Fraud IQ Test

Test your anti-fraud IQ by answering practice questions covering material from the CFE Exam. 

  • December
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December

IQ #1 - Which type of trade-based money laundering scheme involves understating the quantity of goods in a shipment?
  1. Duplicate invoicing scheme
  2. Inflated shipment scheme
  3. Over-shipment scheme
  4. Over-invoicing scheme
View Answer
Over- and under-shipment schemes can be used to create a complex paper trail for the colluding parties to launder money. In an over-shipment scheme, money launderers understate the quantity of goods that are shipped. More goods are shipped than the company invoices for. For example, Company A invoices 100,000 widgets to Company B at a price of one dollar per widget. However, Company A ships 200,000 widgets to Company B. Company B then sells the widgets on the open market for $200,000 and deposits the extra $100,000 into an account controlled by Company A. In contrast, the quantity of goods that are shipped is overstated in an under-shipment scheme. The company invoices for more goods than it actually ships.

In an over-invoicing scheme, the exporter invoices goods or services to the importer at a price above their market value. This scheme transfers value to the exporter because the exporter collects the amount of the higher price that was invoiced, which is more than the goods or services can be sold for on the open market. For example, Company A sends a shipment of widgets worth $100,000 to Company B but invoices Company B for $200,000. Company A then deposits the extra $100,000 into an account controlled by Company B.

In a duplicate invoicing scheme, the exporter issues more than one invoice for the same trade transaction. By issuing duplicate invoices, a money launderer can justify multiple payments for the same goods or services.

Inflated shipment scheme is not the name of a trade-based money laundering scheme.
Correct Answer: (C)

IQ #2 - ______________ is a process aimed at proactively identifying and addressing an organization's vulnerabilities to internal and external fraud.
  • A management ethics assessment
  • An internal control audit
  • A fraud examination
  • A fraud risk assessment
View Answer
Fraud risk assessment is a process aimed at proactively identifying and addressing an organization's vulnerabilities to internal and external fraud. A fraud risk assessment starts with an identification and prioritization of fraud risks that exist in the business. The process evolves as the results of that identification and prioritization begin to drive education, communication, organizational alignment, and action around effectively managing fraud risk and identifying new fraud risks as they emerge.
Correct Answer: (D)

IQ #3 - Failure to record corresponding revenues and expenses in the same accounting period will result in an understatement of net income in the period when the revenue is recorded and an overstatement of net income in the period in which the corresponding expenses are recorded.
  1. True
  2. False
View Answer
According to generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), revenue and corresponding expenses should be recorded or matched in the same accounting period. The timely recording of expenses is often compromised due to pressures to meet budget projections and goals or due to lack of proper accounting controls. As the expensing of certain costs is pushed into periods other than the ones in which they actually occur, they are not properly matched against the income that they help produce. For example, revenue might be recognized on the sale of certain items, but the cost of goods and services that went into the items sold might not be recorded intentionally in the accounting system until the following period. This might make the sales revenue from the transaction almost pure profit, inflating earnings. In the next period, earnings would have fallen by a similar amount.
Correct Answer: (B)

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