Accounting Fraud At Worldcom

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    Worldcom

    WorldCom By Dennis Moberg (Santa Clara University) and Edward Romar (University of Massachusetts-Boston) 2002 saw an unprecedented number of corporate scandals: Enron, Tyco, Global Crossing. In many ways, WorldCom is just another case of failed corporate governance, accounting abuses, and outright greed. But none of these other companies had senior executives as colorful and likable as Bernie Ebbers. A Canadian by birth, the 6 foot, 3 inch former basketball coach and Sunday School teacher emerged

    Words: 4925 - Pages: 20

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    Ethicality of Accounting Activities

    Ethicality of Accounting Activities ETH 376 May 6, 2013 Susan Paris Ethicality of Accounting Activities The WorldCom case shows an example of what unethical behavior is. Cynthia Cooper indicated the activities were fraudulent and describes the individuals involved. More than one department was to blame for the fraud at WorldCom. Cynthia Cooper with the help of Glyn Smith initiated the audit that led to the unethical activities within the company. WorldCom inflated their earnings to

    Words: 1481 - Pages: 6

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    Earnings Management, in Exchange Listed Companies, Is Not Fraud but a Case of Caveat Emptor for Investors ‘’ Up708386

    companies, is not fraud but a case of caveat emptor for investors ‘’ UP708386 ‘’Earnings management, in exchange listed companies, is not fraud but a case of caveat emptor for investors ‘’ UP708386 708386 Corporate governance, Financial Crime, Ethics & Controls for Finance Pathways (U234479) 708386 Corporate governance, Financial Crime, Ethics & Controls for Finance Pathways (U234479) ‘’Earnings management, in exchange listed companies, is not fraud but a case of caveat

    Words: 1754 - Pages: 8

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    Mancon Paper

    WorldCom Characters: 1. Val- Scott Sullivan (CFO) 2. Mila- Cynthia Cooper (Internal auditor) 3. Leslie- Employee 1 4. Kylie- Employee 2 (a junior auditor working with Cynthia Cooper) 5. Donna- Arthur Andersen 6. Brynner- David Myers (Controller) 7. Patrick- Bernard Ebbers (ex-CEO) 8. Ivy- The Government (SEC) 9. Ruby- Employee 3 Scene 1: INTERROGATION Setting: Interrogation room Individual frames on each interviewee (Scott, Cynthia, The Employees, Andersen

    Words: 2575 - Pages: 11

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    Wc Question 1

    the 1990s, the telecommunication was rapidly growing which led WorldCom to adopt the strategy of purchasing small long distance firms with limited geographic service areas and consolidating carriers with large market shares. This was the company’s main key profit. Indeed, by adopting this strategy, WorldCom grew quickly by expanding internationally in South America, West America, Europe and Latin America. As a result of this, WorldCom became the leader in this industry. - The pressure that Ebbers

    Words: 1534 - Pages: 7

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    Clock

    direct consequence of some of these situations, the U.S. Congress passed a very broad piece of legislation called the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. This law has had a wide range of consequences directly affecting large public corporations and public accounting firms and, less specifically, smaller public firms, private corporations, not-forprofit organizations and regulatory entities in many different ways. This law mandates some specific actions for large public corporations, many of these actions being

    Words: 7269 - Pages: 30

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    Ethics Assignment: Worldcom Case

    Ethics Assignment: Worldcom case Introduction: On 21 July 2002, WorldCom, Inc., the then-second largest telecommunications company in the U.S. filed bankruptcy protection. Its failure was due to its executives’ bad business behaviors to manipulate earnings with improper accounting entries. The key persons involved in the fraud were as follows; CEO Bernard Ebbers, CFO Scott Sullivan, the accountants were Bufford Yates (Director of General Accounting), David Meyers (Controller), Troy Norman (Director

    Words: 664 - Pages: 3

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    Business Failure

    status of any entity is unethical and disgraceful. Bernie Ebbers, former Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of WorldCom, did what the average business person would not do, commit fraud. WorldCom was one of the leading giants in the telecommunication arena acquiring MCI Communications en-route to global success, but failing at the proposed merger of Sprint. What lead to the lies and deception of WorldCom downfall? This paper will briefly discuss some of the possibilities and the outcome of WorldCom’s fall

    Words: 568 - Pages: 3

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    Miderm

    demand dictated the price, therefore Enron has higher risk of material misstatement compare to before. The deregulation helped Enron expanded into natural gas trading and financing. And for the first time Enron was allowed to use mark to market accounting for its nature gas trading business. Enron expanded beyond its natural gas business into other markets such as electricity and commodity markets. And it also undertook international projects outside the United States. Such aggressive expansion

    Words: 376 - Pages: 2

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    Bernie Ebbers

    the Downfall of WorldCom    The story surrounding the failure of WorldCom in the early 2000's is one that still haunts the financial market to this day. We often hear accounts of what happened within the telecom giant, but only one person could give a first-hand account of what she observed being the on the frontline and discovering one of the nation's biggest financial scandals of the last quarter century. Cynthia Cooper's account of her internal audit experience within WorldCom paints a bigger

    Words: 797 - Pages: 4

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