Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,651,821 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

"Thievery" numbers don't add up. (Letters).


I read with interest "Control Cash-Register Thievery Thievery
See also Gangsterism, Highwaymen, Outlawry.

Alfarache, Guzmán de

picaresque, peripatetic thief; lived by unscrupulous wits. [Span. Lit.
" (JofA, Jun. 02, page 88), but the following made me scratch my head:

"Each evening, just before closing all eight registers, someone would ring up a several-hundred-dollar refund TO REFUND. To pay back by the party who has received it, to the party who has paid it, money which ought not to have been paid.
     2. On a deficiency of assets, executors and administrators cum testamento annexo, are entitled to have refunded to them legacies
 on one, remove an equal amount of cash and close out the register for the day. The amounts ranged from $200 to $700." The article also said: "Of the $800,000 stolen in three years...."

If $800,000 were stolen in three years and the store was open 365 days a year, the average amount stolen would be $731 per day--yet the article told us that $200 to $700 was removed from one register each day.

I also noted other unusual items in the article such as the ratio of credit card receipts to cash that, if correct, would indicate the reported sales of the store averaged $550,000 per year and reflected at least $267,000 a year of credit memos A Credit Memo (short for "credit memorandum") is a commercial document issued by a seller to a buyer, indicating the products, quantities and agreed prices for products or services that the seller provided the buyer with, but the buyer returned or did not receive. . Forget tracking credit memos--if the sales were $817,000 and only $550,000 was reported, then the gross profit percentage would be an immediate clue to everyone, especially if there were 13 other stores.

Further, the article pointed out the author reconciled the $800,000 fraud and that the insurance deductible That which may be taken away or subtracted. In taxation, an item that may be subtracted from gross income or adjusted gross income in determining taxable income (e.g., interest expenses, charitable contributions, certain taxes).  was $500,000. I'm guessing the insurer An individual or company who, through a contractual agreement, undertakes to compensate specified losses, liability, or damages incurred by another individual.

An insurer is frequently an insurance company and is also known as an underwriter.
 reimbursed the discounted retail chain $300,000, but the author waived his fee because he felt his work was inadequate.

I'm sure all this can be explained, but I believe this succinct suc·cinct  
adj. suc·cinct·er, suc·cinct·est
1. Characterized by clear, precise expression in few words; concise and terse: a succinct reply; a succinct style.

2.
 presentation could leave readers guessing. My point is that summarizing a fraud investigation, which generally is very detailed and laborious la·bo·ri·ous  
adj.
1. Marked by or requiring long, hard work: spent many laborious hours on the project.

2. Hard-working; industrious.
, needs to be extremely accurate or it's possible the work can lose its credibility.
Charles (Chuck) T. VanBelle Jr., CPA
Perrysburg, Ohio


Author's reply: The sentence in question should have read: "Each evening, just before closing all eight registers, someone would ring up a several-hundred-dollar refund on one or more, remove an equal amount of cash and close out the register for the day."
Joseph T. Wells, CFE, CPA
Austin, Texas
COPYRIGHT 2002 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:VanBelle, Charles T., Jr.
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Date:Oct 1, 2002
Words:338
Previous Article:Remote accessibility revisited. (Letters).
Next Article:Professional responsibility comes first.



Related Articles
Angels and superstars.(Review)
Letters in the Editor's Mailbag.(Letters)(Letter to the Editor)
Letters in the Editor's Mailbag.(Letters)(Letter to the Editor)
THEFTS OF IRREPLACEABLE DOCUMENTS TAKE TOLL ON LIBRARIES.(NEWS)
Expertise speeds results. (Entrepreneur's Notebook).(food service consultant)(Brief Article)
'ECLECTIC' COMES ALIVE EVERYTHING FROM DJS TO JAZZ DIVAS WILL TAKE THE STAGE SATURDAY AT UNIVERSAL.(U)
The hoax stops here. (Tech News).(e-mail hoaxes)
Ives, David. Scrib.(Brief Article)(Young Adult Review)(Book Review)
Book of Daniel show cancelled: low ratings, protests from religious right cited as reasons.(CULTURE)
LIPS HAVE LOTS TO SAY.(U)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles