INTRODUCTION [1]Estafa also known as swindling is a crime committed by any person who shall defraud another by any of the means mentioned in the Revised Penal Code (RPC). Article 315 of the Revised Penal Code of the Philippines enumerates the crime constituting estafa. Estafa is a criminal case that is punishable under the Revised Penal Code and is also classified as a crime against property under the same code. As to its nature, Estafa is a crime which is mala in se. [2]Mala in se as defined
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1.What are the pressures that lead executives and managers to “cook the books ” * Pressures from investors ……they want to see that the company/business is growing * Attract new investors ….for the business to grow * Personal reasons …greed and wanting more * Pressure form the big boss * Brand of the company … the business has been known to be a big brang * Slow/decline in the industry 1. What is the boundary between earning management and fraudulent reporting ?
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the constant struggle to conceal their fraud. It is for these reasons that it made Mr. Miller hard to detect. His employers thought he was putting in the extra mile when he would work long hours and he was said to do outstanding work. Most of this was most likely a ploy to cover his tracks. This coupled with Mr. Miller being a very likeable person proved to make his transgressions very hard for his employers to detect. 2. Mr. Miller committed the various fraud schemes by stealing money from his employers
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of dollars and eventually realizing he needs to find a different way to bring in a steady cash flow. He becomes a pilot for Pan Am Airlines as a “deadhead” who is a backup pilot and therefore does no actual flying on the plane. Meanwhile the FBI’s fraud division has caught on to Frank’s scams and begins to track him down with one detective leading the investigation: Carl Hanratty. It becomes Carl’s personal goal to find Frank with little to no support
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The following paper will examine WorldCom and how the business failed. It will also compare and contrast the contributions of leaderships, management and the organizations structures to how the organization failed the way they did. The following paper will examine WorldCom and how the business failed. It will also compare and contrast the contributions of leaderships, management and the organizations structures to how the organization failed the way they did. WorldCom began as a small long distance
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Our company is facing a period of recession. The Major problems in eBay decrease the volume of sales. No one wants to buy products in an unsafe and nonguaranteed way. Let’s get the solutions to lost profits! Previous solutions are inadequate. We should do more. * Making the serious rule to protect copyrighted items in order to prevent illegal auction * Providing more payment methods to bump up sales * Hiring a programmer to ensure email security protection Analysis 1. Value
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failing, but orchestrating fraudulent information just to boost and boast the 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
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Accounting Fraud by: If you were to visit Qwest Communications website today you would find under the Code of Conduct pertaining to Ethics this quote, “…A company’s achievements are the sum of countless interactions every day, every week and every year – with colleagues, customers, and communities. If we are to carry on Qwest’s excellent reputation for ethics and integrity, all of our transactions must be based on doing the right thing. This is the only way to do business and it will remain the
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constant struggle to conceal their fraud. It is for these reasons that it made Mr. Miller hard to detect. His employers thought he was putting in the extra mile when he would work long hours and he was said to do outstanding work. Most of this was most likely a ploy to cover his tracks. This coupled with Mr. Miller being a very likeable person proved to make his transgressions very hard for his employers to detect. 2. Mr. Miller committed the various fraud schemes by stealing money from his
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guilt could then lead to problems in the future or one could continue to do these types of things and get into bigger trouble. This ethical conflict can be resolved by simply following the law set for us. There is also an Insider Trade and Securities Fraud Enforcement Act of 1988, that helps to prohibit insider trading (McGee, 2008, p.214). Source McGee, R. W. (2008). Applying Ethics to
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