Fraud




























In law, fraud is deliberate deception to secure unfair or unlawful gain, or to deprive a victim of a legal right. Fraud itself can be a civil wrong (i.e., a fraud victim may sue the fraud perpetrator to avoid the fraud or recover monetary compensation), a criminal wrong (i.e., a fraud perpetrator may be prosecuted and imprisoned by governmental authorities), or it may cause no loss of money, property or legal right but still be an element of another civil or criminal wrong.[1] The purpose of fraud may be monetary gain or other benefits, such as obtaining a passport or travel document, driver's license or qualifying for a mortgage by way of false statements.[2]


A hoax is a distinct concept that involves deliberate deception without the intention of gain or of materially damaging or depriving a victim.




Contents





  • 1 As a civil wrong


  • 2 As a criminal offence


  • 3 By region

    • 3.1 North America

      • 3.1.1 Canada


      • 3.1.2 United States

        • 3.1.2.1 Criminal fraud


        • 3.1.2.2 Civil fraud




    • 3.2 Pacific Asia

      • 3.2.1 China



    • 3.3 Europe

      • 3.3.1 United Kingdom

        • 3.3.1.1 England, Wales, and Northern Ireland


        • 3.3.1.2 Scotland


        • 3.3.1.3 Serious Fraud Office


        • 3.3.1.4 National Fraud Authority


        • 3.3.1.5 Cifas





  • 4 Cost


  • 5 Types of fraudulent acts


  • 6 Anti-fraud movements


  • 7 Detection


  • 8 Notable fraudsters


  • 9 Related


  • 10 See also


  • 11 References


  • 12 Further reading


  • 13 External links




As a civil wrong


In common law jurisdictions, as a civil wrong, fraud is a tort. While the precise definitions and requirements of proof vary among jurisdictions, the requisite elements of fraud as a tort generally are the intentional misrepresentation or concealment of an important fact upon which the victim is meant to rely, and in fact does rely, to the harm of the victim.[3] Proving fraud in a court of law is often said to be difficult.[citation needed] That difficulty is found, for instance, in that each and every one of the elements of fraud must be proven, that the elements include proving the states of mind of the perpetrator and the victim, and that some jurisdictions require the victim to prove fraud by clear and convincing evidence.[citation needed]


The remedies for fraud may include rescission (i.e., reversal) of a fraudulently obtained agreement or transaction, the recovery of a monetary award to compensate for the harm caused, punitive damages to punish or deter the misconduct, and possibly others.[citation needed]


In cases of a fraudulently induced contract, fraud may serve as a defense in a civil action for breach of contract or specific performance of contract.


Fraud may serve as a basis for a court to invoke its equitable jurisdiction.



As a criminal offence


In common law jurisdictions, as a criminal offence, fraud takes many different forms, some general (e.g., theft by false pretense) and some specific to particular categories of victims or misconduct (e.g., bank fraud, insurance fraud, forgery). The elements of fraud as a crime similarly vary. The requisite elements of perhaps the most general form of criminal fraud, theft by false pretense, are the intentional deception of a victim by false representation or pretense with the intent of persuading the victim to part with property and with the victim parting with property in reliance on the representation or pretense and with the perpetrator intending to keep the property from the victim.[4]



By region



North America



Canada


Section 380(1) of the Criminal Code provides the general definition for fraud in Canada:


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380. (1) Every one who, by deceit, falsehood or other fraudulent means, whether or not it is a false pretence within the meaning of this Act, defrauds the public or any person, whether ascertained or not, of any property, money or valuable security or any service,


(a) is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to a term of imprisonment not exceeding fourteen years, where the subject-matter of the offence is a testamentary instrument or the value of the subject-matter of the offence exceeds five thousand dollars; or

(b) is guilty
(i) of an indictable offence and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or

(ii) of an offence punishable on summary conviction, where the value of the subject-matter of the offence does not exceed five thousand dollars.[5]



In addition to the penalties outlined above, the court can also issue a prohibition order under s. 380.2 (preventing a person from "seeking, obtaining or continuing any employment, or becoming or being a volunteer in any capacity, that involves having authority over the real property, money or valuable security of another person"). It can also make a restitution order under s. 380.3.[6]


The Canadian courts have held that the offence consists of two distinct elements:


  • A prohibited act of deceit, falsehood or other fraudulent means. In the absence of deceit or falsehood, the courts will look objectively for a "dishonest act"; and

  • The deprivation must be caused by the prohibited act, and deprivation must relate to property, money, valuable security, or any service.[7]

The Supreme Court of Canada has held that deprivation is satisfied on proof of detriment, prejudice or risk of prejudice; it is not essential that there be actual loss.[8] Deprivation of confidential information, in the nature of a trade secret or copyrighted material that has commercial value, has also been held to fall within the scope of the offence.[9]



United States



Criminal fraud

The proof requirements for criminal fraud charges in the United States are essentially the same as the requirements for other crimes: guilt must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Throughout the United States fraud charges can be misdemeanors or felonies depending on the amount of loss involved. High value frauds can also include additional penalties. For example, in California losses of $500,000 or more will result in an extra two, three, or five years in prison in addition to the regular penalty for the fraud.[10]


The U.S. government's 2006 fraud review concluded that fraud is a significantly under-reported crime, and while various agencies and organizations were attempting to tackle the issue, greater co-operation was needed to achieve a real impact in the public sector.[11] The scale of the problem pointed to the need for a small but high-powered body to bring together the numerous counter-fraud initiatives that existed.


According to Bloomberg, auto loan application fraud rates in the United States has been steadily rising over the past few years. This type of fraud expected to double from about $2–3 billion in 2015 to $4–6 billion in 2017.[12]



Civil fraud

Although elements may vary by jurisdiction and the specific allegations made by a plaintiff who files a lawsuit that alleged fraud, typical elements of a fraud case in the United States are that:[13]


  1. Somebody misrepresents a material fact in order to obtain action or forbearance by another person;

  2. The other person relies upon the misrepresentation; and

  3. The other person suffers injury as a result of the act or forbearance taken in reliance upon the misrepresentation.

To establish a civil claim of fraud, most jurisdictions in the United States require that each element of a fraud claim be pleaded with particularity and be proved by a preponderance of the evidence,[14] meaning that it is more likely than not that the fraud occurred. Some jurisdictions impose a higher evidentiary standard, such as Washington State's requirement that the elements of fraud be proved with clear, cogent, and convincing evidence (very probable evidence),[15] or Pennsylvania's requirement that common law fraud be proved by clear and convincing evidence.[16]


The measure of damages in fraud cases is normally computed using one of two rules:[17]


  1. The "benefit of bargain" rule, which allows for recovery of damages in the amount of the difference between the value of the property had it been as represented and its actual value;

  2. Out-of-pocket loss, which allows for the recovery of damages in the amount of the difference between the value of what was given and the value of what was received.

Special damages may be allowed if shown to have been proximately caused by defendant's fraud and the damage amounts are proved with specificity.


Many jurisdictions permit a plaintiff in a fraud case to seek punitive or exemplary damages.[18]



Pacific Asia



China


Zhang Yingyu's story collection The Book of Swindles (available here; ca. 1617) testifies to rampant commercial fraud, especially involving itinerant businessmen, in late Ming China.[19]
The journal Science reported in 2017 that fraud is rife in Chinese academia, resulting in numerous article retractions and harm to China's international prestige.[20]The Economist, CNN, and other media outlets regularly report on incidents of fraud or bad faith in Chinese business and trade practices.[21][22][23]Forbes cites cybercrime as a persistent and growing threat to Chinese consumers.[24]



Europe



United Kingdom


In 2016 the estimated value lost through fraud in the UK was £193 billion a year.[25]


In January 2018 the Financial Times reported that the value of UK fraud hit a 15-year high of £2.11bn in 2017 according to a study. The article said that the accountancy firm BDO examined reported fraud cases worth more than £50,000 and found that the total number rose to 577 in 2017, compared with 212 in 2003. The study found that the average amount stolen in each incident rose to £3.66m, up from £1.5m in 2003.[26]


As at November 2017 Fraud is the most common criminal offence in the UK according to a study by Crowe Clark Whitehill, Experian and the Centre for Counter Fraud Studies.[27] The study suggests the UK loses over £190 billion per year to fraud. £190 billion is more than 9% of the UK’s projected GDP for 2017 ($2,496 (£2,080) billion according to Statistics Times). The estimate for fraud in the UK figure is more than the entire GDP of countries such as Romania, Qatar and Hungary.[28]


According to another review by the UK anti-fraud charity Fraud Advisory Panel (FAP), business fraud accounted for £144bn, while fraud against individuals was estimated at £9.7bn. The FAP has been particularly critical of the support available from the police to victims of fraud in the UK outside of London. Although victims of fraud are generally referred to the UK's national fraud and cyber crime reporting centre, Action Fraud, the FAP found that there was "little chance" that these crime reports would be followed up with any kind of substantive law enforcement action by UK authorities, according to the report.[29]


In July 2016 it was reported that fraudulent activity levels in the UK increased in the 10 years to 2016 from £52 billion to £193bn. This figure would be a conservative estimate, since as the former commissioner of the City of London Police, Adrian Leppard, has said, only 1 in 12 such crimes are actually reported.[30] Donald Toon, director of the NCA's economic crime command, stated in July 2016: "The annual losses to the UK from fraud are estimated to be more than £190bn". Figures released in October 2015 from the Crime Survey of England and Wales found that there had been 5.1 million incidents of fraud in England and Wales in the previous year, affecting an estimated one in 12 adults and making it the most common form of crime.[31]


Also in July 2016, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) stated "Almost six million fraud and cyber crimes were committed last year in England and Wales and estimated there were two million computer misuse offences and 3.8 million fraud offences in the 12 months to the end of March 2016." Fraud affects one in ten people in the UK. According to the ONS most frauds relate to bank account fraud. These figures are separate from the headline estimate that another 6.3 million crimes (distinct from frauds) were perpetrated in the UK against adults in the year to March 2016.[32]


Fraud was not included in a "Crime Harm Index" published by the Office for National Statistics in 2016. Michael Levi, professor of criminology at Cardiff University, remarked in August 2016 that it was ‘deeply regrettable’ fraud is being left out of the first index despite being the most common crime reported to police in the UK. Levi said ‘If you’ve got some categories that are excluded, they are automatically left out of the police’s priorities.’.[33] The Chief of the National Audit Office (NAO), Sir Anyas Morse has also said “For too long, as a low-value but high-volume crime, online fraud has been overlooked by government, law enforcement and industry. It is now the most commonly experienced crime in England and Wales and demands an urgent response.”[34]



England, Wales, and Northern Ireland

Since 2007, fraud in England and Wales and Northern Ireland has been covered by the Fraud Act 2006. The Act was given Royal Assent on 8 November 2006, and came into effect on 15 January 2007.[35]


The Act gives a statutory definition of the criminal offence of fraud, defining it in three classes—fraud by false representation, fraud by failing to disclose information, and fraud by abuse of position. It provides that a person found guilty of fraud is liable to a fine or imprisonment for up to twelve months on summary conviction (six months in Northern Ireland), or a fine or imprisonment for up to ten years on conviction on indictment. This Act largely replaces the laws relating to obtaining property by deception, obtaining a pecuniary advantage and other offences that were created under the Theft Act 1978.



Scotland

In Scots law, fraud is covered under the common law and a number of statutory offences. The main fraud offences are common law fraud, uttering, embezzlement and statutory frauds. The Fraud Act 2006 does not apply in Scotland.



Serious Fraud Office


The Serious Fraud Office (United Kingdom) is an arm of the Government of the United Kingdom, accountable to the Attorney-General.



National Fraud Authority

The National Fraud Authority (NFA) was, until 2014, a government agency co-ordinating the counter-fraud response in the UK.



Cifas


Cifas is a British fraud prevention service, a not-for-profit membership organisation for all sectors that enables organisations to share and access fraud data using their databases. Cifas is dedicated to the prevention of fraud, including internal fraud by staff, and the identification of financial and related crime.



Cost


The typical organization loses five percent of its annual revenue to fraud, with a median loss of $160,000. Frauds committed by owners and executives were more than nine times as costly as employee fraud. The industries most commonly affected are banking, manufacturing, and government.[36]



Types of fraudulent acts




The highly decorated fake uniform worn by a man impersonating a "Marine" caught by two gunnery sergeants at Times Square in New York City, New York




A possibly fraudulent "work from home" advertisement


The falsification of documents, forgery or counterfeiting are types of fraud. The theft of one's personal information, like Social Security number, or identity is type of fraud.
Fraud can be committed through many media, including mail, wire, phone, and the Internet (computer crime and Internet fraud). International dimensions of the web and ease with which users can hide their location, the difficulty of checking identity and legitimacy online, and the simplicity with which hackers can divert browsers to dishonest sites and steal credit card details have all contributed to the very rapid growth of Internet fraud. In some countries, tax fraud is also prosecuted under false billing or tax forgery.[37] There have also been fraudulent "discoveries", e.g., in science, to gain prestige rather than immediate monetary gain.[citation needed]



Anti-fraud movements


Beyond laws that aim at prevention of fraud, there are also governmental and non-governmental organizations that aim to fight fraud. Between 1911 and 1933, 47 states adopted the so-called Blue Sky Laws status.[38]
These laws were enacted and enforced at the state level and regulated the offering and sale of securities to protect the public from fraud. Though the specific provisions of these laws varied among states, they all required the registration of all securities offerings and sales, as well as of every U.S. stockbroker and brokerage firm.[39] However, these Blue Sky laws were generally found to be ineffective. To increase public trust in the capital markets the President of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, established the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).[40] The main reason for the creation of the SEC was to regulate the stock market and prevent corporate abuses relating to the offering and sale of securities and corporate reporting. The SEC was given the power to license and regulate stock exchanges, the companies whose securities traded on them, and the brokers and dealers who conducted the trading.[41]



Detection




A fraudulent Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price on a speaker



For detection of fraudulent activities on the large scale, massive use of (online) data analysis is required, in particular predictive analytics or forensic analytics. Forensic analytics is the use of electronic data to reconstruct or detect financial fraud. The steps in the process are data collection, data preparation, data analysis, and the preparation of a report and possibly a presentation of the results. Using computer-based analytic methods Nigrini's wider goal is the detection of fraud, errors, anomalies, inefficiencies, and biases which refer to people gravitating to certain dollar amounts to get past internal control thresholds.[42]


The analytic tests usually start with high-level data overview tests to spot highly significant irregularities. In a recent purchasing card application these tests identified a purchasing card transaction for 3,000,000 Costa Rica Colons. This was neither a fraud nor an error, but it was a highly unusual amount for a purchasing card transaction. These high-level tests include tests related to Benford's Law and possibly also those statistics known as descriptive statistics. These high-tests are always followed by more focused tests to look for small samples of highly irregular transactions. The familiar methods of correlation and time-series analysis can also be used to detect fraud and other irregularities. Forensic analytics also includes the use of a fraud risk-scoring model to identify high risk forensic units (customers, employees, locations, insurance claims and so on). Forensic analytics also includes suggested tests to identify financial statement irregularities, but the general rule is that analytic methods alone are not too successful at detecting financial statement fraud.[43]



Notable fraudsters





  • Alfredo Sáenz Abad, lied about bank loans as a banker so that some customers to the bank went to prison; he was later sentenced to prison, but managed to get a pardon and kept his job


  • Frank Abagnale Jr., American impostor who wrote bad[further explanation needed] checks and falsely represented himself as a qualified member of professions such as airline pilot, doctor, attorney, and teacher; the film Catch Me If You Can is based on his life[44]


  • Mukhtar Ablyazov, Kazakh banker accused of embezzling and mismanaging at least $5 billion of BTA Bank funds in one of world's biggest case of financial fraud on record.[45]


  • John Bodkin Adams, British doctor and suspected serial killer, but only found guilty of forging wills and prescriptions[46]


  • Eddie Antar, founder of Crazy Eddie; has criminal convictions on 17 counts and about $1 billion worth of civil judgments against him stemming from fraudulent accounting practices at that company[47][48]


  • Jordan Belfort, "The Wolf of Wall Street"; swindled over $200 million via a penny stock boiler room operation; the film "The Wolf of Wall Street" starring Leonardo DiCaprio is based on his life and fraudulent activity


  • Cassie Chadwick, pretended to be Andrew Carnegie's illegitimate daughter to get loans


  • Columbia/HCA Medicare fraud; Columbia/HCA pleaded guilty to 14 felony counts and paid out more than $2 billion to settle lawsuits arising from the fraud[49] The company's board of directors forced then–Chairman and CEO Rick Scott to resign at the beginning of the federal investigation; Scott was subsequently elected Governor of Florida in 2010


  • Edward Davenport, self-styled "Lord";[50] nicknamed "Fast Eddie"[51] and "Lord of Fraud";[52] from 2005 to 2009 was the "ringmaster" of a series of advance-fee fraud schemes that defrauded dozens of individuals out of millions of pounds;[53] is said to have made £34.5 million through various frauds[54]


  • Tino De Angelis, perpetrator of the Salad oil scandal


  • Marc Dreier, managing founder of attorney firm Dreir LLP, a $700 million Ponzi scheme[55]


  • Enric Durán, defrauded Spanish banks and then gave away the loaned money to anti-growth organizations


  • Bernard Ebbers, founder of WorldCom, which inflated its asset statements by about $11 billion


  • Ramón Báez Figueroa, banker from the Dominican Republic and former President of Banco Intercontinental; sentenced in 2007 to 10 years in prison for a U.S. $2.2 billion fraud case that drove the Caribbean nation into economic crisis in 2003


  • Martin Frankel, American former financier, convicted in 2002 of insurance fraud worth $208 million, racketeering and money laundering


  • Samuel Israel III, former hedge fund manager; ran the former fraudulent Bayou Hedge Fund Group; faked suicide to avoid jail


  • Konrad Kujau, German fraudster and forger responsible for the "Hitler Diaries"


  • Kenneth Lay, American businessman who built energy company Enron; one of the highest paid CEOs in the U.S. until he was ousted as chairman and convicted of fraud and conspiracy, although, as a result of his death, his conviction was vacated[56]


  • Nick Leeson, English trader whose unsupervised speculative trading caused the collapse of Barings Bank


  • James Paul Lewis, Jr., ran one of the biggest ($311 million) and longest running Ponzi schemes (20 years) in U.S. history


  • Gregor MacGregor, Scottish con man; tried to attract investment and settlers for the non-existent country of Poyais


  • Bernard Madoff, creator of a $65 billion Ponzi scheme, the largest investor fraud ever attributed to a single individual


  • Matt the Knife, American con artist, card cheat and pickpocket; from age approximately 14 through 21, bilked dozens of casinos, corporations and at least one Mafia crime family out of untold sums


  • Gaston Means, professional con man during U.S. President Warren G. Harding's administration


  • Barry Minkow, ZZZZ Best scam


  • Michael Monus, founder of Phar-Mor, which ultimately cost its investors more than $1 billion


  • F. Bam Morrison, conned the town of Wetumka, Oklahoma by promoting a circus that never came


  • Lou Pearlman, former boy-band manager and operator of a $300 million Ponzi scheme using two shell companies


  • Frederick Emerson Peters, American impersonator who wrote bad checks


  • Thomas Petters, American masquerading as a business manwho turned out to be a con man; former CEO and chairman of Petters Group Worldwide;[57] resigned his position as CEO in 2008 amid mounting criminal investigations;[58] later convicted for turning Petters Group Worldwide into a $3.65 billion Ponzi scheme;[59] sentenced to 50 years in federal prison


  • Charles Ponzi, Ponzi scheme


  • Gert Postel, German mailman; worked as a psychiatrist in different hospitals


  • Alves Reis, forged documents to print 100,000,000 PTE in official escudo banknotes (adjusted for inflation, it would be worth about US$150 million today)


  • John Rigas, cable television entrepreneur, co-founder of Adelphia Communications Corporation and owner of the Buffalo Sabres hockey team; defrauded investors of over $2 billion and was sentenced to a 12-year term in federal prison


  • Christopher Rocancourt, a Rockefeller impersonator who defrauded Hollywood celebrities


  • Scott W. Rothstein, disbarred lawyer from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida; perpetrated a Ponzi scheme which defrauded investors of over $1 billion


  • Michael Sabo, best known as a check, stocks and bonds forger; became notorious in the 1960s throughout the 1990s as a "Great Impostor" with over 100 aliases, and earned millions from such


  • John Spano, struggling businessman who faked massive success in an attempt to buy out the New York Islanders of the NHL


  • Allen Stanford, self-styled banker; sold fake certificates of deposit to people in many countries, raking in $7 billion to $8 billion over decades


  • John Stonehouse, the last Postmaster-General of the UK and MP; faked his death to marry his mistress


  • Kevin Trudeau, American writer and billiards promoter; convicted of fraud and larceny in 1991; known for a series of late-night infomercials and his series of books about "Natural Cures 'They' Don't Want You to Know About"


  • Richard Whitney, stole from the New York Stock Exchange Gratuity Fund in the 1930s


Related


Apart from fraud, there are several related categories of intentional deceptions that may or may not include the elements of personal gain or damage to another individual:


  • Obstruction of justice


  • 18 U.S.C. § 704 which criminalizes false representation of having been awarded any decoration or medal authorized by Congress for the Armed Forces of the United States


See also



  • Bait-and-switch


  • Caper stories (such as The Sting)

  • Contract fraud

  • Corruption

  • Cramming (fraud)

  • Creative accounting

  • Crimestoppers

  • Deception

  • Electoral fraud

  • False Claims Act


  • Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

  • Financial crimes

  • Forgery

  • Fraud deterrence

  • Fraud in the factum

  • Fraud in parapsychology

  • Fraud Squad (UK)

  • Friendly fraud

  • Front running

  • Geneivat da'at

  • Great Stock Exchange Fraud of 1814


  • Guinness share-trading fraud, famous British business scandal of the 1980s

  • Hoax

  • Identity management

  • Impersonator


  • Internal Revenue Service (IRS)

  • Internet fraud

  • Interpol

  • Journalism fraud

  • Mail and wire fraud

  • Money laundering

  • The National Council Against Health Fraud

  • Organized crime


  • Phishing, attempt to fraudulently acquire sensitive information

  • Placebo

  • Police impersonation

  • Political corruption

  • Quackery

  • Quatloos.com


  • Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO)

  • SAS 99

  • Scam

  • Secret profits

  • Shell company

  • Swampland in Florida


  • Tobashi scheme, concealing financial losses


  • U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

  • United States Postal Inspection Service

  • United States Secret Service

  • White-collar crime



References




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Further reading



  • Edward J. Balleisen Fraud: An American History from Barnum to Madoff.
    ISBN 9780691164557 (2017). Princeton University Press.


  • Fred Cohen Frauds, Spies, and Lies – and How to Defeat Them.
    ISBN 1-878109-36-7 (2006). ASP Press.

  • Green, Stuart P. Lying, Cheating, and Stealing: A Moral Theory of White Collar Crime. Oxford University Press, 2006.
    ISBN 978-0199225804


  • Review Fraud – Alex Copola Podgor, Ellen S. Criminal Fraud, (1999) Vol, 48, No. 4 American Law Review 1.

  • The Nature, Extent and Economic Impact of Fraud in the UK. February, 2007.


  • The Fraudsters – How Con Artists Steal Your Money(
    ISBN 978-1-903582-82-4) by Eamon Dillon, published September 2008 by Merlin Publishing


  • Zhang, Yingyu. The Book of Swindles: Selections from a Late Ming Collection. Columbia University Press, 2017.
    ISBN 9780231178631


External links







  • The dictionary definition of fraud at Wiktionary

  • Association of Certified Fraud Examiners

  • Immigration Marriage Fraud Amendments of 1986

  • FBI Home page for fraud

  • U.S. Department of Justice Fraud Section










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