The majority of fraud in most developed countries occurs as a result of lots of people stealing modest amounts from government and large corporations.
So while we may occasionally read about the multi-million losses perpetrated by individuals, this situation is comparatively rare.
Instead many tens of thousands of people steal £10 – £10,000 every day via activities such as false benefit applications, bogus grants, insurance, local authority or injury claims, using stolen cards and walking away from utility bills or internet orders.
Indeed, fraud-tracking company, UKFraud.co.uk, believes that the widespread deployment of IT systems to manage business processes "often makes fraud easier as fraudsters prefer such faceless processes to dealing with real people”.
As a result, it has just published a guide on how to spot a fraudster in the workplace, complete with warning signs:
- Young administrative employees, who are “mostly female”. They are usually familiar with the organisation’s systems and administrative gaps and “may be motivated by an oppressive partner or a drink/drug habit”
- Male “long service pin” highly trusted managers who are often the cornerstone of the office, but feel that they has been overlooked for promotion, are overburdened with debt, work or family commitments and could be suffering from other pressures such as a gambling, drink or a drugs habit. ‘Keeping up with the neighbours’ also commonly plays a part.
- The fraudster is the one who doesn’t take holidays. This is still routinely believed, but is rarely the case as fraudsters like to spend time away from the workplace as much as everyone else, presumably spending their ill-gotten gains. Only where the fraud needs to be constantly covered up might such a scenario be true, apparently. An example here could be a need to constantly ‘balance the books’ and ‘explain away the differences’. But the guidance points out: “This is far rarer these days as remote IT system access removes much of the need to be present.”
- The fraudster is a quiet loner that people don’t know much about. It may be true sometimes, but generally having a good rapport with others can help with the cover-up. As the guidelines state: “Often fraudsters use their interpersonal skills to good effect.”
Even though the best way to deter potential fraudsters is to prosecute them under the full force of the law, the problem is that exposing the situation to public gaze often reveals that organisations failed to discover the situation at an early stage or were unaware of its full consequences until far too late.