Bernard Madoff Fraud

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    An Explanation Of White Collar Crime By Edwin Sutherland

    white collar crime definition hasn’t changed much from Sutherland's time to now. White collar crime is defined today as a “financially motivated nonviolent crime committed by business and government professionals.” Typical white-collar crimes include fraud, bribery, Ponzi schemes, insider trading, labor racketeering, embezzlement, cybercrime, copyright infringement, money laundering, identity theft, forgery. The punishment for being convicted of a white collar crime may include a combination of imprisonment

    Words: 609 - Pages: 3

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    The Madoff Scandal

    The Madoff scandal 16 December 2008 The repercussions from the collapse of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, whose founder and owner was arrested last Thursday after admitting that his $17 billion investment advisory business was "a giant Ponzi scheme," continue to widen. According to a criminal complaint filed by the FBI and a civil action brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the elderly Madoff estimated that the losses from his fraud exceeded $50 billion. The

    Words: 1060 - Pages: 5

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    Madoff

    play into how they conduct themselves in their personal and business affairs. Killing, raping, and stealing are examples of such obvious actions that most people would agree are unethical. This relates to the subjective belief of rather Bernard Lawrence "Bernie" Madoff should remain in prison or out on bail because of the practicing of Ponzi schemes because it lies in the not so obvious realm of behavior. Why? There is no essential difference between someone who steals $5 and someone who steals billions

    Words: 1162 - Pages: 5

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    Hedge Fund

    Hedge Funds 1. Hedge Funds Versus Mutual Funds Mutual funds are regulated under the SEC Act 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 and they must invest according to the stated goals in the prospectus. They are adjured to avoid ‘style drift.’ Hedge funds are not open to the general public. The primary investors are institutional investors but they are open to high net worth individuals. Most require minimum investments of $250,000, some go up to $1,000,000. A few now have a minimum

    Words: 1577 - Pages: 7

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    Acct 550

    financial fraud in U.S. history involving mega thief Bernard Madoff, a New York auditor, David Friehling is facing jail time for deceiving investors by signing off on fraudulent financial statements. Mr. Friehling, 49 years old, worked for Mr. Madoff from 1991 to 2008, running his storefront operation out of an ordinary office in New City, a suburb of New York City, N.Y. Mr. Friehling is to convicted of charges including aiding and abetting investment adviser fraud, securities fraud and four counts

    Words: 1008 - Pages: 5

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    Fraud Schemes-Chicago

    fraud scheme | CrimesInChicago 5/4/13 11:59 AM CrimesInChicago CA T EGORY ARCHIVE S : FR AU D SC HE ME White Collar Crime and Prosecution Posted on February 1, 2013 by webmaster White-collar crime is skyrocketing! Tough economic times and the advent of hi-tech computer technology coupled with Wall Street fraud is proving tough times for all Americans. Who are the white-collar criminals? What is White-collar crime? How do these individuals arrive at a position of trust? What is law enforcement

    Words: 1194 - Pages: 5

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    Forensic Accountant Career

    Running Head: Forensic Accountant 1 The Forensic Accountant Career Bus-508 Contemporary Business Professor Chris Lin Sarah Reid August 12, 2012 Forensic Accountant 2 1. Determine the most important five skills that a forensic accountant needs to possess and

    Words: 2009 - Pages: 9

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    Ethics and Accounting

    there have been numerous scandals that have rocked the finance world. Most notably the Enron scandal has been the most widely publicized accounting scandal. Enron was a multi-billion dollar corporation supplying energy sources in the United States. Fraud, false reporting of revenues, and poor accounting eventually caused the collapse of this powerful corporation and the loss of thousands of jobs (Raver, 2006). The collapse of this energy giant prompted Congress to pass the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

    Words: 499 - Pages: 2

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    The Effectiveness of Business Ethics in Education and Today’s Workplace

    Introduction What do Bernard Madoff, Kenneth Lay and Rob Blagojevich all have in common? They all operated with no apparent ethical behavior even though each had received educational backgrounds in which ethical business practices were taught. As L. Zingales states, “While every firm can have its bad apples, when these apples are at the top, it suggests that a company has either a corrupt culture or a defective selection process, or both.” (Zingales, Jul 16, 2012). In Madoffs case, the Ponzi scheme

    Words: 2518 - Pages: 11

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    Mary Schapiro

    Why Mary was appointed: what change drivers lead to her appointment? 1: Under its watch, fraudster Bernard Madoff managed to operate the largest Ponzi scheme in history 2: Wall Street stalwart Lehman Brothers collapsed, taking billions of dollars, business confidence and reputations down with it. She needed to assess what went wrong and to ensure it didn't happen again. Her Key tasks were: 1-identify the issues - assessing what needed to be done within the organisation to restore the agency's

    Words: 352 - Pages: 2

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