Archive for December, 2009

28
Dec/09
1

Employee Dishonesty Insurance – A Great Read

I just finished a book I purchased on-line on employee embezzlement I highly recommend.  Here are the specifics:

Stopping Employee Theft: What Every Employer Must Know.

R.W. Deckert      ISBN # 0-9662640-0-2

This book was not what I expected.  I thought this book would be another book written for the business owner audience on internal controls and segregation of duties to prevent employee thefts – and it does include these topics.

However, the author’s background included over twenty years working as an insurance claims adjuster for fidelity and employee dishonesty claims, and he spends the first half of the book educating the reader on what this coverage and complimentary policies entails.  From describing the different types of coverages and the importance of every employer to have such coverages, through what each type of coverage covers and doesn’t cover, he explains the entire claims process through final resolution of the claim, from receipt of payment through denial of your claim.  He also provides much advice on how to properly file your claim to ensure the maximum assurance of payment on the claim.

Often in employee theft and embezzlement cases the funds are spent or otherwise unrecoverable, and the insurance policy is the only means for recovery.  All too often even today victim employers fail to carry adequate to no coverage for the risk of employees stealing from the business, leaving no means for recovery.  This book is the best book I have ever found that details out the issues relating to this insurance coverage and the claims process leading towards recovery.  It will be a valuable resource in my library.

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22
Dec/09
0

No Shortage of Embezzling

Tonight I did a simple Internet search through Google’s News, using the key word “embezzlement.”

The results – three screens of articles just from today’s publications on recent embezzlement cases, with a wide range of perpetrators and amounts involved.  The largest – a Wisconsin case – a recently discovered $4.5 million scheme by the vice president of finance at Koss.

Others worth noting – $330,000 in retirement funds stolen by the company’s president in New York; $3 million embezzled from a retired doctor in Michigan; $66,000 by a local hardware store bookkeeper in Providence; $45,000 by a physician office manager; $200,000 by union president in Manhattan; and $1 million by a finance clerk at a car dealership in Anaheim Hills – to name a few from today.  There was a church pastor who stole $18,000, a church bookkeeper who stole $90,000, and a former police chief who embezzled city funds to buy weapons for personal use.

Bear in mind that statistically somewhere around 1 in 9 cases ever appears in the media.  If that statistic is accurate, the thirty articles I read from today alone would equate to around 270 actual instances of embezzlement.  Staggering.

Regardless of the size and nature of any entity, fraud prevention and detection measures need to be implemented, and owners need to be vigilant – especially in these economically challenging times.

Joe Campana of the Madison Headlines Examiner said it best in his article regarding the Wisconsin $4.5 million theft -

“Regardless, business ethics, privacy, information security and fraud prevention should be on every businesses New Year to-do list.”

You can find his entire article at  http://www.examiner.com/x-26501-Madison-Headlines-Examiner~y2009m12d22-45-million-Wisconsin-employee-fraud-case-should-sound-business-alert

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