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Audit Those Vendors A vendor can be an entity’s best colleague or worst nemesis. Keep the relationship pleasant and successful by conducting vendor audits.
Using the law to fight fraud: Conducting kickbank investigations Kickback investigations can be difficult. Evidence is hard to find and witnesses are even harder to turn. This session will focus on the investigation and resolution of kickback investigations including looking for the warning signs that you'll most likely come across and evaluating the outside parties making the payments.
Construction Fraud: Beware the ‘Outside Facilitator’ Crafty manipulators will use weak employees at construction job sites to defraud companies for many months – long before the home office smells
any problems.
Fixing Prices and Rigging Bids Fraud examiners and auditors should familiarize themselves with the types of cases that can violate U.S. antitrust regulations.
Protecting the public interest: Fraud in the government, Lessons learned while building an investigative procurement fraud detection program It’s a fraud that affects both the public and private sector — procurement fraud. It’s also a fraud that is difficult to detect. In this session, you’ll learn how to build a proactive investigative procurement fraud detection program and how to avoid making some mistakes that could be costly and program counter-productive. Also discussed will be procurement fraud risk analysis, financial system data-mining, and the need for procurement fraud referrals.
Protecting the public interest: Fraud in government. Grant/Contract fraud in the public sector Not all fraud involves the theft of assets, but rather some involve the misuse of assets. Every year, Federal, State and Local Governments award thousands of dollars in grant/contracts to vendors. However, the grant money is not always prudently managed. This session focuses on the ways and manner in which government grants are misapplied or misused, oftentimes to the benefit of the program administrator.
Investment-bond Fraud: Smiling Faces Asking for Your Retirement Money David Namer had the perfect place for your retirement money: mid-yield corporate bonds – Private Placement Memorandums – backed by insurance from a top-rated company. It was perfect until the pyramid collapsed. Learn how this convicted former banker took thousands of small investors for almost $35 million.
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