The following are activities that occurred at Franklin Manufacturing, a nonpublic company. 1. Franklin's accountant did not

Question:

The following are activities that occurred at Franklin Manufacturing, a nonpublic company.
1. Franklin's accountant did not record checks written in the last few days of the year until the next accounting period to avoid a negative cash balance in the financial statements.
2. Franklin's controller prepared and mailed a check to a vendor for a carload of material that was not received. The vendor's chief accountant, who is a friend of Franklin's controller, mailed a vendor's invoice to Franklin, and the controller prepared a receiving report. The vendor's chief accountant deposited the check in an account he had set up with a name almost identical to the vendor's.
3. The accountant recorded cash received in the first few days of the next accounting period in the current accounting period to avoid a negative cash balance.
4. Discounts on checks to Franklin's largest vendor are never taken, even though the bills are paid before the discount period expires. The president of the vendor's company provides free use of his ski lodge to the accountant who processes the checks in exchange for the lost discounts.
5. Franklin shipped and billed goods to a customer in New York on December 23, and the sale was recorded on December 24, with the understanding that the goods will be returned on January 31 for a full refund plus a 5 percent handling fee.
6. Franklin's factory superintendent routinely takes scrap metal home in his pickup and sells it to a scrap dealer to make a few extra dollars.
7. Franklin's management decided not to include a footnote about a material uninsured lawsuit against the company on the grounds that the primary user of the statements, a small local bank, will probably not understand the footnote anyway.

Required
a. Identify which of these activities are frauds.
b. For each fraud, state whether it is a misappropriation of assets or fraudulent financial reporting.

Dealer
A dealer in the securities market is an individual or firm who stands ready and willing to buy a security for its own account (at its bid price) or sell from its own account (at its ask price). A dealer seeks to profit from the spread between the...
Fantastic news! We've Found the answer you've been seeking!

Step by Step Answer:

Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Auditing and Assurance services an integrated approach

ISBN: 978-0132575959

14th Edition

Authors: Alvin a. arens, Randal j. elder, Mark s. Beasley

Question Posted: