropping.
Suspect (n.): The target of the fraud Investigation.
See also Perpetrator and Fraudster.
Suspect (v.): To place under suspicion of wrongdoing.
Swindle: A scheme to obtain money by Ruse or False
Pretense. See also Confidence Game.
Tailing: See Shadowing.
Testimony: Oral evidence (representations of fact)
taken by Interview or Interrogation. Testimonial
evidence is necessarily weaker than Documentary
Evidence.
Theft: The first step in a Fraud. Unlawfully taking.
"Thief's Calculator": A collection of
innocent-looking bits and pieces near the cash
register for the purpose of tracking the amount of
cash stolen by Skimming.
"Tone at the Top": The messages and actions of senior
management in relation to Fraud detection and
deterrence.
Trapdoor: In computer fraud, a means of unauthorized
access to the computer operating system or files,
usually placed by a Hacker.
Trojan Horse: A type of computer program that remains
inert (and possibly hidden) until activated by an
external event such as a date. Used as Viruses to
disrupt or destroy computer operations, or used to
open a Trapdoor for unauthorized access.
Unauthorized Use: Policies should be in place to
determine what business resources may be used for
personal business and at what times. Other use
constitutes Theft.
Undercover: Secret or Covert Operations where a
person works under an assumed identity, adopts a
disguise, or takes on an assumed role in order to
gather evidence.
Under-ring: To record less than the actual sales
price. Usually refers to a cashier ringing a sale on
a cash register. Under-rings may be a method used in
Skimming cash by the cashier, or they may be used to
give unauthorized discounts to an Accomplice.
Unethical: Behavior that does not meet community
standards for "right behavior," but that does not
violate any laws either.
Unlawful: Behavior that violates established laws.
Virus: In computer operations, a program that is
deliberately released to a system with the ability to
replicate itself and spread by attaching unauthorized
data to files. Viruses can be benign, just taking up
disk storage space, or they may be vicious and
actually destroy data or deny authorized access.
Voids: In cashiering, ringing a "Void" to cancel a
previous sale. Excessive voids may be a sign of
theft.
Whistleblowing: The act of an employee revealing
suspected fraud (usually involving senior management)
to an outside third party.
Witnesses: People who may have information of a Fraud
based on observation.
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