Occupational fraud schemes tend to be
extremely costly. The median loss caused by the
occupational frauds in this study was $175,000.
More than one-quarter of the frauds involved
losses of at least $1 million.
• Occupational fraud schemes frequently
continue for years before they are detected.
The typical fraud in our study lasted two years
from the time it began until the time it was
caught by the victim organization.
• This Report focuses on 11 distinct categories of
occupational fraud. The most common fraud
schemes were corruption, which occurred
in 27% of all cases, and fraudulent billing
schemes, which occurred in 24%. Financial
statement fraud was the most costly category
with a median loss of $2 million among the 99
financial misstatements in this Report.
• Despite increased focus on anti-fraud controls
in the wake of Sarbanes-Oxley and mandated
consideration of fraud in financial statement
audits due to SAS 99, our data shows that
occupational frauds are much more likely to
be detected by a tip than by audits, controls
or any other means. Forty-six percent of the
cases in this Report were detected by tips from
employees, customers, vendors, and other
sources. Tips were also the most common means
of detection in 2002, 2004, and 2006